Aviation Transport

CBN palliatives coming for aviation industry

  • NAMA upgrades equipment

The Minister of Aviation, Hadi Sirika, has said following the loss made due to the closure of the airports for about three months,  businesses in the aviation  sector will be given opportunity to access a two-fold palliative from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Ministry of Finance and National Planning.

The minister, who spoke in Abuja, yesterday explained that the ministry was working on a two-prong palliative.

“There are ones that we are organising through Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and that one is not for airlines alone. It is for the aviation industry, which includes travel agents, ground handling, catering, and of course, the agencies.

“So, the palliative is total.We are organising with CBN and it has been approved. They will apply for loan and the loan will be at five percent from 2021.

So, there is a template on how much they will apply for each business in aviation. So, everybody involved in the air economy is being looked out for in these palliatives.

He explained the second form of palliative would be “the one coming from the government through the Ministry of Finance and National Planning”. This, he however revealed, is still being worked out and would be made known “soon”.

Speaking further on the preparedness for flights resumption, the minister emphasised that aides to VIPs would not be allowed into the terminal building.

In a related development,  the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) has procured sophisticated search and rescue equipment to boost its aeronautical search and rescue capability across the airspace.

Its Managing Director, Captain Fola Akinkuotu, who made this known, said the equipment were being distributed among the nation’s rescue coordination centres in Lagos and Kano and Rescue subcentres in Abuja, Port Harcourt, Maiduguri, Enugu, Ilorin and Sokoto.

This includes plotting as well as communication facilities, medical supplies and International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) documents.

According to Akinkuotu, the plotting equipment include workstations for digital plotting and topographical maps for manual plotting.

The communication equipment, he added, include very high frequency (VHF) radios, high frequency (HF) radios, megaphones as well as Search and Rescue dedicated satellite telephones which can work outside a network area.

He listed others to include ICAO documents , IAMSAR Manual Volume 1,2 and 3 as well as Annex 12 Search and Rescue Preparation Manual.

Other items procured include multifunctional photocopiers, laptops, printers, professional torchlights, status boards, computer desktops and personal locator beacons.

Speaking on this development the Managing Director of NAMA Capt. Fola Akinkuotu said the agency took steps to procure the equipment in order enhance its preparedness and efficiency in Search and Rescue coordination in the event of any occurrence, especially given that the airports were about to be reopened to commercial activities.

“For instance the workstations which came with software applications for digital and faster plotting will aid our personnel in precisely locating where an incident or accident occurred,” he said.

Akinkuotu also revealed that in addition to the facility upgrade, the agency recently recruited experienced Search Mission Coordinators to be on 24 hours watch at both the Rescue Coordination Centers and Rescue Subcenters, saying that dedicated telephone numbers and email addresses of the above Search and Rescue centers have been published in the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP).

“So, having beefed up the capacity of Search and Rescue unit at the two Rescue Coordination Centers and at the six Rescue Subcenters in the country, NAMA is more prepared than ever before in terms of human capacity as well as equipment upgrade.

“In the last few years the agency has trained different categories of critical personnel both in Nigeria and outside the country in Search and Rescue Coordinator courses in line with ICAO Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs),” the NAMA boss said.

He said: “President Muhammadiu Buhari has approved the hitherto big men especially military men, ministers, NASS members, Judiciary, and governors are culprits in this. All their aides that are not traveling will not be permitted into the terminal building.”

Sirika said his ministry has given approval to Murtala Muhammed International Airport and Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport to commence domestic operations tomorrow.He explained that the approval was given after both airports passed the safety tests.

As part of plans made to curb the spread of COVID-19, the minister also disclosed that the last row in the cabin would be reserved and used as isolation space in case anybody exhibits COVID-19 symptoms while the flight is on.

He explained that cabin staff have been trained to carry out necessary precautions and protocols in case of any emergency.

Also, food or any form of refreshment will no longer be served onboard to reduce the level of contact between passengers and cabin staff.

On the seating arrangement, he said: “To maintain safe flight, civil aviation has ensured that the air within the cabin is filtered and circulated. Once you are in the aircraft, if there is space, we will space it and if there is no space, we will sit normally.

Because the wearing of masks and other protocols are all backed by science to ensure that we are safe, so also, our decision is backed by science and findings.

“Risk of contamination is highly reduced when you are in the cabin. As the cabin air is coming down into the cabin, it washes from up, down to the bottom and we are mostly facing front while sitting. Because we are all facing one direction and the airflow is from up to down and because of that, the chances of the viruses and bacteria gaining way to you are reduced.

“The air will be circulated about 30 to 35 times within one hour. So, it is safe to say that no matter how we sit, from the scientific viewpoint, we are safe in the aircraft cabin.

Apapa Customs facilitates $171.2m export trade in 6 months

The Apapa Command of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), said it generated over $171.142 million ( about N52.369 billion) from export trade and N227.347 billion revenue in six months between January and June 2020. The money, which was generated between January and June 2020 was remitted into Federal Government’s coffers by the Command. Speaking at a press briefing in Lagos, the Area Controller of the Command, Comptroller Muhammed Abba-Kura, said the total amount of the goods exported through Apapa Port was 1.642 million tonnes with Free On Board (FOB) value.

According to him, the exported goods include; agricultural products, mineral resources and steel bars among others. On the revenue, he said there was a steady improvement in revenue collection all through the half of the year except for the month of May, which recorded a decline of about N3.531 billion when compared between year 2019 and 2020. He explained that the command in half year of 2019 collected a total sum of N203.264 billion as Customs duty and others like 7 per cent surcharge, VAT, 1 per cent Comprehensive  Import Supervision Scheme (CISS) among others.He said the N227.3 billion collected between January and June 2020 represents an increase of N24.082 billion or 10.59 per cent compared to the previous year.

Why aviation sector should benefit from N27bn relief fund –NACCIMA group

The Creativity, Hospitality and Tourism Trade (CHT)  Group of the Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce Industry Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA) has said that airlines and relevant stakeholders that suffer severely from the COVID -19 losses should benefit from the N27billion stimulus package earedmarked for the sector.

The group, in a statement, says it welcomes steps taken to reopen the aviation sector, and draws attention to the estimated stimulus package of N27 billion, ear-marked  for the sector. It then  recommended that airlines and relevant stakeholders in the industry who suffer severely from the COVID -19 losses should benefit from that package.

Its Chairman, Aare Segun Phillips and the Director General of NACCIMA, Ambassador Ayo Olukanni, who stated this during review of the steps taken to reopen the aviation sector, explained that the moves would enable domestic air operations commence promptly  in line with the trend in other parts of the  world where airline operations have commenced.

They  stressed that the aviation sector, which  played key role of distribution of essential medical and other equipment as part of the fight against COVID -19 during the lockdown, also  has an equally  important role to play for the gradual reopening of the economy.

Noting the determination of government to float a new National carrier, the association  supported the move, government’s intervention in this specific area  and underscored the need for private sector to play a crucial role in structure of ownership and management  of the carrier.

“NACCIMA is ready to work closely with the Federal Ministry of Aviation,  the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), the Airlines Operators of Nigeria (AON), and other stakeholders, to ensure  the aviation sector comes back stronger as concerted efforts are now being made urgently to  get the airlines flying again and effectively revamp the sector.”

 

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