Aviation Ground Handlers Seek Minimum Handling Rates

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The Aviation Ground Handling Association of Nigeria (AGHAN) has urged the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) to create a minimum safety threshold handling rate for the sub-sector. 

President of the association, Mr Olaniyi Adigun,   made the request on Wednesday  in a statement entitled ‘Ground Handling in Nigeria: Management Policy and Regulation’  

Adigun regretted that the two leading ground handling companies established in the country were not formed for profit-making by their founding fathers, a situation which, he said, had negatively affected the sub-sector after privatisation. 

The two companies, the Skyway Aviation Handling Company (SAHCO) Plc and the Nigerian Aviation Handling Company (NAHCO) Plc, reportedly charged the lowest handling fees on the continent, oscillating between $400 and $1,000 for narrow-bodied aircraft. 

Handling charges for a wide-bodied aircraft went for as low as $3,000 for passenger flights, all comprising the lowest charged throughout the continent. 

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Reports have indicated that even the ground handling charges in Guinea, Senegal, Cameroon, Sierra Leone and Ghana for both narrow-body and wide-body aircraft were way ahead of Nigeria’s. 

Adigun said that to change the narrative, it was important for the NCAA to put necessary regulations and policies in place that would usher in new handling rates for the sub-sector. 

He explained that the new template should ensure improved operating standards, safety and security standards, establish minimum safety threshold handling rates within the sector, as well as create the enabling environment that would attract capital inflow into the sector, through local and foreign investments. 

According to him, this will also encourage healthy competition among the players, without compromising safety, security and the economic interests of the nation. 

“Any rates below the established safety threshold ground handling rates has the tendency to jeopardize safety and security and loss of revenue to the Federal Government. 

“This is through the five percent concessionary fees paid by the handling companies to the government. 

“To achieve the aims already highlighted, it is our strong belief that both the NCAA and the various stakeholders should come together to put necessary regulations and policies in place. 

“This includes setting up of a minimum safety threshold handling rates in place, the ground handling sector will experience a rebirth. It will increase government revenue and create stability in terms of safety and security within the sector and the industry at large. 

“This can effectively work out if the extant Nigerian Civil Aviation Regulation (NCAR) Act is amended to further empower NCAA to properly regulate the industry like the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)”, Adigun Added. 

The AGHAN president also appealed to the National Assembly to expedite action on the passage of the NCAR presently before it, saying that this would further improve the Nigerian aviation industry and bring it at par with its counterparts in developed nations. nan.  

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