Blue Economy
Tinubu Approves Cargo Tracking Scheme That Could Save Nigeria N900bn in Lost Import Revenue
Tinubu Approves Cargo Tracking Scheme That Could Save Nigeria N900bn in Lost Import Revenue
Presidential approval secured for ICTN as Nigerian Shippers’ Council begins procurement; scheme expected to go live before year-end
By Emetena Ikuku, Lagos
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved the full implementation of the International Cargo Tracking Note (ICTN), a flagship initiative of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) designed to plug revenue leakages in the country’s import trade and strengthen regulatory oversight of inbound cargo.
The approval, confirmed at a stakeholders’ engagement convened by the Federal Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy in Lagos, ends months of uncertainty over the scheme’s future and sets the stage for what industry analysts say could be one of the most consequential reforms in Nigeria’s maritime sector in recent years.
What the ICTN Does
The ICTN is a real-time, online cargo tracking system that monitors the movement of inbound shipments from origin to destination. Beyond logistics visibility, it is designed to function as an economic intelligence tool — capturing import data that can be used to close gaps in revenue declaration and combat under-invoicing.
Industry projections suggest the system could help Nigeria recover up to N900 billion annually in import revenue currently lost to leakages — a figure that underscores the commercial stakes of getting the rollout right.
Procurement Underway
Pius Akutah, Executive Secretary and CEO of the Nigerian Shippers’ Council, confirmed to stakeholders that presidential approval had been secured and that procurement processes were already in motion. He expressed confidence that the ICTN would become operational before the end of the year.
Akutah acknowledged that previous implementation attempts had been suspended due to unresolved operational challenges, but said the Council had drawn lessons from those setbacks.
He noted that the Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Adegboyega Oyetola, is personally committed to ensuring a seamless rollout, with the ministry taking deliberate steps to resolve all outstanding issues before the scheme goes live.
Nigeria Watch
The ICTN revival is significant beyond its revenue implications. For years, Nigerian freight forwarders, cargo agents, and port operators have operated in an environment where cargo data is fragmented and often unreliable — creating fertile ground for manifest fraud, valuation disputes, and customs evasion.
A fully operational ICTN would give the NSC, the Nigeria Customs Service, and the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) access to a unified cargo data stream, potentially transforming how import risk is assessed at Apapa, Tin Can Island, and the emerging Lekki Deep Sea Port.
For the broader blue economy agenda being championed by Minister Oyetola, real-time cargo intelligence also supports Nigeria’s ambitions to position its ports as West Africa’s premier logistics hub — a goal that requires the kind of regulatory credibility the ICTN is designed to provide.
Stakeholders will be watching the procurement timeline closely. The scheme has been suspended before, and the maritime industry’s confidence in its delivery will depend on whether the ministry can demonstrate tangible progress before the year runs out.