UBA, Zenith Bank, Union Bank, Others To Disburse CVFF Fund

Five Banks
have been selected for the disbursement of Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund
(CVFF).
The Banks
are: United Bank for Africa (UBA), Zenith Bank, Union Bank of
Nigeria, Polaris Bank and Jaiz Bank.
Minister
of Transportation, Mu’azu Sambo, who disclosed this in Lagos during the
flag-off ceremony of Batch B of the Third Phase of Nigerian Seafarers
Development Programme (NSDP), adding that President Mohammadu Buhari has
already approved the disbursement.
The
Federal Government had in 2003 set up the Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund (CVFF)
to address the lack of capacity among indigenous ship owners in
Nigeria.
The
CVFF was inserted into the Coastal and Inland Shipping Act of 2003 otherwise
referred to as Cabotage Act 2003, in order to provide funds for vessel
acquisition amongst indigenous operators.
The source
of the fund is a two per cent contribution by indigenous ship owners from every
contract executed in the nation’s waters.
The
disbursement of the CVFF is backed by the provisions of Section 42(1)-(2) of
the Cabotage Act 2003, which aims to promote the development of indigenous ship
acquisition capacity by providing financial assistance to Nigerian operators in
domestic coastal shipping.
“We will
disburse this fund in days to come to the beneficiaries deserving of it, as we
have made a case that the funds belong to shipowners.
“Mr
president is a man who respects the law and he is on the same page with us that
we should proceed with immediate effect.
“We will be
liasing with the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, and the
Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria to work immediately with the
disbursement,” he said.
Sambo noted
that the agency had pledged to the president that it would allow the funds to
go into the Treasury Single Account.
He, however,
said whenever the money hit the threshold of 50 million dollars, the CBN upon
recommendation from NIMASA and the federal ministry of transportation, would
inspect the transfer of the funds to the primary lending
institutions.
“In this
regards five primary lending institutions have been approved by Mr President to
do the disbursement.
“This
milestone development together with this ceremony go hand in hand because there
is a nexus between seafaring, ship, capacity building and making sure ships are
available.
“With this
approval I am sure our indigenous capacity will grow higher and not even the
sky will be the limit,” he said.
Sambo noted
that his predecessor had administrative challenges with the federal ministry of
finance and that was why he could not disburse the funds.
He said the
agency had identified those gaps and that they had been addressed.
“The five
banks selected for the disbursement are Union Bank of Nigeria, Polaris Bank,
Zenith Bank, United Bank for Africa and Jaiz Bank.
“The banks
were selected based on criteria set out in the guidelines, the enabling law and
guidelines for the disbursement of the funds as approved by National Assembly,”
he said.
The
transportation ministry said to avoid the pitfalls of the past, the guidelines
were very clear; the applicants for the funds would make equity contribution of
50 per cent, NIMASA 35 per cent and banks 15 per cent.
He pointed
out that the agency would put in place an administrative structure so that loan
applications were professionally scrutinised.
“The
approval for the disbursement got to my office late Friday and on Monday the
NIMASA DG will take immediate steps to see to the disbursement,” he
said.
Dr Bashir
Jamoh, Director General, NIMASA, noted that the money at hand was in two folds;
N16 billion or $350 million.
Jamoh said
the agency would develop an action plan with timeline that would be made
available to everybody for them to know when the first cheque would be signed
to the beneficiaries
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