The Federal Executive Council (FEC) yesterday approved the national
automotive policy in a bid to gradually phase out fairly used cars imported into
the country.
This is also to remove Nigeria from the list of countries without
automotive policy.
The council also approved N41 billion for the provision of road and other
infrastructures in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).
The Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, and his Trade and Investments
counterpart, Olusegun Aganga, told State House correspondents at the end of the
meeting chaired by President Goodluck Jonathan, that the new automotive policy
was to encourage local manufacture of vehicles.
Aganga disclosed that in 2012, about $3.4 billion (N550 billion) was spent by
Nigerians importing cars while in 2010, $4.2 billion (N670 billion) was spent,
indicating that car import takes the biggest share of the country's foreign
reserves followed by other machinery.
The new policy when fully effective, will ensure the creation of minimum of
700,000 jobs in the auto industry.
He further explained that the new policy followed nine months of work with
input from the National Automotive Council and foreign car manufacturing giants
like Toyota and Nissan that are to announce their specific investments in
Nigeria soon.
Aganga stressed that the bane of similar policies in the past, like
non-implementation of policies, lack of infrastructure, and inappropriate tariff
regime were considered and adequately addressed in the new one, with the Federal
Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and local vehicle assembly plants/manufacturers
involved.
The minister outlined the high points of the new policy to include the
establishment of three automotive clusters in Lagos/Ogun, Kaduna/Kano and
Anambra/Enugu states to share resources and reduce cost of investments, as well
as the development and revival of the petrochemical and metal/steel sectors and
the tyre manufacturing industry to support the automotive sector.
Also, the Industrial Training Fund (ITF) is working with carmaker, Cena of
Brazil, to open automotive training centres in Nigeria while two Nigerian
universities have agreed to commence degree programmes in auto-mechanical
engineering, all in a bid to provide adequate local manpower for the industry.
Furthermore, appropriate tariff regimes to discourage car imports and
encourage local manufacture will be put in place while government will continue
taking the lead in patronage of locally made vehicles.
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