Showing posts with label Nigeria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nigeria. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 July 2013

Aviation Nigeria

Following the successful signing of the $500 million loan agreement to finance the construction of four new international airport terminals in Nigeria, the aviation ministry has now turned its attention towards the drive to woo foreign investors to buy into the Aerotropolis project.

Addressing the Nigeria-China Investment Forum in Beijing recently, the managing director of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Mr George Uriesi, said the ministry was willing to partner with the Chinese investment community for the development of Aerotropolis in the Nigerian cities of Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt and Kano.

Uriesi said the project holds tremendous promise of good return on investment for any investor, and called on the Chinese investors to take advantage of the huge opportunities which the initiative presents to boost the expansion of their business interest in African.

“We want to partner with you as we develop our aerotropoli in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt and Kano. There is so much that the Chinese companies can do to leverage our drive to position aviation as pivotal to the growth of the Nigerian economy through the airport cities concept, otherwise known as Aerotropolis,” the FAAN MD declared.

Uriesi said Nigeria was poised to take its rightful place in the comity of successful aviation service providing nations of the world through the upgrade of its aviation infrastructure. He added that the ministry wants to establish Nigeria as an aircraft maintenance hub on the African continent and called on Chinese investors to grasp the opportunity and establish maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) facilities in the country.

With a population of over 167 million people and a projected passenger growth of 50 million by 2026, Uriesi said Nigeria is a huge, untapped market waiting to be harnessed by investors with an eye for guaranteed return on investment.

He further spoke of the huge potential which the perishable cargo/fresh produce initiative holds for any investor, stressing that to grow this segment of aviation in Nigeria, about 13 perishable cargo terminals were being constructed across the country.

The Investment Forum was attended by large investment community which expressed readiness to expand its business interests in Nigeria. The forum was the climax of the 3-Day State visit of President Jonathan to China which witnessed the signing of over 15 Agreements and MoUs, including the $500 million loan agreement to finance the construction of four airport terminals in Nigeria.

According to Yakubu Dati, the coordinating general manager, Aviation Parastatals, the intervention of the Nigerian government in the aviation sector, by way of infrastructure, safety and security upgrades as well as human capital development, is repositioning the Nigerian aviation sector as a major player in the continent. 

The signing of the $500 million loan agreement with the Chinese government for the construction of airport terminals is a turning point in Nigeria’s quest to play its leadership role in African aviation.


Construction work on the terminals would soon begin and the funds from the Chinese EXIM Bank, will guarantee its completion on schedule.

Source: Leadership

FAAN Parades Investment Opportunities In Airports

Aviation Nigeria

Following the successful signing of the $500 million loan agreement to finance the construction of four new international airport terminals in Nigeria, the aviation ministry has now turned its attention towards the drive to woo foreign investors to buy into the Aerotropolis project.

Addressing the Nigeria-China Investment Forum in Beijing recently, the managing director of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Mr George Uriesi, said the ministry was willing to partner with the Chinese investment community for the development of Aerotropolis in the Nigerian cities of Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt and Kano.

Uriesi said the project holds tremendous promise of good return on investment for any investor, and called on the Chinese investors to take advantage of the huge opportunities which the initiative presents to boost the expansion of their business interest in African.

“We want to partner with you as we develop our aerotropoli in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt and Kano. There is so much that the Chinese companies can do to leverage our drive to position aviation as pivotal to the growth of the Nigerian economy through the airport cities concept, otherwise known as Aerotropolis,” the FAAN MD declared.

Uriesi said Nigeria was poised to take its rightful place in the comity of successful aviation service providing nations of the world through the upgrade of its aviation infrastructure. He added that the ministry wants to establish Nigeria as an aircraft maintenance hub on the African continent and called on Chinese investors to grasp the opportunity and establish maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) facilities in the country.

With a population of over 167 million people and a projected passenger growth of 50 million by 2026, Uriesi said Nigeria is a huge, untapped market waiting to be harnessed by investors with an eye for guaranteed return on investment.

He further spoke of the huge potential which the perishable cargo/fresh produce initiative holds for any investor, stressing that to grow this segment of aviation in Nigeria, about 13 perishable cargo terminals were being constructed across the country.

The Investment Forum was attended by large investment community which expressed readiness to expand its business interests in Nigeria. The forum was the climax of the 3-Day State visit of President Jonathan to China which witnessed the signing of over 15 Agreements and MoUs, including the $500 million loan agreement to finance the construction of four airport terminals in Nigeria.

According to Yakubu Dati, the coordinating general manager, Aviation Parastatals, the intervention of the Nigerian government in the aviation sector, by way of infrastructure, safety and security upgrades as well as human capital development, is repositioning the Nigerian aviation sector as a major player in the continent. 

The signing of the $500 million loan agreement with the Chinese government for the construction of airport terminals is a turning point in Nigeria’s quest to play its leadership role in African aviation.


Construction work on the terminals would soon begin and the funds from the Chinese EXIM Bank, will guarantee its completion on schedule.

Source: Leadership

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Aviation Nigeria

The Sokoto State Pilgrims’ Welfare Agency has disclosed plans to conduct raffle for Hajj seats. This, according to it, is to ensure fairness in view of the 20 per cent reduction in the number of intending pilgrims from the state.

Chairman of the agency, Alhaji Mukhtari Bello Maigona, said already the agency has held a meeting with all hajj registration officers of local government areas on the issue.

According to him, other measures taken to take care of the reduction in the number of pilgrims, include the exclusion of all those who fail to pay their fares and old timers.

Maigona, who said that only male intending pilgrims would be involved in the raffle draw, adding that reports from all the local government areas indicate that the number of first timers out-number the seats allocated to their respective areas.

He said the raffle draw would commence next Saturday in Kebbe Wurno, Sabon Birni, Tambuwal Gudu and Silame Local Government Areas. According to him, women who are first timers were given automatic consideration.


About 1,300 intending pilgrims from Sokoto were affected by the recent cut in the number of pilgrims to perform this year’s hajj exercise

Sokoto to conduct raffle for Hajj seats

Aviation Nigeria

The Sokoto State Pilgrims’ Welfare Agency has disclosed plans to conduct raffle for Hajj seats. This, according to it, is to ensure fairness in view of the 20 per cent reduction in the number of intending pilgrims from the state.

Chairman of the agency, Alhaji Mukhtari Bello Maigona, said already the agency has held a meeting with all hajj registration officers of local government areas on the issue.

According to him, other measures taken to take care of the reduction in the number of pilgrims, include the exclusion of all those who fail to pay their fares and old timers.

Maigona, who said that only male intending pilgrims would be involved in the raffle draw, adding that reports from all the local government areas indicate that the number of first timers out-number the seats allocated to their respective areas.

He said the raffle draw would commence next Saturday in Kebbe Wurno, Sabon Birni, Tambuwal Gudu and Silame Local Government Areas. According to him, women who are first timers were given automatic consideration.


About 1,300 intending pilgrims from Sokoto were affected by the recent cut in the number of pilgrims to perform this year’s hajj exercise
Aviation Nigeria

Chinese construction giant, China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation, (CCECC) has pledged to deliver the four new International Airport terminals it will be constructing in Nigeria in record time of 20 months.

President of CCECC, Yuan Li who disclosed this when a High-Powered Delegation of Nigerian Government officials paid him a Courtesy/Facility Inspection Visit at the Corporate headquarters of the company in Beijing, said the quality of the work to be done at the airports will be of the highest international standard comparable to similar projects executed by the company in other parts of the world.

Yuan Li said the airport terminals’ construction remains a special project to the company, stressing that the company’s imprimatur of unrivaled excellence would be brought to bear in the building of the terminals in Nigeria.

Responding, Aviation Minister, Princess Stella Adaeze Oduah said she is eagerly looking forward to the signing of the agreement today and the completion of the projects in the next 18-20 months, adding that the desire to have the best for Nigerian airports informed the decision to work with a reputable, world class construction firm like CCECC.

The Minister said she has no iota of doubt in her mind on either the quality of job to be delivered by CCECC or the completion timelines since due diligence was conducted before the Federal government finally settled for CCECC.

When completed, the Minister said the Nigerian International airports would take their rightful place in the world aviation map, and boost Nigeria’s position as the natural hub for commercial aviation business on the African continent. The $500 million loan deal is for the construction of four, brand new International terminals in Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt and Kano.

Also speaking, Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Elder Godsday Orubebe expressed satisfaction that CCECC has been a very active firm in Nigeria, saying he would want to have the company in the East-West and the Oron-Calabar road projects.

He said with the President’s State Visit to China, a new chapter is being opened in the bilateral and economic relationship between the two countries, and expressed the hope that the four international airport projects would be completed in good time.

Speaking further, Yuan Li said CCECC is the biggest Chinese company doing business in Nigeria, with a local staff strength of about 20, 000 and an expatriate quota of 1000 Chinese citizens. He expressed gratitude to President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan and the government of Nigeria for the support given to the company, adding that CCECC wants to establish a special friendship between Nigeria and China.

Responding to concerns raised by another member of the Nigerian delegation and Minister of Transport, Senator Idris Umar that CCECC needs to make a paradigm shift from being A Contractor to an Investor firm in Nigeria, Li said the company has already made that strategic decision and has started investing in Real Estate development. He added that the company intends to expand its investments in Nigeria to include manufacturing (cement), seaports, railways, Highways development, Steel, among st others.

Already, he said the company has finalized plans to incorporate a new firm-CCECC Industries Nigeria Ltd to to prosecute its investment agenda in Nigeria and help develop the industrial sub-sector of the economy, adding that going forward, the company intends to increase the number of indigenous Nigerian employees while reducing the expatriate quota to the barest minimum.

To accomplish this, he said the company has mapped out a scheme to grant scholarships to, and train Nigerian students in technical areas in Chinese Universities to make up for the manpower needs in critical areas like Railway Engineering and Management, amongst others.

He said CCECC also intends to set up a Joint Venture (JV) with the Nigerian government for the operation and maintenance of the railways, and would soon commence construction work for CCECC Plazas in Abuja and Lagos.

In his remarks, Works Minister, Mike Onolemehme said Nigeria and Nigerians were worried that CCECC was not investing in the country, adding that the assurances by Li that the company would begin to invest massively in Nigeria is heart-warming.

He said his Ministry is executing road projects worth over $2billion, with CCECC as a major contractor, and expressed the desire to see the company venture into real investments rather than pure contract execution.

Also speaking, Chairman, Senate Committee on Aviation, Senator Hope Uzodinma said President Jonathan is committed to moving Nigeria to the next level, adding that the National Assembly will give him all necessary support.

Also on the Courtesy Visit was the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Aviation Sector Reforms, Ms Anne Ene-Ita, Vice Chairman, House Committee on Aviation, Hon. Ahmed Rufai Chanchangi, Representative of the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Aviation, Mr Clement Dosunmo, DG NIMET, Dr Anthony Anuforom and MD, NAMA, Mazi Nnamdi Udoh, among others.

CCECC to constuct four International airports in Nigeria

Aviation Nigeria

Chinese construction giant, China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation, (CCECC) has pledged to deliver the four new International Airport terminals it will be constructing in Nigeria in record time of 20 months.

President of CCECC, Yuan Li who disclosed this when a High-Powered Delegation of Nigerian Government officials paid him a Courtesy/Facility Inspection Visit at the Corporate headquarters of the company in Beijing, said the quality of the work to be done at the airports will be of the highest international standard comparable to similar projects executed by the company in other parts of the world.

Yuan Li said the airport terminals’ construction remains a special project to the company, stressing that the company’s imprimatur of unrivaled excellence would be brought to bear in the building of the terminals in Nigeria.

Responding, Aviation Minister, Princess Stella Adaeze Oduah said she is eagerly looking forward to the signing of the agreement today and the completion of the projects in the next 18-20 months, adding that the desire to have the best for Nigerian airports informed the decision to work with a reputable, world class construction firm like CCECC.

The Minister said she has no iota of doubt in her mind on either the quality of job to be delivered by CCECC or the completion timelines since due diligence was conducted before the Federal government finally settled for CCECC.

When completed, the Minister said the Nigerian International airports would take their rightful place in the world aviation map, and boost Nigeria’s position as the natural hub for commercial aviation business on the African continent. The $500 million loan deal is for the construction of four, brand new International terminals in Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt and Kano.

Also speaking, Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Elder Godsday Orubebe expressed satisfaction that CCECC has been a very active firm in Nigeria, saying he would want to have the company in the East-West and the Oron-Calabar road projects.

He said with the President’s State Visit to China, a new chapter is being opened in the bilateral and economic relationship between the two countries, and expressed the hope that the four international airport projects would be completed in good time.

Speaking further, Yuan Li said CCECC is the biggest Chinese company doing business in Nigeria, with a local staff strength of about 20, 000 and an expatriate quota of 1000 Chinese citizens. He expressed gratitude to President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan and the government of Nigeria for the support given to the company, adding that CCECC wants to establish a special friendship between Nigeria and China.

Responding to concerns raised by another member of the Nigerian delegation and Minister of Transport, Senator Idris Umar that CCECC needs to make a paradigm shift from being A Contractor to an Investor firm in Nigeria, Li said the company has already made that strategic decision and has started investing in Real Estate development. He added that the company intends to expand its investments in Nigeria to include manufacturing (cement), seaports, railways, Highways development, Steel, among st others.

Already, he said the company has finalized plans to incorporate a new firm-CCECC Industries Nigeria Ltd to to prosecute its investment agenda in Nigeria and help develop the industrial sub-sector of the economy, adding that going forward, the company intends to increase the number of indigenous Nigerian employees while reducing the expatriate quota to the barest minimum.

To accomplish this, he said the company has mapped out a scheme to grant scholarships to, and train Nigerian students in technical areas in Chinese Universities to make up for the manpower needs in critical areas like Railway Engineering and Management, amongst others.

He said CCECC also intends to set up a Joint Venture (JV) with the Nigerian government for the operation and maintenance of the railways, and would soon commence construction work for CCECC Plazas in Abuja and Lagos.

In his remarks, Works Minister, Mike Onolemehme said Nigeria and Nigerians were worried that CCECC was not investing in the country, adding that the assurances by Li that the company would begin to invest massively in Nigeria is heart-warming.

He said his Ministry is executing road projects worth over $2billion, with CCECC as a major contractor, and expressed the desire to see the company venture into real investments rather than pure contract execution.

Also speaking, Chairman, Senate Committee on Aviation, Senator Hope Uzodinma said President Jonathan is committed to moving Nigeria to the next level, adding that the National Assembly will give him all necessary support.

Also on the Courtesy Visit was the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Aviation Sector Reforms, Ms Anne Ene-Ita, Vice Chairman, House Committee on Aviation, Hon. Ahmed Rufai Chanchangi, Representative of the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Aviation, Mr Clement Dosunmo, DG NIMET, Dr Anthony Anuforom and MD, NAMA, Mazi Nnamdi Udoh, among others.

Friday, 28 June 2013

Aviation Nigeria

Airline operators have began an appeal to the Federal Government for low cost loans which they say will help keep them afloat.

Speaking on the needs of airline operators, the Chief Executive Officer of Overland Airways, Captain Edward Boyo stated that the problems of domestic airline operators include low capacity of funding institutions, which hampers aircraft acquisition and high lending rates to airlines which have created a major challenge for many operators and increasing lease rates.

“The problem that operators have is high financing of aircraft. This is a problem in Nigeria and Africa, generally. We have lower financing costs in Europe and more advanced countries." Boyo said.

He added that the last intervention fund had a good intention from the government, but many airlines did not get the cash.

"The banks that were generous in funding the airlines got into trouble. Even despite the intervention, to show you how deep airlines were in the negative, the intervention fund was not sufficient." He added


Others, according to Boyo, are prohibitive maintenance costs, high import duties and taxes on aircraft parts, which add to operators’s piralling cost.

Airline operators appeal to FG for low cost loans

Aviation Nigeria

Airline operators have began an appeal to the Federal Government for low cost loans which they say will help keep them afloat.

Speaking on the needs of airline operators, the Chief Executive Officer of Overland Airways, Captain Edward Boyo stated that the problems of domestic airline operators include low capacity of funding institutions, which hampers aircraft acquisition and high lending rates to airlines which have created a major challenge for many operators and increasing lease rates.

“The problem that operators have is high financing of aircraft. This is a problem in Nigeria and Africa, generally. We have lower financing costs in Europe and more advanced countries." Boyo said.

He added that the last intervention fund had a good intention from the government, but many airlines did not get the cash.

"The banks that were generous in funding the airlines got into trouble. Even despite the intervention, to show you how deep airlines were in the negative, the intervention fund was not sufficient." He added


Others, according to Boyo, are prohibitive maintenance costs, high import duties and taxes on aircraft parts, which add to operators’s piralling cost.

Thursday, 27 June 2013

Aviation Nigeria

Captain Fola Akinkuotu has been appointed as the new Director General of the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA).

Akinkuotu up until his recent appointment, was the Rector of International Aviation College, Ilorin, and has been a pilot/flight engineer with over 40 years aviation experience.

“The airline industry is not that of immediate profit, but it is a cash cow." Akinkuotu stated while talking to newsmen after his recent appointment.

Describing himself as well as his wealth of experience, the former head of flight operations in Air Nigeria, Akinkuotu said:

“My name is Captain Fola Akinkotun; I am the Rector of International Aviation College, Ilorin, which is the newest aviation college in Nigeria. I have been in the aviation industry most of my life. I will definitely say over 40 years in the industry. I started out as an aircraft engineer and I became a flight engineer and a pilot. I have flown in most of the airlines in Nigeria and I have over 13,000 hours of jet time. I have been in various things; I have been an instructor; a VIP pilot, I flew the Pope in 1997. I have done my bit.”

Akinkuotu was nominated following a recomendation to the Senate by President Goodluck Jonathan as a replacement to the former Director General of the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Dr. Harold Demuren.


The President stated that the action was part of the  recent moves by the Federal Government to restructure the aviation industry. 

Akinkuotu appointed as new NCAA Director General

Aviation Nigeria

Captain Fola Akinkuotu has been appointed as the new Director General of the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA).

Akinkuotu up until his recent appointment, was the Rector of International Aviation College, Ilorin, and has been a pilot/flight engineer with over 40 years aviation experience.

“The airline industry is not that of immediate profit, but it is a cash cow." Akinkuotu stated while talking to newsmen after his recent appointment.

Describing himself as well as his wealth of experience, the former head of flight operations in Air Nigeria, Akinkuotu said:

“My name is Captain Fola Akinkotun; I am the Rector of International Aviation College, Ilorin, which is the newest aviation college in Nigeria. I have been in the aviation industry most of my life. I will definitely say over 40 years in the industry. I started out as an aircraft engineer and I became a flight engineer and a pilot. I have flown in most of the airlines in Nigeria and I have over 13,000 hours of jet time. I have been in various things; I have been an instructor; a VIP pilot, I flew the Pope in 1997. I have done my bit.”

Akinkuotu was nominated following a recomendation to the Senate by President Goodluck Jonathan as a replacement to the former Director General of the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Dr. Harold Demuren.


The President stated that the action was part of the  recent moves by the Federal Government to restructure the aviation industry. 

Thursday, 20 June 2013

Aviation Nigeria

The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has released all outstanding staff promotions, between 2009 and 2012, as part of the Authority’s staff welfare package.

This was made public by the General Manager, Corporate Communications of Aviation parastatals, Mr Yakubu Dati.

The statement said the promotion exercise, cut across all cadres and airports, and was preceded by a screening exercise, which involved written examinations and oral interviews designed to test the capacity of qualified staff in handling the responsibilities of higher office and their grasp of current developments in the industry. 

The Managing Director of FAAN, Mr. George Uriesi, has congratulated all the promoted staff and asked them to see their promotions as a tonic for greater productivity, in line with the transformation agenda of the Federal Government in the aviation industry as well as the Aviation Sector Master Plan, as developed by the Honourable Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah.


Most of the affected staff have expressed gratitude to the management of the Authority for bringing an end to their long wait for the release of the promotion, most of which preceded the present management.

Oustanding staff promotions released by FAAN

Aviation Nigeria

The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has released all outstanding staff promotions, between 2009 and 2012, as part of the Authority’s staff welfare package.

This was made public by the General Manager, Corporate Communications of Aviation parastatals, Mr Yakubu Dati.

The statement said the promotion exercise, cut across all cadres and airports, and was preceded by a screening exercise, which involved written examinations and oral interviews designed to test the capacity of qualified staff in handling the responsibilities of higher office and their grasp of current developments in the industry. 

The Managing Director of FAAN, Mr. George Uriesi, has congratulated all the promoted staff and asked them to see their promotions as a tonic for greater productivity, in line with the transformation agenda of the Federal Government in the aviation industry as well as the Aviation Sector Master Plan, as developed by the Honourable Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah.


Most of the affected staff have expressed gratitude to the management of the Authority for bringing an end to their long wait for the release of the promotion, most of which preceded the present management.

Wednesday, 19 June 2013

Aviation Nigeria

A total of 13 airports have been earmarked to host perishable cargo terminals. This was contained in a statement by the Coordinating General Manager of Aviation Parastatals, Mr. Yakubu Dati.

Yakubu Dati stated that: 

"At present, based on expression of interest from the private sector and State governments, the following cities have been prioritized to host perishable cargo terminals; Abuja, Akure, Calabar, Ilorin, Jalingo, Jos, Kano, Lagos, Makurdi, Minna, Owerri, Port Harcourt and Uyo."

He also added that these, airports which are in proximity to states which can be relied as food baskets will be developed with international standard perishable cargo facilities to enhance their operations.

State governments have also been encouraged to partner with the Federal government to revive smaller airports, particularly for taxi operations, tourism and cargo operations which could benefit domestic and regional economic development.

“This is to enable them key into the over N250 billion naira annual air freight export market out of Africa. Countries like Kenya, South Africa, Benin, Cote d’ivoire, Ghana, Senegal, Ethiopia, Tanzania and Egypt are participating in the trading in commodities such as fruits, fresh fish, vegetables and flowers while Nigeria, which produces these produce in abundance, records zero participation." It read.

Speaking on the decision Datti stated that provision would also be made to create the much needed storage infrastructure in view of the large volume involved and to facilitate the evacuation of agricultural produce to domestic markets, in conformity with international standards.

Dati pointed out that the European Union (EU) is the main market for African exporters, and accounts for more than 40% of total exports, followed by the US with 20%. Intra-regional trade represented only 8% of the total, with South Africa as the leading exporter to the region with 21% of the total.

He added that the development of Economic Free Trade and Export Processing Zones will be targeted alongside cargo airports and agro-allied industrial clusters, based on local opportunities and the state’s competitive and comparative advantage in agriculture production.


The Nigerian aviation sector is establishing closer co-operation with Federal Ministry of Agriculture and State Governments for concerted and strategic focus to this efforts” Datti stated

13 Airports to host cargo terminals

Aviation Nigeria

A total of 13 airports have been earmarked to host perishable cargo terminals. This was contained in a statement by the Coordinating General Manager of Aviation Parastatals, Mr. Yakubu Dati.

Yakubu Dati stated that: 

"At present, based on expression of interest from the private sector and State governments, the following cities have been prioritized to host perishable cargo terminals; Abuja, Akure, Calabar, Ilorin, Jalingo, Jos, Kano, Lagos, Makurdi, Minna, Owerri, Port Harcourt and Uyo."

He also added that these, airports which are in proximity to states which can be relied as food baskets will be developed with international standard perishable cargo facilities to enhance their operations.

State governments have also been encouraged to partner with the Federal government to revive smaller airports, particularly for taxi operations, tourism and cargo operations which could benefit domestic and regional economic development.

“This is to enable them key into the over N250 billion naira annual air freight export market out of Africa. Countries like Kenya, South Africa, Benin, Cote d’ivoire, Ghana, Senegal, Ethiopia, Tanzania and Egypt are participating in the trading in commodities such as fruits, fresh fish, vegetables and flowers while Nigeria, which produces these produce in abundance, records zero participation." It read.

Speaking on the decision Datti stated that provision would also be made to create the much needed storage infrastructure in view of the large volume involved and to facilitate the evacuation of agricultural produce to domestic markets, in conformity with international standards.

Dati pointed out that the European Union (EU) is the main market for African exporters, and accounts for more than 40% of total exports, followed by the US with 20%. Intra-regional trade represented only 8% of the total, with South Africa as the leading exporter to the region with 21% of the total.

He added that the development of Economic Free Trade and Export Processing Zones will be targeted alongside cargo airports and agro-allied industrial clusters, based on local opportunities and the state’s competitive and comparative advantage in agriculture production.


The Nigerian aviation sector is establishing closer co-operation with Federal Ministry of Agriculture and State Governments for concerted and strategic focus to this efforts” Datti stated

Tuesday, 11 June 2013

Aviation Nigeria

Lufthansa Airlines has called on the Nigerian government to improve its open skies policy with foreign airline.

The airlines Managing Director West and Central Africa Mr Claus Becker made this assertion during an award tour for travel agents in Nigeria.

He commended the effort which had been taken to create and implement the recent Aviation Policy and its explicit approach to foreign interests, adding that there was a noticeable opportunities for foreign investment.

Becker said that this would aid in adjusting the economies of demand and supply in the nations aviation market, a reason he pointed out was responsible for the disparity in airline fares across the country, as well as other African nations.

The Director pointed out that the airline had in the past and is still currently fulfilling its  social responsibility to the country through employment and training of Nigerians in airline and aviation technology as well as aviation business.

Becker said that employment was one of the major social responsibility issues supported by the company’s headquarters.

"We have the Memorandum of Understanding to train Nigerian flight attendants and the airline has been having a good relationship with travelling agents in the country" he said.


The Open skies policy was first implemented in the United States of America to liberalize the skies, and provide for seamless operations of air transportation among countries.

Lufthansa urges for improvement in Nigerias Open Skies policy

Aviation Nigeria

Lufthansa Airlines has called on the Nigerian government to improve its open skies policy with foreign airline.

The airlines Managing Director West and Central Africa Mr Claus Becker made this assertion during an award tour for travel agents in Nigeria.

He commended the effort which had been taken to create and implement the recent Aviation Policy and its explicit approach to foreign interests, adding that there was a noticeable opportunities for foreign investment.

Becker said that this would aid in adjusting the economies of demand and supply in the nations aviation market, a reason he pointed out was responsible for the disparity in airline fares across the country, as well as other African nations.

The Director pointed out that the airline had in the past and is still currently fulfilling its  social responsibility to the country through employment and training of Nigerians in airline and aviation technology as well as aviation business.

Becker said that employment was one of the major social responsibility issues supported by the company’s headquarters.

"We have the Memorandum of Understanding to train Nigerian flight attendants and the airline has been having a good relationship with travelling agents in the country" he said.


The Open skies policy was first implemented in the United States of America to liberalize the skies, and provide for seamless operations of air transportation among countries.

Monday, 27 May 2013

Aviation Nigeria


Pilots have been advised to be very cautious and take precaution during flight operations   as violent weather is becoming more frequent within the country’s airspace as the wet season sets in.

The advise was given by the Director General of Nigerian Meteorological Agency, [NIMET] Dr Anthony Anuforom  in an interview with newsmen shortly after delivering an induction lecture organized by the Nigerian Academy of Science.

Dr Anuforom explained that in some locations that the frequency of occurrence of  thunder storms was increasing adding that the rainfall pattern this year would  be similar to that of last year.

“The rainfall pattern this year was going to be similar with that of last year. In terms of what is happening in the air, those things are there because violent weather, extreme weather effect is becoming more and more frequent. In some locations, frequent of occurrence of thunderstorms are increasing and which means that there have to be more precaution on the part of pilots and everybody.”

The NIMET boss however declared that it was a challenge to the agency which required constant watch adding that there was nothing to worry about as the agency has been equipped by the government to give real time weather conditions.

“Fortunately for us government has encouraged us by providing us with equipment we need and to sustain and live with challenge of maintaining it”.

Dr Anuforom revealed that the agency was getting more and more accurate in its prediction as attested to by the fact that the aeronautical metrological service scaled the ISO 001 quality management  audit and that  the agency would continue to render accurate and quality meteorology services to Nigerians.

On the precautions being taken by some state government to avert disaster following this year’s rainfall predictions by NIMET, Dr Anuforom said it was a welcome development that the Governors forum was concerned about the predictions as the forum has written for collaboration with NIMET.

NIMET Cautions Pilots Over Prevalent Violent Weather

Aviation Nigeria


Pilots have been advised to be very cautious and take precaution during flight operations   as violent weather is becoming more frequent within the country’s airspace as the wet season sets in.

The advise was given by the Director General of Nigerian Meteorological Agency, [NIMET] Dr Anthony Anuforom  in an interview with newsmen shortly after delivering an induction lecture organized by the Nigerian Academy of Science.

Dr Anuforom explained that in some locations that the frequency of occurrence of  thunder storms was increasing adding that the rainfall pattern this year would  be similar to that of last year.

“The rainfall pattern this year was going to be similar with that of last year. In terms of what is happening in the air, those things are there because violent weather, extreme weather effect is becoming more and more frequent. In some locations, frequent of occurrence of thunderstorms are increasing and which means that there have to be more precaution on the part of pilots and everybody.”

The NIMET boss however declared that it was a challenge to the agency which required constant watch adding that there was nothing to worry about as the agency has been equipped by the government to give real time weather conditions.

“Fortunately for us government has encouraged us by providing us with equipment we need and to sustain and live with challenge of maintaining it”.

Dr Anuforom revealed that the agency was getting more and more accurate in its prediction as attested to by the fact that the aeronautical metrological service scaled the ISO 001 quality management  audit and that  the agency would continue to render accurate and quality meteorology services to Nigerians.

On the precautions being taken by some state government to avert disaster following this year’s rainfall predictions by NIMET, Dr Anuforom said it was a welcome development that the Governors forum was concerned about the predictions as the forum has written for collaboration with NIMET.

Thursday, 23 May 2013

Aviation Nigeria


Foreign registered private jets have began to opt of out operations in Nigeria with the recent policy by the Federal Government which limits their stay within the country to 15 days.

Aviation authorities say about 20 private jets registered abroad but flying in Nigeria may have left the country in barely one month.

Aviation sources also say the foreign-registered planes have been operating in the country under the auspices of private operators on ad-hoc basis but end up doing commercial business with charter.

A top aviation official said, "Many of the foreign-registered private jets flying illegally in Nigeria have started leaving the country. They are illegal because most of them have been carrying out illegal charter services in the country."

The National Civil Aviation Policy, 2013 was unveiled over three weeks ago with clear cut rules for private jet ownership and operations in the country.

Among other stringent rules, all foreign-registered private jets will no longer be allowed to stay in the country beyond 15 days as recommended by the NCAP.

It, however also states that foreign-registered private jets on special mission in Nigeria will be allowed to stay for 60 days.

The other option for owners of private jets with foreign registration is to de-register them and subsequently register them in Nigeria, according to some industry experts.

"I think what the government is saying is that most of these people should go and de-register their planes and put them on Nigerian registration," an industry CEO, who pleaded not to be named, told our correspondent.

Aviation sources said that about 50 private jets were currently carrying out illegal charter services in the country.

NCAP: Foreign registered jets opt out of operations

Aviation Nigeria


Foreign registered private jets have began to opt of out operations in Nigeria with the recent policy by the Federal Government which limits their stay within the country to 15 days.

Aviation authorities say about 20 private jets registered abroad but flying in Nigeria may have left the country in barely one month.

Aviation sources also say the foreign-registered planes have been operating in the country under the auspices of private operators on ad-hoc basis but end up doing commercial business with charter.

A top aviation official said, "Many of the foreign-registered private jets flying illegally in Nigeria have started leaving the country. They are illegal because most of them have been carrying out illegal charter services in the country."

The National Civil Aviation Policy, 2013 was unveiled over three weeks ago with clear cut rules for private jet ownership and operations in the country.

Among other stringent rules, all foreign-registered private jets will no longer be allowed to stay in the country beyond 15 days as recommended by the NCAP.

It, however also states that foreign-registered private jets on special mission in Nigeria will be allowed to stay for 60 days.

The other option for owners of private jets with foreign registration is to de-register them and subsequently register them in Nigeria, according to some industry experts.

"I think what the government is saying is that most of these people should go and de-register their planes and put them on Nigerian registration," an industry CEO, who pleaded not to be named, told our correspondent.

Aviation sources said that about 50 private jets were currently carrying out illegal charter services in the country.

Monday, 20 May 2013

Aviation Nigeria


Arik Air, is seeking traffic rights and slot allocation from the Brazilian authorities to commence flights into the São Paulo airport, Arik said in a statement.

The statement quoted the Deputy Managing Director of Arik Air, Captain Ado Sanusi to have said the request for traffic rights and slot allocation into the São Paulo Airport is a follow up to the meeting between President Dr Goodluck Jonathan and his Brazillian counterpart for the restoration of air link between the two countries to boost trade relations and cultural ties.

Captain Sanusi said the restoration of direct air link between the two countries as regional leaders in Africa and South America will boost economic relationship, which will be accelerated with direct flights into major cities including Lagos and São Paulo.

Sanusi explained that Arik Air is working round the clock to ensure that within three months all arrangements are concluded for the commencement of flight into Brazil even as the airline will take delivery of more wide body aircraft to boost its long haul and international destinations.

The Arik Air deputy managing director said the carrier considers Brazil an important route for its operations, because it would eliminate the difficulties passengers go through in connecting flights into South America, from either Europe or the Middle East.

He explained that apart from saving passengers travel time, the restoration of direct air link between Nigeria and Brazil will create a robust window for investment opportunities between the two countries for players in the private sector who are seeking closer ties between Africa and South America.

Arik has maintained a readiness to cooperate with the Brazilian authorities in getting approval for the commencement of flight before the commencement of the Nigerian/Brazilian Bi-Commission conference scheduled for August 2013.

Arik to begin Nigeria and Brazil route in August

Aviation Nigeria


Arik Air, is seeking traffic rights and slot allocation from the Brazilian authorities to commence flights into the São Paulo airport, Arik said in a statement.

The statement quoted the Deputy Managing Director of Arik Air, Captain Ado Sanusi to have said the request for traffic rights and slot allocation into the São Paulo Airport is a follow up to the meeting between President Dr Goodluck Jonathan and his Brazillian counterpart for the restoration of air link between the two countries to boost trade relations and cultural ties.

Captain Sanusi said the restoration of direct air link between the two countries as regional leaders in Africa and South America will boost economic relationship, which will be accelerated with direct flights into major cities including Lagos and São Paulo.

Sanusi explained that Arik Air is working round the clock to ensure that within three months all arrangements are concluded for the commencement of flight into Brazil even as the airline will take delivery of more wide body aircraft to boost its long haul and international destinations.

The Arik Air deputy managing director said the carrier considers Brazil an important route for its operations, because it would eliminate the difficulties passengers go through in connecting flights into South America, from either Europe or the Middle East.

He explained that apart from saving passengers travel time, the restoration of direct air link between Nigeria and Brazil will create a robust window for investment opportunities between the two countries for players in the private sector who are seeking closer ties between Africa and South America.

Arik has maintained a readiness to cooperate with the Brazilian authorities in getting approval for the commencement of flight before the commencement of the Nigerian/Brazilian Bi-Commission conference scheduled for August 2013.

Thursday, 9 May 2013

Aviation Nigeria

In recent years, an assortment of executive jets, helicopters and other private aircraft have appeared at airports across Nigeria. But the causes and consequences of this aviation trend are not quite as obvious as they might seem. Nigeria’s commercial airlines generally remain in a parlous state, while the country’s airline sector is perhaps among Africa’s most underdeveloped. Last year’s Dana Air crash in Lagos, which killed 163 people, forced the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) to suspend Dana’s operating licence. Just a few months later, Air Nigeria, a larger airline owned by billionaire Jimoh Ibrahim, collapsed under an unsustainable debt burden.

Between them, the two airlines handled about a third of Nigeria’s commercial air traffic, so their disappearance decimated seat capacity throughout the country. Indeed, by December 2012, annualised capacity on Nigeria’s most important air route, the Lagos-Abuja shuttle, was down by 36 percent – one million seats – compared to a year earlier. Capacity to Port Harcourt, a major oil city, fell by 26 percent. In response, Arik Air, Nigeria’s largest surviving carrier, raised its network-wide fares by an average of 50 percent.

This was a private jet operator’s dream. With airlines suddenly unable to satisfy demand, the private jet companies were able to bulk up their fleets and routes. The large number of multinationals in Nigeria – many of whom operate in relatively remote locations when drilling for oil and gas – meant that there was a ready market.

It was hardly surprising that Switzerland’s ExecuJet Aviation Group, which manages the world’s largest fleet of private jets, last year chose Lagos as the location for its first West African facility, over several other potential locations in Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire. “In Nigeria, companies are looking for solutions to get them to places, which are now inaccessible by commercial airlines,” says Ettore Poggi, the company’s Head of African Operations.

Globally, ExecuJet manages more than 150 private jets, from Global Expresses (built by Bombardier) to Legacies (built by Embraer). Owned by wealthy private individuals or companies, the jets are chartered out when not in use, usually for many thousands of dollars per hour. A three-hour round trip flight on a Global Express 6000, for instance, might cost $22,000 (N3.46 million). In a Bombardier Challenger, a oneway trip from Lagos to Dakar would be around $37,000 (N5.8 million) – versus $1,100 (N173,000) for a business-class airline ticket on the same route.

Though the vastly more expensive option, private aviation has numerous advantages in a country like Nigeria. Naturally, the experience is luxurious: private jets typically boast reclining armchairs, minibars, retractable televisions and even beds. “They like our beautiful cabins and the service we provide,” remarks Poggi. The private terminals now appearing in Lagos are wellappointed, so that passengers can shower, eat and relax prior to departure. And most importantly, in a country where scheduled airline flights are so often delayed, private jet users can choose when they want to leave, where they want to fly, and even how quickly they want to get there. Says Poggi: “For time-pressed businesspeople it’s the perfect product.” Whether corporate or private, typical customers buy flight time in pre-purchased blocks of 100 hours, which guarantees them a jet on-demand, at any time of their choosing, anywhere in the world.

Behind the scenes, operators such as ExecuJet take care of everything from the pilots to the flight planning, and also perform the necessary maintenance work – which takes much of the hassle out of jet ownership. Indeed, ExecuJet’s Lagos base has been certified by both Bombardier and Gulfstream as a line maintenance facility, one of only a handful in the whole of Africa. “Just fly,” says the company’s slogan, “we take care of the details.” Those ‘details’ are a big part of business aviation’s appeal to the oil and gas multinationals operating within Nigeria. Unlike the country’s commercial airlines, which are licensed by the NCAA, most private jet operators are licensed by European agencies and are therefore required to operate to European safety and maintenance standards, which satisfies the multinationals’ auditors.

With the private jet market growing apace in the region, ExecuJet is not alone in trying to get a piece of the action. Rivals like VistaJet, also headquartered in Switzerland, are also building their brands. Within four months of establishing its West Africa office in 2010, VistaJet operated 1,200 hours of flights for seven major clients. The company then took the unprecedented decision to deploy three dedicated aircraft to Lagos and Abuja, which are maintained by a team of expatriate engineers seconded from Bombardier. VistaJet founder, Thomas Flohr, says that he envisages Nigeria becoming one of the company’s biggest markets.

VistaJet’s success in Nigeria was specifically mentioned by Flohr as a factor in his recent decision to place the largest private jet order in history, which added 20 planes to his company’s fleet. “From a commodity location somewhere in Siberia, to fly to Abuja, how do you do that without a private jet?” he asked. “People talk about the BRIC [Brazil, Russia, India, China] emerging markets, but I would like to extend that to BRINC. I would like to insert an ‘N’ there because we see Nigeria as a tremendous growth market.”

VistaJet’s achievements in Nigeria rest partly on its partnership with local businessman, Kola Aluko, who is also a member of the company’s advisory board. Aluko claims to have tailored VistaJet’s operation to the Nigerian market’s cultural expectations. “The catering we offer here, for example, is very different from what you have elsewhere, and the behaviour of the crew means they’re respectful to the passengers in a way that’s based on West African customs and Nigerian traditions,” he said.

Other private jet operators to open Nigerian offices in recent years include Britain’s Hangar8, for which Lagos is one of only five global bases.

Many of Nigeria’s wealthiest people have eschewed ad-hoc charters arranged through thirdparty operators like ExecuJet, VistaJet and Hangar8, and instead purchased their own aircraft. In the five years leading up to 2012, 120 private jets worth a total of $6.5 billion were imported into Nigeria, bringing the country’s private jet fleet to about 200 aircraft – almost 10 times the number of planes operated by Arik Air. Recent buyers have been companies including Global Fleet Group, Zenon Oil and Azikel Group, which has stationed its jet in Port Harcourt in an effort to promote that city’s aviation expertise.

But it’s not only businesses that are buying planes: pastors and politicians are among the buyers, too. Last year, the government of Rivers State sanctioned the purchase of a $46 million Bombardier Challenger. Other popular choices include Gulfstreams, Falcons and Legacies. Beyond the cost of the aircraft themselves, annual upkeep, crew and maintenance can cost as much as $1 million per year.

Robert Habjanic, a sales director for Bombardier in Africa, reports that Nigeria is now his firm’s second-largest market, after China.

Sources at the ultra-exclusive Jet Business, a private jet dealership on London’s Hyde Park Corner, say that Nigerians are among their most prolific customers. The firm’s premises contain a full-sized replica of a jet interior, as well as a floor-toceiling computer screen on which clients can design their own aircraft upholstery.

Nicky Oblie, a Ghanaian-born business aviation consultant who focuses on the West Africa region, is enthusiastic about Nigeria’s potential. “There are a lot of rich people and businessmen with limited time on their hands, who can’t find flights on commercial airlines or who don’t want to be tied to an airline’s inflexible schedule,” he says. “So they fly privately. Now that the oil and gas companies are moving into Ghana and Sierra Leone, there’s a real opportunity here for Nigeria to establish a lead in this market. If private jets arrive in Nigeria, auxiliary businesses like maintenance shops will arrive too. Nigeria can become the region’s principal player.”

As Oblie points out, this is already happening. Private jets need regular maintenance, so several Nigerian-owned support facilities have opened in Lagos. One of them, Evergreen Apple, is headquartered near Lagos’ bustling Ikorodu Road and was the first such company to open a fixed operating base at Lagos Airport. The base measure 15,000 square metres and offers an accredited maintenance facility, in partnership with an American engineering firm. As well as building the skills of local engineers, the base makes Lagos an attractive destination for private jets from across the region, which no longer need to go as far as South Africa, Dubai or Europe for scheduled maintenance. Today, private jets from Ghana, Cameroon, Congo, Sierra Leone and Cote d’Ivoire can all be seen on the apron at Lagos Airport.

But Nigeria’s federal government has misgivings. Little treasury revenue has been raised from the $6.5 billion spent on private jets by the Nigerian elite, as most planes were purchased through shell companies based in offshore tax havens. The proliferation of private jets has also unquestionably weakened the commercial aviation sector, which the government is keen to reinvigorate but whose profitability depends on lucrative business traffic. In January, the Special Assistant to the Ministry of Aviation revealed that the government had temporarily banned private jet imports, pending a ministerial review. Affected parties may include Dazair, Skypower Express, and Bishop David Oyedepo of the Living Faith Church, all of whom currently have private jets on order. More significantly, the ban is likely to affect Nigeria’s growing band of auxiliary service outfits, like Evergreen Apple, which expects to see income dip as a result. “We’re extremely disappointed. We think the ban is totally unjustified,” said one source at the company, on condition of anonymity. “Aviation maintenance and safety is an area in which Nigeria has traditionally lagged its neighbours, so the government should be encouraging our work, not damaging it by banning our customers.”

Even so, Oblie sees the latest developments as another boon for the private jet operators who charter out their own jets. They remain unaffected by the government’s manoeuvre since technically they do not ‘import’ their aircraft. “Companies like VistaJet can expect to see meteoric growth,” he says. “They can target the mining, drilling and oil prospecting companies and also branch out regionally to other countries where airlines perhaps aren’t quite as reliable as passengers might like them to be.”

Indeed, private jets are proliferating across Africa. Afrijet, a Libreville-based group founded in 2004 by Gabonese private investors, offers private jet charters around central Africa, while Greece’s Gainjet proposes a concerted push for market share in the east. Together with ExecuJet and 16 other suppliers, they formed the African Business Aviation Association (AFBAA) in 1012, in order to create a unified industry voice. In an interview, AFBAA’s newly appointed chairman, Tarek Ragheb, described the continent as a vast, untapped business aviation market. “There are few railways, there are few roads and certainly the infrastructure is poor. The best way to get around is through the air, and the best way for an entrepreneur, government official or businessman to get around is through private jets,” he said. AFBAA has plans for an annual conference circuit that would tour Africa, modelled on the events that NBAA and EBACE, business aviation associations for North America and Europe respectively, organise in their own continents.

But of all Africa’s business aviation markets, none are as big as Nigeria’s. The country has surpassed South Africa as foreign operators race to establish premises in Lagos, and as wealthy Nigerians continue to order more aircraft. Growth is unlikely to slow soon. Auxiliary operations like maintenance and training facilities should continue to thrive and with luck, Nigeria’s federal government will also succeed in extracting more revenue from this booming trade. Meanwhile, Nigeria’s highest flyers will continue to fly high.

Feature: Of Private Jet Owners And Nigeria’s Aviation Industry

Aviation Nigeria

In recent years, an assortment of executive jets, helicopters and other private aircraft have appeared at airports across Nigeria. But the causes and consequences of this aviation trend are not quite as obvious as they might seem. Nigeria’s commercial airlines generally remain in a parlous state, while the country’s airline sector is perhaps among Africa’s most underdeveloped. Last year’s Dana Air crash in Lagos, which killed 163 people, forced the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) to suspend Dana’s operating licence. Just a few months later, Air Nigeria, a larger airline owned by billionaire Jimoh Ibrahim, collapsed under an unsustainable debt burden.

Between them, the two airlines handled about a third of Nigeria’s commercial air traffic, so their disappearance decimated seat capacity throughout the country. Indeed, by December 2012, annualised capacity on Nigeria’s most important air route, the Lagos-Abuja shuttle, was down by 36 percent – one million seats – compared to a year earlier. Capacity to Port Harcourt, a major oil city, fell by 26 percent. In response, Arik Air, Nigeria’s largest surviving carrier, raised its network-wide fares by an average of 50 percent.

This was a private jet operator’s dream. With airlines suddenly unable to satisfy demand, the private jet companies were able to bulk up their fleets and routes. The large number of multinationals in Nigeria – many of whom operate in relatively remote locations when drilling for oil and gas – meant that there was a ready market.

It was hardly surprising that Switzerland’s ExecuJet Aviation Group, which manages the world’s largest fleet of private jets, last year chose Lagos as the location for its first West African facility, over several other potential locations in Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire. “In Nigeria, companies are looking for solutions to get them to places, which are now inaccessible by commercial airlines,” says Ettore Poggi, the company’s Head of African Operations.

Globally, ExecuJet manages more than 150 private jets, from Global Expresses (built by Bombardier) to Legacies (built by Embraer). Owned by wealthy private individuals or companies, the jets are chartered out when not in use, usually for many thousands of dollars per hour. A three-hour round trip flight on a Global Express 6000, for instance, might cost $22,000 (N3.46 million). In a Bombardier Challenger, a oneway trip from Lagos to Dakar would be around $37,000 (N5.8 million) – versus $1,100 (N173,000) for a business-class airline ticket on the same route.

Though the vastly more expensive option, private aviation has numerous advantages in a country like Nigeria. Naturally, the experience is luxurious: private jets typically boast reclining armchairs, minibars, retractable televisions and even beds. “They like our beautiful cabins and the service we provide,” remarks Poggi. The private terminals now appearing in Lagos are wellappointed, so that passengers can shower, eat and relax prior to departure. And most importantly, in a country where scheduled airline flights are so often delayed, private jet users can choose when they want to leave, where they want to fly, and even how quickly they want to get there. Says Poggi: “For time-pressed businesspeople it’s the perfect product.” Whether corporate or private, typical customers buy flight time in pre-purchased blocks of 100 hours, which guarantees them a jet on-demand, at any time of their choosing, anywhere in the world.

Behind the scenes, operators such as ExecuJet take care of everything from the pilots to the flight planning, and also perform the necessary maintenance work – which takes much of the hassle out of jet ownership. Indeed, ExecuJet’s Lagos base has been certified by both Bombardier and Gulfstream as a line maintenance facility, one of only a handful in the whole of Africa. “Just fly,” says the company’s slogan, “we take care of the details.” Those ‘details’ are a big part of business aviation’s appeal to the oil and gas multinationals operating within Nigeria. Unlike the country’s commercial airlines, which are licensed by the NCAA, most private jet operators are licensed by European agencies and are therefore required to operate to European safety and maintenance standards, which satisfies the multinationals’ auditors.

With the private jet market growing apace in the region, ExecuJet is not alone in trying to get a piece of the action. Rivals like VistaJet, also headquartered in Switzerland, are also building their brands. Within four months of establishing its West Africa office in 2010, VistaJet operated 1,200 hours of flights for seven major clients. The company then took the unprecedented decision to deploy three dedicated aircraft to Lagos and Abuja, which are maintained by a team of expatriate engineers seconded from Bombardier. VistaJet founder, Thomas Flohr, says that he envisages Nigeria becoming one of the company’s biggest markets.

VistaJet’s success in Nigeria was specifically mentioned by Flohr as a factor in his recent decision to place the largest private jet order in history, which added 20 planes to his company’s fleet. “From a commodity location somewhere in Siberia, to fly to Abuja, how do you do that without a private jet?” he asked. “People talk about the BRIC [Brazil, Russia, India, China] emerging markets, but I would like to extend that to BRINC. I would like to insert an ‘N’ there because we see Nigeria as a tremendous growth market.”

VistaJet’s achievements in Nigeria rest partly on its partnership with local businessman, Kola Aluko, who is also a member of the company’s advisory board. Aluko claims to have tailored VistaJet’s operation to the Nigerian market’s cultural expectations. “The catering we offer here, for example, is very different from what you have elsewhere, and the behaviour of the crew means they’re respectful to the passengers in a way that’s based on West African customs and Nigerian traditions,” he said.

Other private jet operators to open Nigerian offices in recent years include Britain’s Hangar8, for which Lagos is one of only five global bases.

Many of Nigeria’s wealthiest people have eschewed ad-hoc charters arranged through thirdparty operators like ExecuJet, VistaJet and Hangar8, and instead purchased their own aircraft. In the five years leading up to 2012, 120 private jets worth a total of $6.5 billion were imported into Nigeria, bringing the country’s private jet fleet to about 200 aircraft – almost 10 times the number of planes operated by Arik Air. Recent buyers have been companies including Global Fleet Group, Zenon Oil and Azikel Group, which has stationed its jet in Port Harcourt in an effort to promote that city’s aviation expertise.

But it’s not only businesses that are buying planes: pastors and politicians are among the buyers, too. Last year, the government of Rivers State sanctioned the purchase of a $46 million Bombardier Challenger. Other popular choices include Gulfstreams, Falcons and Legacies. Beyond the cost of the aircraft themselves, annual upkeep, crew and maintenance can cost as much as $1 million per year.

Robert Habjanic, a sales director for Bombardier in Africa, reports that Nigeria is now his firm’s second-largest market, after China.

Sources at the ultra-exclusive Jet Business, a private jet dealership on London’s Hyde Park Corner, say that Nigerians are among their most prolific customers. The firm’s premises contain a full-sized replica of a jet interior, as well as a floor-toceiling computer screen on which clients can design their own aircraft upholstery.

Nicky Oblie, a Ghanaian-born business aviation consultant who focuses on the West Africa region, is enthusiastic about Nigeria’s potential. “There are a lot of rich people and businessmen with limited time on their hands, who can’t find flights on commercial airlines or who don’t want to be tied to an airline’s inflexible schedule,” he says. “So they fly privately. Now that the oil and gas companies are moving into Ghana and Sierra Leone, there’s a real opportunity here for Nigeria to establish a lead in this market. If private jets arrive in Nigeria, auxiliary businesses like maintenance shops will arrive too. Nigeria can become the region’s principal player.”

As Oblie points out, this is already happening. Private jets need regular maintenance, so several Nigerian-owned support facilities have opened in Lagos. One of them, Evergreen Apple, is headquartered near Lagos’ bustling Ikorodu Road and was the first such company to open a fixed operating base at Lagos Airport. The base measure 15,000 square metres and offers an accredited maintenance facility, in partnership with an American engineering firm. As well as building the skills of local engineers, the base makes Lagos an attractive destination for private jets from across the region, which no longer need to go as far as South Africa, Dubai or Europe for scheduled maintenance. Today, private jets from Ghana, Cameroon, Congo, Sierra Leone and Cote d’Ivoire can all be seen on the apron at Lagos Airport.

But Nigeria’s federal government has misgivings. Little treasury revenue has been raised from the $6.5 billion spent on private jets by the Nigerian elite, as most planes were purchased through shell companies based in offshore tax havens. The proliferation of private jets has also unquestionably weakened the commercial aviation sector, which the government is keen to reinvigorate but whose profitability depends on lucrative business traffic. In January, the Special Assistant to the Ministry of Aviation revealed that the government had temporarily banned private jet imports, pending a ministerial review. Affected parties may include Dazair, Skypower Express, and Bishop David Oyedepo of the Living Faith Church, all of whom currently have private jets on order. More significantly, the ban is likely to affect Nigeria’s growing band of auxiliary service outfits, like Evergreen Apple, which expects to see income dip as a result. “We’re extremely disappointed. We think the ban is totally unjustified,” said one source at the company, on condition of anonymity. “Aviation maintenance and safety is an area in which Nigeria has traditionally lagged its neighbours, so the government should be encouraging our work, not damaging it by banning our customers.”

Even so, Oblie sees the latest developments as another boon for the private jet operators who charter out their own jets. They remain unaffected by the government’s manoeuvre since technically they do not ‘import’ their aircraft. “Companies like VistaJet can expect to see meteoric growth,” he says. “They can target the mining, drilling and oil prospecting companies and also branch out regionally to other countries where airlines perhaps aren’t quite as reliable as passengers might like them to be.”

Indeed, private jets are proliferating across Africa. Afrijet, a Libreville-based group founded in 2004 by Gabonese private investors, offers private jet charters around central Africa, while Greece’s Gainjet proposes a concerted push for market share in the east. Together with ExecuJet and 16 other suppliers, they formed the African Business Aviation Association (AFBAA) in 1012, in order to create a unified industry voice. In an interview, AFBAA’s newly appointed chairman, Tarek Ragheb, described the continent as a vast, untapped business aviation market. “There are few railways, there are few roads and certainly the infrastructure is poor. The best way to get around is through the air, and the best way for an entrepreneur, government official or businessman to get around is through private jets,” he said. AFBAA has plans for an annual conference circuit that would tour Africa, modelled on the events that NBAA and EBACE, business aviation associations for North America and Europe respectively, organise in their own continents.

But of all Africa’s business aviation markets, none are as big as Nigeria’s. The country has surpassed South Africa as foreign operators race to establish premises in Lagos, and as wealthy Nigerians continue to order more aircraft. Growth is unlikely to slow soon. Auxiliary operations like maintenance and training facilities should continue to thrive and with luck, Nigeria’s federal government will also succeed in extracting more revenue from this booming trade. Meanwhile, Nigeria’s highest flyers will continue to fly high.

Wednesday, 3 April 2013

Aviation Nigeria


Aviation stakeholders have raised concerns on the circumstance that may face foreign airlines flying into Nigeria as they are yet to have their summer schedule approved, five days after the commencement of the summer season on March 28, 2013.

Aviation experts opine that the international position would deem flights into other countries without getting approval for its winter and summer seasonal schedules from the host countries, would be considered illegal.

The development has also generated concerns among the foreign airlines’ executives and top officials of the Ministry of Aviation, who felt that any further delay might force some of the carriers to consider halting their flight operations into the country so as not to find themselves in an unpleasant situation.

Reports indicate that most of the airlines’ winter schedules expired between March 28 and 31, as regularly placed on each carrier’s schedule.

The approval is usually given days ahead of the expiration of the current season’s schedule in order to avoid a situation where an airline has to ground its flight operations while waiting for approval.
Although most of the foreign airlines have begun implementing their winter schedule, which has yet to be approved by the Ministry of Aviation, a number of them are, however, worried that the delay in the approval process may put them in an unpleasant situation.

A country manager of one of the foreign airlines, who spoke to our correspondent in confidence because of the sensitive nature of the subject said, “This has not happened in a very long time. So, that is why we are worried. The approval comes usually days ahead of the commencement of the new season’s schedule.”

The financial implications of not getting approval for the schedule before flying is that in the event of a crash or major accident, insurance companies can refuse to pay compensation to the affected airline and its passengers as such flights would be regarded as an illegal.

Approval is conventionally issued by the Minister of Aviation on the recommendations of the Schedule Approval Committee comprising officials from the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria and Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, and the Ministry of Aviation.

Special Assistant (Media) to the Minister of Aviation, Mr. Joe Obi, said the Minister of Aviation had not refused to approve the foreign airlines’ summer schedules, adding that they would be approved as soon as possible.

Foreign airlines awaiting winter approval for flights into Nigeria

Aviation Nigeria


Aviation stakeholders have raised concerns on the circumstance that may face foreign airlines flying into Nigeria as they are yet to have their summer schedule approved, five days after the commencement of the summer season on March 28, 2013.

Aviation experts opine that the international position would deem flights into other countries without getting approval for its winter and summer seasonal schedules from the host countries, would be considered illegal.

The development has also generated concerns among the foreign airlines’ executives and top officials of the Ministry of Aviation, who felt that any further delay might force some of the carriers to consider halting their flight operations into the country so as not to find themselves in an unpleasant situation.

Reports indicate that most of the airlines’ winter schedules expired between March 28 and 31, as regularly placed on each carrier’s schedule.

The approval is usually given days ahead of the expiration of the current season’s schedule in order to avoid a situation where an airline has to ground its flight operations while waiting for approval.
Although most of the foreign airlines have begun implementing their winter schedule, which has yet to be approved by the Ministry of Aviation, a number of them are, however, worried that the delay in the approval process may put them in an unpleasant situation.

A country manager of one of the foreign airlines, who spoke to our correspondent in confidence because of the sensitive nature of the subject said, “This has not happened in a very long time. So, that is why we are worried. The approval comes usually days ahead of the commencement of the new season’s schedule.”

The financial implications of not getting approval for the schedule before flying is that in the event of a crash or major accident, insurance companies can refuse to pay compensation to the affected airline and its passengers as such flights would be regarded as an illegal.

Approval is conventionally issued by the Minister of Aviation on the recommendations of the Schedule Approval Committee comprising officials from the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria and Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, and the Ministry of Aviation.

Special Assistant (Media) to the Minister of Aviation, Mr. Joe Obi, said the Minister of Aviation had not refused to approve the foreign airlines’ summer schedules, adding that they would be approved as soon as possible.

Tuesday, 5 March 2013


Aviation Nigeria

The Margaret Ekpo International Airport, Calabar, in Cross River State has been designated as one of the nation’s Agro-Perishable cargo airport in the country in line with the Aviation Ministers Cargo Perishable Initiative.

The Director Cargo Development, Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Mr Roland Ofule, disclosed this to the Acting governor of the state during a courtesy call at the governor’s office in Calabar.

Mr Ofule remarked that over the years, local farmers face the challenge of access to markets, reasoning that the initiative will allay their fears and encourage them to be more productive thereby boosting the economy of the state and nation at large and stressed on the need for farmers to be properly educated on this initiative.

The Acting governor of Cross River, Mr. Efiok Cobham appreciative of the choice of Calabar Airport for driving the Federal Governments transformation agenda.

He contended that, this would enable aircraft with bigger tonnage ply the airport without hitch as well as enable the airport function optimally to meet up its new status as a cargo airport.

At some farms, to find out farmers view about the initiative, it came to them as a surprise, after much explanations, it was glaring that they can’t wait to have all their farm produce especially the perishable ones being sold right there in their farms after cultivation.

Calabar Airport designated for Agro-Perishable cargo terminal


Aviation Nigeria

The Margaret Ekpo International Airport, Calabar, in Cross River State has been designated as one of the nation’s Agro-Perishable cargo airport in the country in line with the Aviation Ministers Cargo Perishable Initiative.

The Director Cargo Development, Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Mr Roland Ofule, disclosed this to the Acting governor of the state during a courtesy call at the governor’s office in Calabar.

Mr Ofule remarked that over the years, local farmers face the challenge of access to markets, reasoning that the initiative will allay their fears and encourage them to be more productive thereby boosting the economy of the state and nation at large and stressed on the need for farmers to be properly educated on this initiative.

The Acting governor of Cross River, Mr. Efiok Cobham appreciative of the choice of Calabar Airport for driving the Federal Governments transformation agenda.

He contended that, this would enable aircraft with bigger tonnage ply the airport without hitch as well as enable the airport function optimally to meet up its new status as a cargo airport.

At some farms, to find out farmers view about the initiative, it came to them as a surprise, after much explanations, it was glaring that they can’t wait to have all their farm produce especially the perishable ones being sold right there in their farms after cultivation.

Monday, 21 January 2013

Aviation Nigeria


The Federal Government may suspend the importation of private airplanes, helicopters and other lighter aircraft into the country. The Special Assistant (Media) to the Minister of Aviation, Mr. Joe Obi, has confirmed this development.

The suspension, which is yet to officially take effect was scheduled a few months ago, and will continue until the formulation of a new policy on importation of private jets and helicopters.

A new policy, currently being drafted by the ministry, would take into cognizance several issues regarding the importation of private jets into the country. The Aviation ministry is yet to determine when work on the policy would be completed and, as such, there was no definite date for the removal of the suspension.

Obi, however, stressed that the suspension did not affect the importation of commercial and passenger jets being used by domestic airlines.

He said, “The domestic airlines are free to bring in their normal passenger planes. But the suspension only affects private jets. The government is trying to work on a new policy for the private jet.

“You will agree with me that the current policy on private jets is old, and there is a need to renew it. Pending that renewal, all applications for importation for now will have to hold on.”

Obi also said, “There is no definite time for now. It depends on when the new policy is completed. Government is working on the policy. When it is completed, every body will be informed.”
Several applications for the importation of private jets, helicopters and other lighter aircraft had been piling up at the Aviation ministry for over four months now.

The Nigerian private jet market has been one of the fastest growing in the world lately. The sector has been witnessing tremendous growth since 2007.

However, recent developments such as the crash involving the Governor of Taraba State, Mr. Danbaba Suntai, led the Aviation Minister, to begin plans to properly regulate private jet and helicopter operations.

FG to regulate Importation Of Private Jets

Aviation Nigeria


The Federal Government may suspend the importation of private airplanes, helicopters and other lighter aircraft into the country. The Special Assistant (Media) to the Minister of Aviation, Mr. Joe Obi, has confirmed this development.

The suspension, which is yet to officially take effect was scheduled a few months ago, and will continue until the formulation of a new policy on importation of private jets and helicopters.

A new policy, currently being drafted by the ministry, would take into cognizance several issues regarding the importation of private jets into the country. The Aviation ministry is yet to determine when work on the policy would be completed and, as such, there was no definite date for the removal of the suspension.

Obi, however, stressed that the suspension did not affect the importation of commercial and passenger jets being used by domestic airlines.

He said, “The domestic airlines are free to bring in their normal passenger planes. But the suspension only affects private jets. The government is trying to work on a new policy for the private jet.

“You will agree with me that the current policy on private jets is old, and there is a need to renew it. Pending that renewal, all applications for importation for now will have to hold on.”

Obi also said, “There is no definite time for now. It depends on when the new policy is completed. Government is working on the policy. When it is completed, every body will be informed.”
Several applications for the importation of private jets, helicopters and other lighter aircraft had been piling up at the Aviation ministry for over four months now.

The Nigerian private jet market has been one of the fastest growing in the world lately. The sector has been witnessing tremendous growth since 2007.

However, recent developments such as the crash involving the Governor of Taraba State, Mr. Danbaba Suntai, led the Aviation Minister, to begin plans to properly regulate private jet and helicopter operations.

Tuesday, 15 January 2013


Aviation Nigeria

The Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria(FAAN) has responded to claims regarding a land dispute between the Agency and concessionaires.

This was made through a press statement signed by the General Manager Corporate Communications, Yakubu Dati.

Dati stated that the controversial property which is being used as a temporary car park at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport is the sole property of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

The statement read: 
" About a decade ago, a concessionaire had requested for land for the development of a hotel and such was granted. However the transaction was subsequently enmeshed in controversy which resulted in arbitration.
The arbitrator awarded damages to the said concessionaire while the land remained FAAN property.

The concessionaire cannot therefore exercise legal right over the land but can pursue their interest i.e. monetary compensation as contained in the arbitrary award."

The statement is a quick response in the wake of disputes between the agency, and A.I.C Limited a company owned by Chief Harry Akande.

Yakubu Dati reminded the general public that the on-going development around the airport environment is for the general benefit of all and therefore overrides any personal or group interest.

FAAN maintains its ownership on Airport land dispute.


Aviation Nigeria

The Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria(FAAN) has responded to claims regarding a land dispute between the Agency and concessionaires.

This was made through a press statement signed by the General Manager Corporate Communications, Yakubu Dati.

Dati stated that the controversial property which is being used as a temporary car park at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport is the sole property of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

The statement read: 
" About a decade ago, a concessionaire had requested for land for the development of a hotel and such was granted. However the transaction was subsequently enmeshed in controversy which resulted in arbitration.
The arbitrator awarded damages to the said concessionaire while the land remained FAAN property.

The concessionaire cannot therefore exercise legal right over the land but can pursue their interest i.e. monetary compensation as contained in the arbitrary award."

The statement is a quick response in the wake of disputes between the agency, and A.I.C Limited a company owned by Chief Harry Akande.

Yakubu Dati reminded the general public that the on-going development around the airport environment is for the general benefit of all and therefore overrides any personal or group interest.

Saturday, 12 January 2013


Aviation Nigeria.

Arik Air and Air Côte d’Ivoire are exploring the possibility of a partnership to resolve the challenges of intra-Africa connections.

The officials of Air Côte d’Ivoire, the new carrier in the French-speaking West African country, said they visited Arik Air to seek ways of exploring mutual partnership between the two carriers to resolve the problem intra Africa connections. The officials led by General Coulibaly Abdoulaye, who is chairman of the Air Côte d’Ivoire explained that the visit to Arik Air has afforded them the opportunity to learn how to run a service driven airline, which would become a model in Africa. He explained that the partnership would also equip the carrier with the strategy of achieving how to build a hub for the southern part of Central Africa, remarking that since the former regional carrier, Air Afrique collapsed, there had been no direct air link between Nigeria and Côte d’Ivoire. He further explained that the best model for building stronger airlines in Africa was through partnership among carriers, insisting that the visit to Arik Air has afforded the officials the window to obtain first-hand experience of running a service oriented airline.

Arik Air has announced various partnerships with West African countries – Leone Airways and Ghana Airways – over the past years, but none of the projects actually materialised, apart from the short-lived Arik Niger.

The Federal Government also appears to be restrictive in allowing other West African carriers to operate into Lagos or Abuja Airport. In recent years, now defunct Air Ivoire and Senegal Airlines were unsuccessful in obtaining landing rights, while Fly540 Ghana, Gambia Bird and Westair Bénin are still awaiting permission to start flights to Nigeria.

Arik Air and Air Côte d’Ivoire may enter partnership


Aviation Nigeria.

Arik Air and Air Côte d’Ivoire are exploring the possibility of a partnership to resolve the challenges of intra-Africa connections.

The officials of Air Côte d’Ivoire, the new carrier in the French-speaking West African country, said they visited Arik Air to seek ways of exploring mutual partnership between the two carriers to resolve the problem intra Africa connections. The officials led by General Coulibaly Abdoulaye, who is chairman of the Air Côte d’Ivoire explained that the visit to Arik Air has afforded them the opportunity to learn how to run a service driven airline, which would become a model in Africa. He explained that the partnership would also equip the carrier with the strategy of achieving how to build a hub for the southern part of Central Africa, remarking that since the former regional carrier, Air Afrique collapsed, there had been no direct air link between Nigeria and Côte d’Ivoire. He further explained that the best model for building stronger airlines in Africa was through partnership among carriers, insisting that the visit to Arik Air has afforded the officials the window to obtain first-hand experience of running a service oriented airline.

Arik Air has announced various partnerships with West African countries – Leone Airways and Ghana Airways – over the past years, but none of the projects actually materialised, apart from the short-lived Arik Niger.

The Federal Government also appears to be restrictive in allowing other West African carriers to operate into Lagos or Abuja Airport. In recent years, now defunct Air Ivoire and Senegal Airlines were unsuccessful in obtaining landing rights, while Fly540 Ghana, Gambia Bird and Westair Bénin are still awaiting permission to start flights to Nigeria.

Friday, 12 October 2012


By Faith Achanya 

A section of the aviation workers union has been accused of using the union to propagate an ethnic agenda directed against the Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah. Part of the attack on the minister was that she was employing people who were of non-Yoruba ethnic stock.But a group, the Middlebelt Vanguard for the Protection of Ethnic Minorities (MVPEM), in a statement, insisted that the minister was actually diluting the dominance of the aviation industry by one ethnic group so as to make available to other Nigerians from other parts of the country opportunities that should readily be available to them. In a Press Conference, yesterday in Jos,  the Coordinators of the group, Dr. James Danklang and Esther Martahot, accused some unscrupulous union officials of threatening the lives of non-Yoruba Nigerians recently employed by the aviation authorities in Lagos. MVPEM accused them of “playing the script of their pay masters who have sworn to derail the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan, especially in the aviation sector, where the Minister of Aviation, is   taking the sector to heights hitherto considered impossible. “The Middlebelt will not fold its hands and watch while the Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah is being lampooned by tribal jingoists for her efforts in affording Nigerians equal opportunity irrespective of religion, tribe or creed.
Courtesy Leadership



Group Condemns Attack On Aviation Minister


By Faith Achanya 

A section of the aviation workers union has been accused of using the union to propagate an ethnic agenda directed against the Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah. Part of the attack on the minister was that she was employing people who were of non-Yoruba ethnic stock.But a group, the Middlebelt Vanguard for the Protection of Ethnic Minorities (MVPEM), in a statement, insisted that the minister was actually diluting the dominance of the aviation industry by one ethnic group so as to make available to other Nigerians from other parts of the country opportunities that should readily be available to them. In a Press Conference, yesterday in Jos,  the Coordinators of the group, Dr. James Danklang and Esther Martahot, accused some unscrupulous union officials of threatening the lives of non-Yoruba Nigerians recently employed by the aviation authorities in Lagos. MVPEM accused them of “playing the script of their pay masters who have sworn to derail the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan, especially in the aviation sector, where the Minister of Aviation, is   taking the sector to heights hitherto considered impossible. “The Middlebelt will not fold its hands and watch while the Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah is being lampooned by tribal jingoists for her efforts in affording Nigerians equal opportunity irrespective of religion, tribe or creed.
Courtesy Leadership



Thursday, 23 August 2012


By Skywatch correspondent.

Any avid news follower of Nigerian news especially news from the aviation sub-sector would have noticed the calculated campaign of calumny that has been drawn up by paid mischief makers to derail the steady but surely revolution that is daily gaining grounds in the aviation industry. However, the pay masters of these faceless individuals and groups are no longer the beneficiaries from the corrupt cartels that have cornered all juicy deals in the aviation sector for several years. Independent investigations have shown that the sponsors of the tirades against the Ministry and the person of the Minister are those whose lobbying prowess has failed in the face of the singular determination to do good by God, country and above all give the much needed honest lease of life –to a sector that remains highly under utilised and remains one of the most important link in the transportation equilibrium of not only Nigeria but sub-saharan Africa and the entire globe.

Never in the history of Nigeria’s aviation has the Ministry come under such barrage of media misrepresentations like the one currently being thrown at the Ministry and the person of the Minister Princess Stella Adaze Oduah.

Every step of the Airport terminal reconstruction has been met with stiff resistant, even from prominent stakeholders, even at a time when the airports didn’t have functional amenities and were not worthy of being the terminals of one of Africa’s most important air routes. It is befuddling to hear aviation professionals say safety first before reconstruction, forgetting that though aviation safety is the singular most important factor in instilling the confidence in air travel, it is equally only a comfortably well equipped airport that can compliment air safety. An airport with safe runways, well demarcated perimeter fence and functional tower facilities, fire service hubs and clinics that can aide in ensuring that such edifice is fit for air travelling amidst optimum safety and comfort.

 As if the paid ghost writers haven’t had enough their pay masters have also told them to attack the process of the bidding of the airport projects, not even the Ministry of aviation’s explanation of the projects being emergency projects in order the fast track the development of the sector has dissuade them from peddling their outright lies and half truths.

The investment drive abroad in search of competent aviation professionals to become big players in Nigeria’s aviation sector was greeted with so much disdain that if not for her patriotic zeal, the attention currently being enjoyed by potential investors wouldn’t have even been thought of. Another much maligned aspect of the Minister’s transformation drive has been the misconception and misrepresentation of the facts about the BASA fund, an interventionist fund meant for the ministry which the minister has said part of it will be channelled towards bequeathing world class airport terminals and other safety facilities at our airports nationwide. 

In fact not even fatal and tragic crashes that characterised the tenure of Prof. Babalola Borishade did the Ministry suffer such negative criticisms and wholesome cynicism. To refresh our minds a bit after Prof. Borishade was replaced on November 2 2006 four days after the crash of ADC Airlines Boeing 737 passenger aircraft, two years later he was later to be arraigned alongside his successor Femi Fani Kayode for their roles in the mismanagement of the 19.5 Billion Naira aviation intervention fund. One of the highlights of this sordid case was when an Austrian executive mentioned during a hearing that they had paid Borishade the sum of 1 Billion Naira in order to acquire the contract for the remodelling of the airports. Yet the aforementioned were not daily staples in our news items 6 years ago.

It is sad that some so-called stakeholders will rather wish for Nigeria’s aviation sector to remain underdeveloped at the expense self interest, it is important that at this critical juncture we are come together to ensure that we have an aviation sector that is amongst one of the best in Africa, the steps are already being taken, its time to rally round the Minister and ensure that the strides currently being made are sustained for the generality of Nigerians and those unborn.

Aviation Industry: Giant strides amidst a season of media denigration


By Skywatch correspondent.

Any avid news follower of Nigerian news especially news from the aviation sub-sector would have noticed the calculated campaign of calumny that has been drawn up by paid mischief makers to derail the steady but surely revolution that is daily gaining grounds in the aviation industry. However, the pay masters of these faceless individuals and groups are no longer the beneficiaries from the corrupt cartels that have cornered all juicy deals in the aviation sector for several years. Independent investigations have shown that the sponsors of the tirades against the Ministry and the person of the Minister are those whose lobbying prowess has failed in the face of the singular determination to do good by God, country and above all give the much needed honest lease of life –to a sector that remains highly under utilised and remains one of the most important link in the transportation equilibrium of not only Nigeria but sub-saharan Africa and the entire globe.

Never in the history of Nigeria’s aviation has the Ministry come under such barrage of media misrepresentations like the one currently being thrown at the Ministry and the person of the Minister Princess Stella Adaze Oduah.

Every step of the Airport terminal reconstruction has been met with stiff resistant, even from prominent stakeholders, even at a time when the airports didn’t have functional amenities and were not worthy of being the terminals of one of Africa’s most important air routes. It is befuddling to hear aviation professionals say safety first before reconstruction, forgetting that though aviation safety is the singular most important factor in instilling the confidence in air travel, it is equally only a comfortably well equipped airport that can compliment air safety. An airport with safe runways, well demarcated perimeter fence and functional tower facilities, fire service hubs and clinics that can aide in ensuring that such edifice is fit for air travelling amidst optimum safety and comfort.

 As if the paid ghost writers haven’t had enough their pay masters have also told them to attack the process of the bidding of the airport projects, not even the Ministry of aviation’s explanation of the projects being emergency projects in order the fast track the development of the sector has dissuade them from peddling their outright lies and half truths.

The investment drive abroad in search of competent aviation professionals to become big players in Nigeria’s aviation sector was greeted with so much disdain that if not for her patriotic zeal, the attention currently being enjoyed by potential investors wouldn’t have even been thought of. Another much maligned aspect of the Minister’s transformation drive has been the misconception and misrepresentation of the facts about the BASA fund, an interventionist fund meant for the ministry which the minister has said part of it will be channelled towards bequeathing world class airport terminals and other safety facilities at our airports nationwide. 

In fact not even fatal and tragic crashes that characterised the tenure of Prof. Babalola Borishade did the Ministry suffer such negative criticisms and wholesome cynicism. To refresh our minds a bit after Prof. Borishade was replaced on November 2 2006 four days after the crash of ADC Airlines Boeing 737 passenger aircraft, two years later he was later to be arraigned alongside his successor Femi Fani Kayode for their roles in the mismanagement of the 19.5 Billion Naira aviation intervention fund. One of the highlights of this sordid case was when an Austrian executive mentioned during a hearing that they had paid Borishade the sum of 1 Billion Naira in order to acquire the contract for the remodelling of the airports. Yet the aforementioned were not daily staples in our news items 6 years ago.

It is sad that some so-called stakeholders will rather wish for Nigeria’s aviation sector to remain underdeveloped at the expense self interest, it is important that at this critical juncture we are come together to ensure that we have an aviation sector that is amongst one of the best in Africa, the steps are already being taken, its time to rally round the Minister and ensure that the strides currently being made are sustained for the generality of Nigerians and those unborn.

Saturday, 18 August 2012

By Odunayo G. Bifarin.


In Nigeria it easy for us to dismiss the importance of airport terminals in the scheme of transportation, this is due in part to the stagnant development that characterized air travel over the years.

From the humble beginnings of the first recorded aviation activity in Kano in 1925 when a RAF pilot made a breath- taking but safe landing on the horse race course in Kano, the historic moment went down in history as the first recorded aviation activity in Nigeria.

The dilapidated structures that characterize airport terminals in Nigeria today have diminished over the years from the world class structures they were as at the time of construction almost 40 years ago. It is only proper that we trace the history of aviation in Nigeria, which shows that the earliest known commercial aviation activity in Nigeria is credited to one gentle man, "Bud" Carpenter, who owned the earliest type of the Light aircraft, de Havilland Moth.

Records show that he frequently undertook high-risk flights between Kano and Lagos, using the rail tracks as his guide and piling up extra distance in the process. Unfortunately all this humble gains have been eroded away by years of mismanagement.

In the early 1930s, an enterprising pilot carried a few fare-paying passengers in a seaplane between Lagos and Warri. With the continuation of the annual RPLF flights, aviation activities in Nigeria became quite considerable, creating the need for aerodromes.

Consequently, a representative of the Air Ministry in London visited Nigeria to inspect what could then be appropriately described as "landing grounds". Sites were selected at Maiduguri, Oshogbo, Lagos, Minna, Kano and Kaduna. Wing Commander E. H. Coleman, one of the earliest observers of the evolution of civil aviation in Nigeria described the aerodromes thus:

It must be remembered, however that what was called an aerodrome in those days would by no means meet requirements for even some of the small airplanes of modern times. In the early days it was considered necessary to construct several runways oriented in varying directions to avoid cross wind landings and take-offs, as the older type of tail-wheel aircraft was more prone to swing than the modern nose wheel types.

However, no matter how simplistic these were, they still served the purpose, however in times of increasing air safety and technological advancement Nigerian aviation sector failed to keep up with the gains that innovation had bequeathed to other visionary countries especially during the military years of the 1980s and early 90s. Fast forward to 2012 -it is not a secret knowledge that most of the Nigerian Airports and Terminals were built in the 70s, as such by 2011 they were decayed and in a state of utter dysfunction.

All Airport Users attest to the fact that our Infrastructure was a disgrace and embarrassment to our National pride. Imagine an airport without adequate toilet facilities; this was what Nigerians and foreigners alike had suffered for several years. As such it is remarkable and important the current call for the remodelling and reconstruction of the Industry must be supported in all ramifications.

The Minister of Aviation Stella Oduah must be commended for the giant strides taking to ensure that the projects come on stream immediately, despite the barrage of criticisms that has trailed the flag off the media.

The airports in major cities like Abuja, Lagos, and Port-Hacourt etc are already in the process of enjoying this rejuvenation.

Most importantly this new investment will go a long way in ensuring that Nigeria's air safety record rises to be at par with global best practices. Certainly Nigerian air travellers deserve the very best.


Imperatives Of Aviation Infrastructure Reconstruction, A Historical Perspective

By Odunayo G. Bifarin.


In Nigeria it easy for us to dismiss the importance of airport terminals in the scheme of transportation, this is due in part to the stagnant development that characterized air travel over the years.

From the humble beginnings of the first recorded aviation activity in Kano in 1925 when a RAF pilot made a breath- taking but safe landing on the horse race course in Kano, the historic moment went down in history as the first recorded aviation activity in Nigeria.

The dilapidated structures that characterize airport terminals in Nigeria today have diminished over the years from the world class structures they were as at the time of construction almost 40 years ago. It is only proper that we trace the history of aviation in Nigeria, which shows that the earliest known commercial aviation activity in Nigeria is credited to one gentle man, "Bud" Carpenter, who owned the earliest type of the Light aircraft, de Havilland Moth.

Records show that he frequently undertook high-risk flights between Kano and Lagos, using the rail tracks as his guide and piling up extra distance in the process. Unfortunately all this humble gains have been eroded away by years of mismanagement.

In the early 1930s, an enterprising pilot carried a few fare-paying passengers in a seaplane between Lagos and Warri. With the continuation of the annual RPLF flights, aviation activities in Nigeria became quite considerable, creating the need for aerodromes.

Consequently, a representative of the Air Ministry in London visited Nigeria to inspect what could then be appropriately described as "landing grounds". Sites were selected at Maiduguri, Oshogbo, Lagos, Minna, Kano and Kaduna. Wing Commander E. H. Coleman, one of the earliest observers of the evolution of civil aviation in Nigeria described the aerodromes thus:

It must be remembered, however that what was called an aerodrome in those days would by no means meet requirements for even some of the small airplanes of modern times. In the early days it was considered necessary to construct several runways oriented in varying directions to avoid cross wind landings and take-offs, as the older type of tail-wheel aircraft was more prone to swing than the modern nose wheel types.

However, no matter how simplistic these were, they still served the purpose, however in times of increasing air safety and technological advancement Nigerian aviation sector failed to keep up with the gains that innovation had bequeathed to other visionary countries especially during the military years of the 1980s and early 90s. Fast forward to 2012 -it is not a secret knowledge that most of the Nigerian Airports and Terminals were built in the 70s, as such by 2011 they were decayed and in a state of utter dysfunction.

All Airport Users attest to the fact that our Infrastructure was a disgrace and embarrassment to our National pride. Imagine an airport without adequate toilet facilities; this was what Nigerians and foreigners alike had suffered for several years. As such it is remarkable and important the current call for the remodelling and reconstruction of the Industry must be supported in all ramifications.

The Minister of Aviation Stella Oduah must be commended for the giant strides taking to ensure that the projects come on stream immediately, despite the barrage of criticisms that has trailed the flag off the media.

The airports in major cities like Abuja, Lagos, and Port-Hacourt etc are already in the process of enjoying this rejuvenation.

Most importantly this new investment will go a long way in ensuring that Nigeria's air safety record rises to be at par with global best practices. Certainly Nigerian air travellers deserve the very best.