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Experts Advocate Innovation in Nigeria’s Transport Sector

Host, MD/CEO JustAlive Communications Limited, Mrs. Pearl Ngwama

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The Organiser of the 2025 Transport Summit, Mrs. Pearl Ngwama, has called for bold, innovative, and sustainable investment in Nigeria’s transport infrastructure to unlock the nation’s economic potential and drive inclusive development.

Delivering her welcome address at the inaugural Transport Summit organised by JustAlive Communications Limited, publishers of JustNet News, Mrs. Ngwama said the summit’s theme “Nigeria’s Transport Infrastructure: Innovation for a Sustainable Future” reflects the urgent need to modernise and integrate the country’s transport systems to meet the demands of a growing economy.

The event, held at the Providence Hotel, GRA, Ikeja, Lagos, attracted leading policymakers, industry stakeholders, investors, and experts across the transport and logistics value chain.

Ngwama described transport as “the bloodstream of the economy,” emphasising that a nation’s productivity and prosperity depend on how efficiently it can move people, goods, and services.

“When transport flows freely, the organs of the economy thrive; when it is blocked or weak, growth is stunted,” she stated.

She underscored that while Nigeria is blessed with vast resources, arable land, and a young population, the country’s wealth will remain underutilised without efficient connectivity across road, rail, air, and sea networks.

Citing recent data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), she noted that the transportation and storage sector contributed 6.53 percent to Nigeria’s GDP in 2024, describing the growth as commendable but insufficient.

Ngwama also highlighted the steady progress in different transport modes:

The maritime sector, which recorded N130.75 trillion in foreign trade in 2024 a 91% increase over 2023;

The aviation sector, which contributed N215.6 billion to GDP in 2023, with Lagos, Abuja, and Port Harcourt airports accounting for over 70% of that total; and

The rail sector, which transported 929,553 passengers and 181,520 tons of freight in the first quarter of 2025 — both showing marked year-on-year increases.

“These numbers tell us we have momentum and potential,” she said, “but they also remind us that there is still much work to be done.”

Mrs. Ngwama called for long-term, technology-driven, and climate-resilient infrastructure projects that can support national development while adapting to future innovations. She urged collaboration between government, private sector players, and civil society to turn policy discussions into concrete actions.

Referencing President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, she expressed optimism that ongoing reforms in road, rail, air, and maritime infrastructure can create a modern transport system that positions Nigeria as a regional hub for trade and logistics.

“We must build a Nigeria where roads and rail corridors connect farms to factories and ports; where airports become continental hubs; where our seaports serve the wider West and Central Africa region,” she said.

Beyond infrastructure, Mrs. Ngwama touched on social challenges affecting national development, including the “Japa syndrome” the emigration of skilled Nigerian youth in search of better opportunities.

From left: Director of Business Development, Global Transport Policy, Mr. Mark Onuchi; Former Rector, NCAT, Zaria, Capt. Sam Caulcrick; President, Aircraft Owners and Pilot Association of Nigeria, Dr. Alex Nwuba; Former Commandant of the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos, Group Capt. John Ojikutu; Director of Cabonate Dept., NAMASA, Ms Gloria Adaugo Aneyasodo; Host, MD/CEO JustAlive Communications Limited, Mrs. Pearl Ngwama; Chairman of the Occasion,Managing Director/CEO, Primero, Transport Services Limited, Fola Tinubu; Deputy Director, NIMASA, Board Chair Women in Maritime, Dr. (Mrs.) Chizoba Anyika; Keynote Speaker, Prof. Bamidele Abiona; Repreaenting Managing Director/CEO, Aero Contractor of Nigeria, Benedict Olufemi Oluwafemi and Senior Lecturer, University of Lagos (UNILAG, Dr. Femi Aiyegbajeje, during JustAlive Communications Limited Maiden Summit 2025 Theme: Nigeria’s Transport Infrastructure: Innovation for a Sustainable Future, in Lagos 29th October, 2025 Photo Sunday Eshiet

“Our commitment here today and in this room is to salvage, rebuild, and transform our beloved nation. We will not give up,” she affirmed.

She urged participants to ensure that the summit produces tangible outcomes, including a strong communiqué, actionable recommendations, and a roadmap for government and investors.

The welcome address concluded with a rallying call for unity and purpose:

“Let us unite in public and private sectors, in civil society and the media to build Nigeria’s transport infrastructure for the future. In doing so, we unlock the potential of our people, our economy, and our continent.”

The 2025 Transport Summit continues with keynote presentations and panel discussions on policy reforms, financing, innovation, and sustainability across Nigeria’s multimodal transport landscape.

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Aviation

The Man Who Kept Nigeria’s Aviation Grounded in Excellence

Oluropo Owolabi

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At 80, Oluropo Owolabi is not merely being celebrated for longevity but for a lifetime that helped shape the operational backbone of Nigeria’s aviation industry.

Across airports, airline offices and ground handling terminals, the story of Dr. Owolabi is told not as that of a pilot who commanded aircraft from the cockpit, but as one of the industry’s quiet architects who ensured those aircraft had systems, people and structures strong enough to fly.

Born on May 24, 1946, Owolabi built his aviation career through the commercial arm of the defunct Nigeria Airways, where his expertise in airline management, route development and operational coordination quickly distinguished him among industry professionals.

Armed with a Higher National Diploma, a Diploma in Airline Management from Germany and a postgraduate qualification from the Chartered Institute of Transport Administration of Nigeria, he became one of the airline’s trusted commercial hands during the golden era of Nigeria Airways.

His competence saw him deployed to strategic international stations including London, Rome and New York, where assignments originally planned for short durations were repeatedly extended because of his performance and ability to stabilize operations.

Yet it was his intervention at SAHCO PLC, formerly Sky Power Aviation Handling Company Limited, that would define his legacy in the aviation sector.

At a period when the company faced operational uncertainty and declining fortunes, Owolabi was appointed General Manager and tasked with rebuilding the organization.

Industry veterans recall that he approached the assignment with uncommon clarity and discipline, beginning with designing the company’s logo himself before initiating broad operational reforms that transformed the handling company into one of the industry’s leading service providers.

Under his leadership, staff morale improved, operational standards strengthened and the company gradually evolved from a struggling operator into a respected aviation brand.

The turnaround earned him elevation to the position of Managing Director, cementing his reputation as one of Nigeria’s most influential aviation administrators.

Colleagues and associates say his greatest strength was his ability to unite workers across departments toward shared operational goals, creating a culture where efficiency, professionalism and human relations became central to daily operations.

A Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Transport Administration of Nigeria, Owolabi also earned widespread respect as a mentor whose management philosophy prioritized people alongside profit.

His career journey, however, took another defining turn during the privatization of SAHCOL, when many feared his years of work at the company could come to an abrupt end.

That changed with the intervention of Taiwo Afolabi, Chairman of Sifax Group, who acquired the company and reinstated Owolabi to continue leading the organization.

In reflecting on that period, Owolabi described Afolabi as “an uncommon Nigerian” whose support restored his confidence at a critical stage of his career.

The renewed leadership stability enabled the company to consolidate its growth and further strengthen its position within Nigeria’s aviation handling sector.

Today, Owolabi remains connected to the organization as a Non-Executive Director, continuing to provide guidance and institutional knowledge built across decades in aviation.

Tributes have continued to pour in from aviation professionals, labour leaders and industry observers who describe him as one of the sector’s most dependable administrators.

Secretary General of the Association of Nigeria Aviation Professionals, Abdulrazaq Saidu, said Owolabi demonstrated that commercial intelligence and humane leadership could coexist successfully in the aviation sector.

Former Chairman of the League of Aviation and Airport Correspondents, Chuks Iwelunmo, described him as a transformational figure who restored SAHCOL’s relevance and reputation within the industry.

Former LAAC General Secretary, Gboyega Adeoye, said Owolabi played a stabilizing role in Nigeria’s aviation development, while veteran journalist and public relations consultant, Aliu Mohammed, praised his integrity and lasting contributions to aviation administration.

Despite the accolades surrounding his 80th birthday, associates say the aviation icon requested modest celebrations focused mainly on prayers for Nigeria, his family, friends and colleagues.

For many within the industry, the enduring image of Dr. Owolabi remains that of a leader who proved that aviation success is sustained not only by those who fly aircraft, but also by those who build the systems that keep them safely in the skies.

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Aviation

Nigeria Backs Continental Aviation Reforms to Boost Intra-African Connectivity

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The Federal Government has reaffirmed Nigeria’s commitment to aviation liberalisation and stronger regional air connectivity as part of efforts to drive economic growth and integration across Africa.

Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, said Nigeria was fully supporting reforms aimed at transforming Africa into a more connected and competitive aviation market.

Speaking at the Annual Lecture Series of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport in Abuja, the minister said Africa must urgently move from policy declarations to practical implementation of the Single African Air Transport Market and the Yamoussoukro Decision.

Represented by the Managing Director of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, Mrs. Olubunmi Kuku, Keyamo described aviation as a strategic tool for economic transformation, trade expansion and regional cooperation.

He warned that Africa would continue to lose billions of dollars in economic opportunities if the continent remained fragmented and poorly connected.

According to him, enhanced connectivity would increase flight frequencies, reduce airfares, strengthen tourism and improve trade volumes among African nations.

The minister identified legal certainty, commercial enablement and institutional trust as the three pillars necessary for building a sustainable continental aviation market.

He disclosed that Nigeria had implemented reforms targeted at improving investor confidence, including legal frameworks designed to strengthen compliance with international aviation agreements and improve judicial efficiency.

Keyamo said the reforms would support safer operations, fleet modernisation and easier access to aircraft financing for operators.

He also revealed that Nigeria’s partnership with Boeing was expected to deepen technical expertise, improve training opportunities and strengthen the country’s aerospace capabilities.

The minister stressed that liberalisation must also protect local interests through strong regulatory oversight, fair competition and deliberate local-content development.

He called on African governments to invest more aggressively in aviation training institutions, regulatory agencies, greener airport infrastructure and technical education.

Keyamo maintained that the future of African economic integration depended heavily on the continent’s ability to build efficient, safe and sustainable air transport systems.

CILT Abuja

He added that Nigeria would continue working with regional and international partners to ensure that African skies become more open, accessible and economically beneficial to millions of people across the continent.

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Events

Oyeyemi, Ugboma Lead Transport Safety Talks

President of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transportation (CILT), Dr. Boboye Oyeyemi, and the Dean of the School of Transportation and Logistics at Lagos State University (LASU), Prof. Ogochukwu Ugboma as lead speakers

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The National President of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transportation (CILT), Dr. Boboye Oyeyemi, and the Dean of the School of Transportation and Logistics, Lagos State University (LASU), Prof. Ogochukwu Ugboma, are set to headline discussions at the 12th edition of the Nigeria Transport Lecture scheduled for June 18, 2026, in Lagos.

The annual lecture, organised by Transport Day Media, will focus on the theme: “Multi-modal Transportation Safety in Nigeria: Prospects, Challenges & Contribution to National Growth.”

The event will hold at the Radisson Blu Hotel, Ikeja, and is expected to attract key stakeholders from the public and private sectors of the transportation and logistics industry.

Organisers said the lecture would provide a strategic platform for industry players, policymakers, regulators, and academics to examine safety concerns affecting Nigeria’s road, rail, maritime, and aviation transportation systems.

Dr. Oyeyemi, former Corps Marshal of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), and Prof. Ugboma are expected to deliver keynote presentations on the need for stronger safety frameworks, policy coordination, and sustainable transport systems capable of supporting national economic growth.

Over the years, the Nigeria Transport Lecture has featured prominent industry leaders and policymakers, including former Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Dakuku Peterside; former Federal Permanent Secretary, Dr. Anthonia Ekpa; and the Managing Director of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC), Dr. Kayode Opeifa.

Speaking ahead of the event, the Editor of Transport Day Media, Mr. Frank Kintum, described the annual lecture as an important platform for addressing critical challenges facing the transport and logistics sector.

“Every year, we use the lecture as a platform to discuss contemporary issues in the industry. This year, we settled for multi-modal transportation safety because without safety, the various multi-modal transport initiatives by governments at different levels may be undermined,” Kintum said.

He added that the lecture forms part of Transport Day Media’s contribution towards building a sustainable, efficient, and globally competitive transport and logistics sector in Nigeria and across Africa.

Kintum noted that the event would also encourage policy dialogue, knowledge sharing, and stakeholder collaboration aimed at improving transportation safety standards nationwide.

Industry stakeholders expected at the lecture include operators, regulators, government officials, logistics professionals, academics, and representatives of transport agencies across the country.

The organisers expressed optimism that deliberations at the event would generate practical recommendations capable of strengthening Nigeria’s multi-modal transport safety framework and supporting national development.

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