Headlines
NIMASA, NOSDRA, NUPRC upbeat to contain spread of Egina crude oil spill

” Reconnaissance survey of the impacted area confirms that the shoreline communities of Andoni, Qua-Iboe terminals, Bonny Island, Opobo/Nkoro and Eastern Obolo, which are closest to Egina, are not yet affected”
The Director General of NIMASA, Dr Bashir Jamoh noted that the Agency is in collaboration with all stakeholders to control the pollution and also put in place measures to prevent such occurrences in the future, in line with provisions of the MARPOL Convention.“Since the incident happened, our men have been liaising with other organs of Government to ensure the pollution is effectively controlled and managed, to protect the marine environment and the communities close to the incident point.
” Accidents do happen, it’s what we do thereafter that matters and I believe that the IOC Total, working with NIMASA, NUPRC, and NOSDRA and collaborating with international service providers, will surely ensure proper management of the spill”. Jamoh assures.
Analyses
The Anchor of Dependency: Rethinking Nigeria’s Port Financing Strategy

Headlines
NPA: Starving the goose that lays the golden eggs

Tomorrow, on Monday Discourse, Ibrahim Nasiru looks at what he describes as the paradox in the financing system of the Nigerian Ports Authority( NPA).
An agency which lays the golden eggs that feed the nation, yet has to borrow from external creditors to fix its infrastructures.
On Monday Discourse, Nasiru advises government to rethink Nigeria’s Port Financing Strategy
“The NPA is projecting a staggering ₦1.489 trillion in revenue for 2026. Yet, why are we still looking outward to borrow billions of dollars for Port Modernization?
“The truth is, Nigeria’s Ports are trapped in a fiscal paradox.
“We treat the NPA as a cash cow to fund federal deficits, sweeping its massive trillions into the central treasury, while leaving our 100-year-old Ports to starve of the vital liquidity needed for self maintenance.
“Forcing an agency to bleed cash to the treasury while begging foreign creditors for infrastructure loans is an unsustainable contradiction.
“If we are serious about the Blue Economy, it’s time for a legislative rethink that allows internal revenue retention for a dedicated Port Modernization Fund.
Read Nasiru’s analysis on why Nigerian Ports must feed themselves before they can sustainably feed the nation.
Keep a date with Nasiru on Monday Discourse tomorrow ,Monday, June 1st, 2026.
It’s a must read
Headlines
NRC suspends Warri- Itakpe train service over operational concerns

Headlines3 months agoNRC plans electric rail operations across the country- Opeifa
Headlines3 months agoLekki Port boosts Nigeria’s trade surge as NPA releases 2025 operational performance
Headlines2 months agoNSW opens dedicated support centre in Apapa to assist port users
Aviation3 months agoFAAN resumes toll collection at Airports, adopts hybrid payment method
Headlines2 months agoTinubu approves disbursement of CVFF by NIMASA
Aviation2 months agoFrom 6k to 50k: The economic insensitivity of arbitrary hike in parking rate at MM2






