NPA said the ships were discharging petrol, diesel, crude oil, buckwheat, general cargo, containers, bulk gas, fresh fish, bulk gypsum, base oil, and bulk urea.
The document stated that 15 other ships were already at the ports.
The Nigerian Ports Authority stated this in its publication, ‘Shipping Position’, on Tuesday in Lagos.
The NPA, in its “Daily Shipping Position” on Monday, disclosed that the vessels are expected from January 12 to 30.
The NPA, in its ‘Daily Shipping Position’, on Tuesday disclosed that the vessels are expected from January 6 to 16.
No fewer than 41 ships laden with petroleum products, food items and other goods are expected to arrive at Lagos seaport.
The Nigerian Ports Authority reports that 17 ships are expected to arrive at Apapa and Tin-Can Island ports in Lagos from November 3 to 7.
Mr Tajudeen explained that the naira-for-crude-oil policy carried significant implications for Nigeria’s foreign exchange stability, revenue generation, and long-term energy security.
NUPRC said the performance demonstrated the country’s capacity to meet its production targets under the OPEC agreement
Mr Kangye stated that the criminals were handed over to the appropriate authorities for necessary action.
