Business
Zulum Tasks NPA on Non-Oil Exports, Presses for Maiduguri Dry Port Take-Off
Zulum Tasks NPA on Non-Oil Exports, Presses for Maiduguri Dry Port Take-Off
By Okeoghene Onoriobe | Waterways News Reporter
Borno State Governor Babagana Zulum has called on the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) to intensify efforts to grow non-oil export volumes from the state, linking the push to broader goals of boosting foreign exchange earnings and reducing youth unemployment in Nigeria’s North-East.
Zulum made the appeal during a working visit to NPA headquarters in Lagos on Tuesday, where he was received by the Authority’s Managing Director, Dr Abubakar Dantsoho, alongside senior management staff.
The governor outlined plans to strengthen value addition for locally produced commodities in Borno, with the aim of positioning the state as a more competitive player in international trade corridors.
The visit is part of a widening logistics and trade engagement by the Borno governor. In an earlier interaction with the Nigerian Shippers’ Council, Zulum had pressed for accelerated progress on the Maiduguri Dry Inland Port — a critical infrastructure project designed to bring port services closer to the North-East and reduce the burden on distant southern gateways including Apapa, Calabar and Warri. He argued that a functional inland port in Maiduguri would significantly cut the cost of moving goods, ease pressure on congested port corridors, generate thousands of direct and indirect jobs, and shore up internally generated revenue for the state.
Borno is also working to activate a dedicated trade hub under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) framework in Banki, a border town adjoining Cameroon. Governor Zulum indicated that plans for the facility are at an advanced stage.
Taken together, the inland port push and the AfCFTA trade hub are intended to form the backbone of an industrial diversification strategy for Borno — reducing the state’s heavy dependence on federal statutory allocations while opening new income streams through trade and manufacturing.
Waterways News | waterwaysnews.ng
Business
ANLCA Members Petition IGP, Demand End to Maritime Police Harassment at Seaports
ANLCA Members Petition IGP, Demand End to Maritime Police Harassment at Seaports
By Emetana Ikuku | Waterways News Reporter
Port stakeholders under the Association of Nigeria Licensed Customs Agents (ANLCA) have formally petitioned the Inspector General of Police, demanding an immediate halt to what they describe as unlawful interference, extortion, and obstruction of legitimately cleared cargo by officers of the Maritime Police Command at Nigerian seaports.
The petition, dated May 6, 2026 and signed by High Chief John A. Ofobike (Dankatsina), was addressed to the ANLCA National President and the National Executive Committee (NECOM). In the letter, the stakeholders accused Maritime Police officers of routinely stopping containers that have already been fully processed and released by the Nigeria Customs Service.
According to the petitioners, consignments bearing valid Single Goods Declarations (SGDs), duty payment receipts, and Customs Release Orders are being unlawfully intercepted at Terminal Delivery Order processing points, shipping company offices, and bonded terminals — with importers and licensed agents subjected to repeated documentation demands and monetary extortion before their goods are freed.

Sir John Oforbike
The stakeholders argued that such conduct directly violates the Federal Government’s 48-hour cargo clearance directive and undermines the statutory authority of the Nigeria Customs Service as the designated lead agency at the nation’s ports.
Beyond the legal arguments, the petitioners painted a grim financial picture. Demurrage and storage charges running into millions of naira are piling up on importers caught in the web of delays, with small and medium-scale traders said to be particularly hard hit. Many, they warned, are quietly exiting the business altogether — unable to sustain the cost burden.
The customs agents also took direct aim at what they called institutionalised corruption within the port clearance system, alleging that the phrase “investigation activity for fraud” is routinely deployed as a pretext to detain goods that have already passed Customs scrutiny.
“This is damaging Nigeria’s image as a trade destination,” the petitioners stated, adding that the practice is actively discouraging both local and foreign investment.
On the path forward, ANLCA members are calling on NECOM to urgently engage the Nigeria Police Force hierarchy — specifically the IGP and the Assistant Inspector General in charge of the Maritime Command — to rein in the offending officers. They are also pushing for a clear statutory delineation of responsibilities between the Nigeria Customs Service and the Maritime Police, anchored on the Nigeria Customs Service Act 2023 and the Police Act 2020.
Among their specific demands is the formation of a joint task force comprising Customs, Police, and port stakeholders to investigate reported abuses and sanction erring officers. The petitioners further called on ANLCA to escalate the matter to the Federal Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy and relevant National Assembly committees.
The stakeholders were emphatic on the core principle at stake: the constitutional mandate of the Maritime Police is to secure port infrastructure and protect lives — not to duplicate Customs functions or frustrate legitimate trade. Failure to address the crisis, they warned, will further inflate the cost of port operations and ultimately pass the burden on to ordinary Nigerians at the point of purchase.
Blue Economy
FROM OCEAN TO ENGINE: How Seawater-to-Hydrogen Technology Could Reshape the Future of Maritime Fuel
FROM OCEAN TO ENGINE: How Seawater-to-Hydrogen Technology Could Reshape the Future of Maritime Fuel
Breakthrough electrolysis systems promise to turn the world’s most abundant resource into clean shipping energy — and the implications for global shipping are profound
By Raymond Gold | Co-publisher and Research Reporter| Waterways News, Lagos
For centuries, the sea has been both highway and hazard for the world’s merchant fleets — a vast, untameable resource that ships cross but cannot consume. That relationship may now be on the verge of a fundamental transformation. Engineers and clean-energy researchers are advancing technology that converts seawater directly into hydrogen fuel, potentially allowing vessels to generate their own power from the very ocean beneath their hulls.
The concept, long theorised in academic and engineering circles, has in recent years moved closer to practical application. And for an industry under mounting pressure to decarbonise — shipping accounts for nearly three percent of global greenhouse gas emissions annually — the implications could hardly be more consequential.
What the Technology Does
At its core, seawater-to-hydrogen conversion exploits a deceptively simple chemistry: water, whether fresh or saline, is composed of hydrogen and oxygen atoms that can be separated through electrolysis — the application of electrical current to drive a chemical reaction. In conventional electrolysis, this process uses purified water. The innovation driving current research is the ability to perform this separation efficiently using raw seawater, bypassing the costly and energy-intensive step of desalination.
The challenge is considerable. Seawater is not merely water with dissolved salt; it is a complex mineral solution containing chlorides, sulphates, magnesium, calcium, and dozens of trace elements that aggressively corrode standard electrolysis equipment and compromise catalytic efficiency. Overcoming this requires specialised membrane materials, corrosion-resistant electrode coatings, and advanced catalyst designs capable of selectively extracting hydrogen without triggering the destructive chlorine evolution reactions that plague conventional systems.
Several research institutions — including teams at Stanford University and in China’s leading materials science faculties — have demonstrated functional seawater electrolysis cells in laboratory conditions. The next frontier is ruggedising these systems for the rolling, salt-spray environment of an operational vessel on an ocean crossing.
Once extracted, the hydrogen can be deployed aboard ship in two primary ways: through hydrogen fuel cells, which generate electricity through an electrochemical reaction between hydrogen and oxygen with water as the only byproduct; or through combustion in modified engine systems, including hydrogen-driven steam turbines — a technology that echoes the steam age of maritime history but points firmly toward a zero-emission future.
Why This Matters for Shipping
The global shipping industry moves approximately 90 percent of world trade by volume. It runs almost entirely on heavy fuel oil and marine diesel — fossil fuels that produce sulphur oxides, nitrogen oxides, particulate matter, and carbon dioxide at scale. The International Maritime Organisation (IMO) has set a target of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions from international shipping by or around 2050, with intermediate milestones that are already forcing operators and flag states to act.
Alternative fuels — LNG, methanol, ammonia, and green hydrogen — are being explored across the industry. Each carries its own infrastructure challenge. LNG requires cryogenic bunkering terminals. Ammonia is toxic and demands careful handling protocols. Green hydrogen, produced from renewable electricity, depends on an entirely new supply chain that does not yet exist at the scale shipping requires.
Onboard seawater electrolysis sidesteps this infrastructure dependency entirely. A vessel equipped with the technology would, in principle, generate its own fuel continuously during a voyage, powered by renewable energy sources — solar arrays, wind-assisted propulsion, or wave energy convertors — installed on the ship itself. The bunkering port visit, one of the central logistics events in any ocean voyage, could eventually become optional rather than obligatory.
“The vision is genuine maritime energy autonomy,” one marine engineer familiar with current research described it. “You leave port, and the ocean provides.”
The Engineering Obstacles
The path from laboratory demonstration to commercial deployment is rarely short, and seawater electrolysis faces specific engineering obstacles that require resolution before any shipowner will commit capital to a retrofit or newbuild specification.
Foremost among these is the corrosion problem. The electrolytic cell, the filtration system, and all downstream hydrogen handling components must withstand not only the mineral aggressiveness of seawater but also the physical stresses of a marine operating environment — vibration, temperature cycling, and the mechanical demands of continuous operation over voyages measured in weeks. Catalysts and membranes that perform well in controlled conditions may degrade rapidly under these stresses, driving up maintenance costs and reducing reliability.
Filtration is a related challenge. Seawater must be processed through multi-stage filtration to remove particulates, biological matter, and the heaviest dissolved minerals before it reaches the electrolysis cell. The design and maintenance of these filtration trains — compact enough to fit within a vessel’s existing hull footprint without displacing cargo capacity — is itself an active area of engineering research.
Energy efficiency is perhaps the most critical metric. Electrolysis is not thermodynamically free; splitting water requires energy input, and on a vessel where every kilowatt-hour must be generated or stored, the round-trip efficiency of the fuel generation cycle determines whether the system is economically viable. Current state-of-the-art electrolysers operate at between 60 and 80 percent efficiency in ideal conditions. Marine seawater systems are not yet at the upper end of that range.
Scale is the final variable. A research cell producing grams of hydrogen per day is a proof of concept. A commercial system capable of fuelling a Panamax bulker or a large container vessel across the Pacific must produce hydrogen at a rate orders of magnitude higher, consistently and safely, in a package that integrates with existing ship systems and satisfies classification society and flag state safety requirements.
Nigeria Watch: What This Means for West Africa’s Maritime Sector
For Nigerian shipping stakeholders — from the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) to the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), private shipowners, and the Federal Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy — seawater-to-hydrogen technology warrants close attention even at this early stage of development.
Nigeria’s maritime sector is undergoing a strategic pivot. The revival of a national carrier through partnerships with DP World and AD Ports Group, the deepening of Lekki Deep Sea Port operations, and the Federal
Government’s blue economy agenda all signal ambitions to position Nigeria as a maritime hub rather than merely a transit market. The vessels and fleets that will carry those ambitions — whether coastal tankers, offshore support vessels, or deep-sea cargo ships — will be subject to increasingly strict international emissions standards as they operate in foreign ports and trade lanes.
The European Union’s Emissions Trading System now applies to shipping, and vessels calling at European ports are already paying a carbon price on their voyages. The IMO’s Carbon Intensity Indicator (CII) regulations are tightening year on year. Nigerian-flagged vessels, and Nigerian operators trading internationally, cannot remain insulated from these requirements indefinitely.
A technology that enables onboard fuel generation from seawater would be particularly valuable for the offshore oil and gas support sector — a significant component of Nigeria’s maritime economy — where vessels operate far from shore for extended periods and fuel logistics represent a meaningful proportion of operating costs. Patrol and surveillance vessels operated by NIMASA and the Nigerian Navy, which must sustain extended coastal and offshore operations, represent another potential application domain.
The immediate priority for Nigerian maritime regulators and industry associations is awareness and engagement: monitoring the development trajectory of seawater electrolysis systems, participating in IMO technical working groups on alternative fuels, and ensuring that when commercial systems begin to reach the market — an eventuality most analysts place in the 2030s — Nigerian operators and shipyards are positioned to adopt rather than adapt belatedly.
Looking Ahead
The conversion of seawater into hydrogen fuel will not decarbonise global shipping overnight. The technology faces real, unresolved engineering challenges, and the capital cycle of the shipping industry — where vessels are built to operate for 25 years or more — means that transformation is necessarily gradual. But the direction of travel is clear, and the pace of research is accelerating.
What was speculative a decade ago is now demonstrable in laboratory conditions. What is demonstrable today will, with sustained investment and engineering ingenuity, be deployable at sea within the decade. For an industry that has powered itself with fossil fuels since the coal age, the prospect of drawing energy from the ocean itself represents not merely a technical advance but a philosophical one: a shift from consuming the earth’s finite reserves to harvesting the planet’s most inexhaustible resource.
The sea, in other words, may one day fuel the ships that sail in it.
Raymond Gold is Co-publisher and Research Reporter for Waterways News
Waterways News covers the Nigerian and West African maritime sector. For enquiries, advertising, and editorial submissions, visit www.waterwaysnews.ng
Business
Global Trade Shifts Boost Panama Canal as Hormuz Tensions Reshape Shipping Routes
Global Trade Shifts Boost Panama Canal as Hormuz Tensions Reshape Shipping Routes
By Okeoghene Onoriobe | Waterways News
The ongoing conflict in the Middle East and mounting disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz are reverberating across global shipping lanes, with the Panama Canal recording a significant uptick in vessel traffic and cargo volumes as traders seek safer and more reliable routes.
Data released by the Panama Canal Authority covering October 2025 to March 2026 — the first half of the canal’s financial year — show that 6,288 vessel transits were completed during the period, a rise of 224 compared with the corresponding period a year earlier. Total cargo volumes grew by roughly five per cent to reach 254 million Panama Canal Universal Measurement System tonnes, underscoring the waterway’s expanding importance amid shifting geopolitical dynamics.
The momentum has been particularly evident in recent months. Daily transit averages climbed to 34 vessels in January and 37 in March, with peak days recording more than 40 transits — a clear sign that shipping lines are routing more cargo through the Central American passage.
Panama Canal Administrator Ricaurte Vásquez Morales attributed the growth to strong container traffic and a sharp surge in liquefied petroleum gas shipments, describing energy cargoes as an increasingly vital part of the canal’s traffic profile.
The high demand has also driven transit slot auction prices to unprecedented levels. Víctor Vial, Vice President of Finance at the Panama Canal Authority, disclosed that auction prices for some vessels have crossed the $1 million mark — a remarkable climb from the pre-conflict average of between $135,000 and $140,000. Between March and April alone, average auction prices surged to approximately $385,000. Vial was quick to stress, however, that these elevated figures reflect short-term market conditions and do not affect the cost or scheduling of transits booked in advance through the reservation system, which accounts for the bulk of traffic.
The canal’s recovery has been further supported by a return to normal water levels following the severe drought that constrained operations in 2023 and 2024. Gatún and Alhajuela Lakes — the primary water sources for canal operations — are currently at maximum capacity, thanks in part to unseasonably heavy rainfall.
Chief Sustainability Officer Ilya Espino de Marotta said the authority is not anticipating major disruptions in the near term but will maintain close monitoring of water levels as it navigates an El Niño year. Preventative conservation measures remain in place as a precaution.
Nigeria Watch
For Nigerian shippers, freight forwarders and maritime operators, these developments carry direct implications. With LPG shipments surging through the Panama Canal and freight markets reacting sharply to geopolitical pressures, the ripple effects on global fuel supply chains and shipping costs are worth watching closely. Nigeria, as a major crude oil and gas producer and a significant importer of refined petroleum products, sits squarely within the global trade flows being reshaped by these dynamics.
Vásquez Morales reaffirmed the canal’s readiness to meet rising global demand, describing the waterway as open, dependable and well-positioned to serve as a key pillar of international commerce in these uncertain times.
Waterways News | waterwaysnews.ng
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