Nigeria’s new Lekki port has doubled cargo capacity, but must not repeat previous failures


Three-quarters of the world is covered by water and up to 90% of world trade is seaborne. Seaports and shipping are critical to the conduct of global trade.

Africa has relatively few natural harbours that offer shelter and are deep enough to take big vessels. Along the Atlantic coastline of West Africa, for instance, natural harbours exist only at Freetown and Lagos. Consequently, artificial ports have been carved out of lagoon and river ports, which dot the coastline from Morocco to South Africa. Considerable capital and engineering know-how have been applied since the late nineteenth century to make African ports accessible to ocean shipping.

Since the 1990s, African countries have engaged in a “ports race” to emerge as the shipping hub for their region.

In this context, the recent completion of the US$1.5 billion Lekki Deep Sea Port in Lagos, Nigeria, is significant.

Lekki is one of Africa’s top six ports. It is Nigeria’s first fully automated port, and its largest. It has more than doubled the capacity of Lagos’ ports, which had remained the same for 25 years. It will accommodate the world’s largest cargo ships and is expected to reduce cargo wait times from over 50 days to two days.

Its modernity and efficiency are projected to make Nigeria a regional hub and boost the country’s GDP. It is envisaged to generate 170,000 direct and indirect jobs, billions of dollars in tax revenues for Lagos State and the host community, and a turnover of US$361 billion over the next 45 years.

My work on the economic history of African seaports supports the view that the Lekki Deep Sea Port could serve as a pivot of local and regional development. The project should have multiplier effects on commerce, industry, agriculture and small-scale enterprises connected to it by various modes of transport.

A combination of factors will determine its success. These include its capacity to meet the demands of shipping; its efficiency and competitiveness in the national and international contexts; the coordination of policies; the way transport modes work together; the state of the inland economies; and the application of technology.

Nigeria’s port history

In colonial Nigeria, significant port development took place between 1850 and 1950 for the economic benefit of Britain. Shipping was concentrated at a few ports during the world wars and the Great Depression (1929-33). But increasing imports and exports in prosperous times required more functioning ports to cope with the greater volume of trade.

Lagos and Port Harcourt gained prominence because they had railway links to the hinterland. Port Harcourt was created as an outlet for the coal exports from Udi, near Enugu in eastern Nigeria, and the tin exports of the Jos Plateau. Lagos had become the leading port in West Africa following extensive harbour works between 1892 and 1914 when it welcomed its first ocean liner. It handled the bulk of Nigeria’s foreign trade right into the independence period.

The civil war of 1967-70 compelled the adoption of a policy of port concentration at Lagos. Port congestion at Lagos was aggravated by the demands of post-war reconstruction. Massive oil revenues, following the 1973 Arab-Israeli conflict, funded massive imports.

Poor planning saddled Nigerian ports with an armada of cement-laden ships in the late 1970s. The congestion imposed huge demurrage costs on the country. And containerisation, which existing seaports were unsuited to handle, made it necessary to expand Apapa Port and create the Tin Can port in Lagos in 1977.

During the 1980s and 1990s, the growth of the national economy outstripped the installed capacity of Nigerian ports. At the same time, Nigerian ports attained increasing notoriety for inefficiency, decaying infrastructure, uncompetitive tariffs and systemic corruption. Other West African ports offered better services – so traffic went there instead.

The Nigerian government eventually in 2005 adopted the landlord model of port administration: state control was replaced by a system of concessions. This improved port services, but did not bridge the gap between capacity and volume of container traffic. Thus the idea of the Lekki Deep Sea Port was conceived.

Lekki port’s potential

Lekki is expected to generate direct and induced business revenue estimated at US$158 billion, a qualitative impact on the manufacturing, commercial and services sectors, and a multiplier effect over 230 times the cost of construction. It will attract a massive influx of people, businesses and investment.

The new facility will support the industrial and petrochemical complex, including the Dangote Refinery, the largest in the world, situated in the Lekki Free Trade Zone. It is poised to attract investment in the range of US$20 billion in the first few years. With an airport in the vicinity, the port will be a component of a Harbour City equipped with logistics infrastructure of various kinds.

Lekki port should reduce congestion at the older ports in Lagos and help recover the lost traffic of landlocked Chad and Niger, which had been diverted to more efficient ports in the sub-region.

The port also positions Nigeria to optimise the African Continental Free Trade Agreement.

Weak Points

However, it appears that the project suffered from some lapses in planning. Provision for cargo evacuation by rail is non-existent, and the road infrastructure is inadequate for the anticipated volume of traffic.

The other challenge is the encroachment on land around the Lekki port and the future problem of congestion. Unless the state government takes drastic action under the Land Use Act to acquire land in the public interest for the future expansion of the port, it will be a repeat of the problems of older ports hemmed in by unplanned industrial, urban and commercial land use.

The project indicates that public-private sector partnership is the best way to plan and deliver landmark infrastructure projects. Lekki Port LFTZ Enterprise Ltd was created for the purpose, with investment by China Harbour Engineering Company Ltd, Singapore’s Tolaram Group and the Nigerian government.

But it has the potential drawback of idle capacity if the economic prospects that motivated it fail to materialise. Then the huge investment in the deep sea port project would become a huge burden of unpaid debts.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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EGYPS 2023 set to drive the energy conversation and address the reshaping of global markets

With the global energy transition underway, the 6th edition of the Egypt Petroleum Show (EGYPS) returns to Cairo from 13-15 February 2023 at the Egypt International Exhibition Center to propel the dialogue on energy security and climate action through collaborative industry efforts. Taking place under the patronage of His Excellency Abdel Fattah El Sisi, President of the Arab Republic of Egypt and with support of the Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, EGYPS 2023 brings an expanded agenda across its conferences with focused programmes covering Strategic, Technical, Finance and Investment in Energy, Equality in Energy, and Sustainability in Energy topics. More than 65-panel discussions, two thousand delegates, and over 260 speakers will convene, engage in dialogue, and identify solutions and strategies that will support the reshaping of global energy markets across the entire oil, gas and energy value chain. The two-day Strategic Conference features ministers, C-suite executives, and CEOs of the largest energy companies to share industry insights within the framework of 3 pillars: geopolitical and global economies, energy transition and energy solutions, and the next generation of oil, gas and energy ecosystems. The conference will address the growing importance of North Africa and the Mediterranean in supporting sustainable global energy supply and demand. Ministerial-led discussions include the participation of His Excellency Tarek El Molla, Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, Arab Republic of Egypt;  Commissioner for Energy at the European Union, Kadri Simson; Chairman of the Palestinian Energy & Natural Resources Authority, Zafer Milhem; Equatorial Guinea’s Minister of Mines and Hydrocarbons and incoming OPEC 2023 President, Gabriel Mbaga Obiang Lima; OPEC Secretary General, Haitham Al Ghais; OAPEC Secretary General, Ali Sabt BenSabt; General Director of Observatoire Méditerranéen de l’Energie (OME), Dr. Houda Ben Jannet Allal; Chairman and CEO of Baker Hughes, Lorenzo Simonelli; CEO of Wintershall Dea, Mario Mehren; President and CEO of Axens, Jean Sentenac; CEO of AspenTech, Antonio Pietri; CEO of DESFA, Maria, Rita Galli; CEO of Saipem, Alessandro Puliti; CEO of Energean, Mathios Rigas; CEO of Capricorn Energy, Simon Thomson; CEO of Methanex, Rich Sumner; CEO of HELLENiQ ENERGY, Andreas Shiamishis; CEO of ThyssenKrupp, Dr. Cord Landsmann; Executive President, UEG and CEO of Kuwait Energy, Song Yu; Vice President of Global Exploration at ExxonMobil, John Ardill; Minister of Energy and Natural Resources of Republic of Djibouti, His Excellency Honourable Yonis Ali Guedi; Minister of Petroleum and Energies, Senegal, Her Excellency Dr Aissatou Sophie Gladima; CEO of Sonatrach, Toufik Hakkar; Secretary General of Union for the Mediterranean (UfM), Nasser Kamel; and President, Energy of Bechtel, Paul Marsden. The Finance and Investment in Energy Conference returns, bringing global investors, industry leaders, and financial and economic experts. The conference will address stimulating industry growth and transformation.  Panelists will examine forward-looking partnership models for the new energy investment landscape, balancing ESG with energy security and net-zero targets.  Plus, a look at the implications of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on oil and gas investment markets.  To date, confirmed speakers include President of MEDREG, Abdellatif Bardach; CEO and Head of E&P Business Unit at Hellenic Petroleum Upstream, Anastasios Vlassopoulos; CFO of Dragon Oil, Ahmad Ali BinObood; Executive Director and Chief Investment Officer of Africa Finance Corporation, Sameh Shenouda; Vice President and Group Chief Financial Officer of Elsewedy Electric Group, Sherif El Zeiny; Managing Director – Africa Energy Investments Corporation, African Petroleum Producers’ Organization (APPO), Zakaria Dosso; and Director of Exploration and Research Innovations, National Authority of Petroleum and Minerals (ANPM), Mateus da Costa. The Equality in Energy Conference hosts a full day of sessions defining the workforce and workplace of the future, championing equality, diversity and inclusion.  Organisational change management and inclusion and diversity specialists to lead the conversation on how the industry is creating equal, diverse and inclusive workforces and workplaces of the future to deliver sustainable low-carbon business models. To date, confirmed speakers include Chief Human Resources Officer of Thyssenkrupp Industrial Solutions AG, Walter Schön; Chief Sustainability Officer of Elsewedy Electric, Manal Hassan; Group Director of Energy Policy and International Affairs, Hellenic Petroleum, Liana Gouta; Executive Vice President, People, Communications & Transformation at Baker Hughes, Deanna Jones; Senior Vice President Oman, UAE, Iraq and North Africa at Worley, Amru Alabidi; Vice President, Human Resources of Apache, Brandy Jones; President, Automation Solutions, Middle East & Africa (MEA) at Emerson, Vidya Ramnath; and Vice President, Customer Satisfaction & Quality of Schneider Electric, Manal Messiha. With an ever-increasing focus on sustainability, EGYPS 2023 hosts its Sustainability in Energy Conference with an agenda set to address the rise of CSR, ESG and HSE across the industry.  Bringing together global energy leaders, sustainability and HSE experts to explore how oil and gas operators are integrating sustainability practices into their business models and workplaces ensuring a positive impact on the planet, their employees, and the communities in which they operate.  To date, confirmed speakers include Chief Sustainability Officer of Baker Hughes Allyson Book; Vice President of Environment, Health and Safety at Apache, Jessica Jackson; COO of Capricorn Energy, Paul Mayland; Group Senior Vice President Sector Lead Upstream, Midstream, LNG at Worley, Jim Lenton; and Vice President Socioeconomic Development at TotalEnergies, Laila Chemane-Chilemba. Spanning the entire oil, gas and energy value chain, the EGYPS Technical Conference has been created from a global industry-wide call for papers campaign featuring 19 technical categories and a thorough two-stage Technical Committee review, comprising over 80 industry specialists.  Across the three days of EGYPS, over 180 technical experts will be speaking in 45 sessions, delivering insights on the latest technical excellence across the world. Driving excellence across the industry, EGYPS 2023 will host two Awards Ceremonies.  Having received an exceptional mix of global and regional entries across eight categories, the Awards Juries selected 30 finalists through a two-stage evaluation process.  In celebrating both winners and finalists, the Sustainability in Energy Awards Ceremony will take place on Tuesday 14 February and the Equality in Energy Awards Ceremony on Wednesday 15 February 2023.  See the category finalists on www.egyps.com

UAE to inject $2bn into solar projects in Zambia

Zambia and the United Arab Emirates have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) during the Abu Dhabi Sustainability Week towards the development of 2 GW of solar energy in the Southern African state. The MoU provides for the establishment of a joint-venture between the UAE’s state-owned entity Masdar and Zambia’s state-utility ZESCO. The project seeks to diversify Zambia’s energy mix after repeated droughts have severely curtailed the country’s production of hydropower. The new joint-venture will target the installation of 2 GW of solar PV power, starting with an initial phase of 500 MW. The Government of Zambia has been committed to solar energy for several years and joined the International Finance Corporation’s Scaling Solar Initiative in 2015. The competitive auction has already resulted in the commissioning of two solar PV plants in 2019: Enel Green Power’s 34 MW Ngonya facility and Neoen’s 54.3 MW Bangweulu facility.