New Automative Policy: FG Ends Import Of Tokunbo Cars -
The federal government has begun the
phasing out of used cars (otherwise known as “tokunbo”) which may lead to the
eventual stoppage of importation of used cars into the country.
The move, which received the nod of
the Federal Executive Council (FEC) yesterday, was contained in a new National
Automotive Policy which was endorsed in a meeting chaired by President Goodluck
Jonathan at the State House.
Announcing the decision after the
FEC meeting, minister of industry, trade and investment Olusegun Aganga said
the policy, which was drawn over the last nine months with
the input of the National Automotive Council (NAC) and foreign car
manufacturers such as Toyota, Nissan and Honda, would encourage local
manufacturing of vehicles and enforce a gradual phasing out of used cars.
Briefing journalists alongside his
information and FCT counterparts Labaran Maku and Senator Bala Mohammed, Aganga
said the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) would kick off a new vehicle car
registration/tracking system in the next two weeks to check the smuggling of
used cars into the country.
He said that the federal
government was worried that with the country spending a
whopping $4.2 billion (about N550billion) on the importation of cars in
2010, and $3.4 billion on the item in 2012, car importation was almost
head-to–head with machinery as the biggest consumer of the
country’s foreign reserves.
Aganga said government would
encourage banks to operate vehicle purchase schemes to enable Nigerians to buy
cars on easy terms with payment in instalments.
He informed that government
would put in place appropriate tariff regimes to discourage car
importation and encourage local manufacturing.
The minister disclosed that the new
policy would run as a 10–year plan and would be reviewed every five
years, adding that Nigeria and Bangladesh were among the few countries
without national automotive policies.
According to him, highpoints of the
new policy include the establishment of three automotive clusters in three
parts of the country, namely, Ogun and Lagos states, Kano and Kaduna states and
Enugu and Anambra states, pointing out that the establishment of the automotive
clusters would reduce the cost of investments and production. In addition, the
policy would encourage the revival of the petrochemical and metal/steel sectors
and tyre manufacturing industries, he said.
Aganga revealed that the Industrial
Training Fund (ITF) was collaborating with Cena, a vehicle manufacturer in
Brazil, to open automotive training centres in Nigeria.
This is just as two Nigerian
universities had been designated to commence degree programmes in
auto-mechanical engineering to provide adequate local manpower
The minister said that government’s
projection was that, with strict implementation of the policy, a brand new car
locally produced would sell for less than N1.5 million.
He said the policy when fully
implemented would also create a minimum of 700,000 job opportunities.
According to him, a similar
policy in the country in the 1970s during which new Peugeot and Volkswagen cars
were produced locally and were affordable for average citizens failed as a
result of the lack of infrastructure, non-implementation, inappropriate tariff
regime, among others, assuring that government had identified the pitfalls
and would put forward measures that would guard against the inadequacies
and encourage the success of the new policy.
Aganga said countries such as South
Africa, India and Brazil had successfully operated the policy.
Doles out N41.4bn for road,
infrastructure in FCT
Meanwhile, FEC also approved
N39,829,749,225.69 for the rehabilitation and expansion of the outer southern
expressway (OSEX) from Villa Roundabout in Abuja to the OSEX/Ring Road 1(RR1)
junction including five interchanges.
The contract which was approved in
favour of Messrs CGZ Nig Ltd. will ensure the free flow of traffic
and significantly reduce travel time in and out of the city.
The FCT minister also noted
that the existing segment of the OSEX from the villa roundabout to RR1 is only
partially developed with a 2-lane main carriage way and one 2-lane service
carriageway as against the 10-lane expressway provided in the Abuja master
plan.
Mohammed further stated
that FEC also approved the provision of engineering infrastructure to Plot
4075, Asokoro Extension (comprising 50 plots), Abuja, in favour of Messrs COAN
(W.A) Ltd at the sum of N1,683,258,423.00 with a completion period of 12
months.
He added that government had
already provided engineering infrastructure to virtually all the residential
districts of phase 1 of the Federal Capital City (FCC).
According to him, the outstanding
areas without infrastructure are mostly areas where large plots have been
redesigned and sub-divided into smaller plots and allocated to the general
public.
He said Plot 4075, Cadastral Zone
B04 in Asokoro District Extension is one of the large plots which has been
redesigned and sub-divided into 50 smaller residential plots.
He said, “The employment generation
opportunity that would emanate from the construction activities following the
implementation of the project is expected to be in the neighourhood of 450
employees.”
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