Wednesday, June 25, 2014

CONFAB: TRANSPORT COMMITTEE REPORT

The ongoing National Conference in Abuja set up a Transport Committee headed by Senator Musa Abebe, a non-schedule operator chieftain in the industry. On submission of the report the conferees debated and resolutions were taken. RETURN OF MERGED AGENCIES TO STATUSQUO Asking Government to return to statusquo without proffering cost reduction measures is merely glossing the issue. The NCAA should remain autonomous, while NIMET should either be merged with NAMA or a related agency in the Ministry of Transport. The Ministry of Aviation should be scrapped with immediate effect. A transparent and competitive public private partnership programme should be initiated for FAAN, and the huge debt owed by the organisation due to the remodelling exercise should be addressed. On NCAT, the Federal Government is going to Ogbaru in Anambra State to set up a second aviation training school. The choice of Ogbaru, is not an issue at the moment, but the essence of owning a second training school when they have not been able to fund NCAT satisfactorily? NCAT and the new school in Ogbaru should be privatised, not commercialised. They can sustain themselves and attain international recognition if the privatisation process is properly and transparently handled. It is also better to affiliate the new school in Ogbaru with Anambra State University of Technology, Uli or Nnamdi Azikwe University, Awka, instead of Oko Polytechnic, as proposed. REVIEW OF THE NATIONAL CIVIL AVIATION POLICY The Committee also recommended the review of the 2013 Civil Aviation Policy, a good decision, based on the premise that stakeholders will be called from all facets of the industry to make an input. I also concur, but I must also say that there are some good policies in that document that must be appreciated and sustained. I really look forward to the independent and effective economic regulatory body which will stem the drift toward predatory tendencies. NATIONAL CARRIER The Committee tried in vain to convince other conferees on the need of having another national carrier to replace the dead and improperly buried Nigeria Airways. The option was rejected and I agree in totality with the conferees. We need strong flag carriers to be built from the present carriers through a regulated consolidation process. We cannot wait for the NCAA anymore, since they lack the balls. The conferees and the National Assembly should urgently initiate the process. NIGERIAN CONTENT In consonance with the proposed National Assembly bill, the conferees are asking for an increase in Nigerian participation in operation and services. This call would be unnecessary if NCAA had lived up to its responsibility by implementing the Civil Aviation Act to the letter. If the NCAA cannot monitor and implement now, how will a bill or the Confab decision change that mentality? The Nigerian content should not be limited to personnel alone, but other operational services with the enshrined principle of reciprocity and investment. CONSTRUCTION OF PERIMETER FENCE AND ROADS The conferees also want the government as a matter of security urgency to provide perimeter fencing and roads for all airports in Nigeria. This call is necessary and timely considering the upsurge in attacks by insurgents and the ease with which stowaways get to airfields. In the PPP arrangement I advocated earlier, the perimeter fencing, AVSEC and related issues will be retained and controlled by Government, while all other revenue generating aspects of the airport should be ceded. REVIVAL OF THE ABANDONED ONITSHA CARGO AIRPORT This is simply comical and an emotional decision. Asaba airport is barely 10 minutes away, while Benin, Enugu and Owerri airports are about an hour’s drive from the proposed Onitsha Airport. Two of these airports are designated as cargo airports. The Princess of Ogbaru must have been properly briefed, for Onitsha not to have been included. The conferees should just delete this wasteful section from the report, so we can move on to other important issues. LINKAGE OF ALL INTERNATIONAL AIRPORTS TO RAIL LINES This is good and futuristic considering the huge funds needed to actualise this dream. In the interim, surface connectivity between the domestic and international terminals should be activated, while other connections within cities should be developed to ease movement and encourage tourist and transit passengers. COMPLETION OF NATIONAL HANGAR PROJECT AT UYO AIRPORT Senator Abebe must have used his influence of heading the Committee to smuggle this home grown paragraph into the report. The proponents of Uyo Airport had a business model when they initiated the project. A National Hangar was not envisioned; rather it was Uyo Hangar to generate additional revenue for the airport. The agitation for a National Hangar preceded the dream of building Uyo Airport. Yes, we need a National Hangar that will be internationally certified and recognised. It will save cost, generate revenue for the industry and develop our personnel. If Uyo Airport gets it by virtue of infrastructure, so be it. The national hanger should be privately driven and has not been designated to any airport or state.

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