Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Bashir Jamoh has restated the Agency’s commitment to ensuring effective pollution prevention and control in the Nigerian Maritime domain, in order to continue to create an enabling environment for the sector to thrive.
Dr. Bashir Jamoh who made this assertion while speaking at the 7th meeting of the National Standing Committee on International Oil Pollution Compensation (IOPC) Fund implementation in Nigeria emphasized the Agency’s commitment to the effective implementation of the IOPC Fund regime, by ensuring optimal utilisation of the instrument in the country.
The National Standing Committee on IOPC Fund
The Director General of NIMASA, who was represented by the Agency’s Director Marine Environment Management Department, Mrs. Aishatu A. Jidda, urged all stakeholders to abide by the provisions of all enabling international instruments, as provided for by the International Maritime Organization (IMO), adding that the Convention for Civil Liability for Oil Pollution Damage 1992 and the International Convention on Establishment of an International Fund for Compensation for Oil Damage 1992, which Nigeria is signatory to, remains relevant to the growth and development of the Nigerian maritime sector.
Dr. Bashir Jamoh, the Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), said “Nigeria has domesticated these Conventions and we are qualified to reap the benefits therein. We, at NIMASA, have a register for contributing oil receivers in Nigeria. We urge all stakeholders to play their part to ensure reports emanating from Nigeria are in line with acceptable standards.”
Benefits of being signatory to International Conventions
NIMASA is committed to ensuring Nigerians enjoy all the benefits from being signatory to these International Conventions"
He adds, “It is good we have a record as a contributing oil receiver and because it is our obligation to ensure we give the IOPC Fund, the names of all contributing oil receivers in Nigeria. NIMASA is committed to ensuring Nigerians enjoy all the benefits from being signatory to these International Conventions.”
Dr. Bashir Jamoh reaffirmed the importance of the conventions to Nigeria’s Marine Environment Management. He said the facilitation of domestication, by the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), led to the constitution of the National Standing Committee (NSC) on IOPC Fund, in September 2004 and five other Sub-Committees, in October 2016, with a mandate to ensure seamless implementation of both conventions.
Subcommittees
The five subcommittees include the Sub-Committee on Fish Stock/Fisheries; Sub-Committee on Identification of Receivers of Contributing Oil; Sub-Committee on Compilation of Oil Report; Sub-Committee on Claims Handling and Sub-Committee on Pricing Index.
The objective of the meeting was to deliberate on the resolutions reached at the 6th meeting, including the development of a roadmap on the establishment of a Local Oil Pollution Compensation Fund, by local insurance companies; drawing up national guidelines on fish stock/fisheries, as well as the collation of recent data on Contributing Oil Receivers and Contributing Oil Products imported.
Other resolutions
Other resolutions include drawing up National Guidelines on fish stock/fisheries; collation of recent data on contributing oil receivers, contributing oil products imported, and quantity of product and details of coastal movement of Low Pour Fuel Oils (LPFO) and High Pour Fuel Oils (HPFO) from the refineries and condensates, as well as distribution of COR-1 Forms and carrying out sensitisation programmes.