Information and communication technologies have become as essential for modern society as electricity and water networks.
Modern everyday life would be utterly unthinkable without information and communication technologies.
Correct application of ICT helps organisations and enterprises to
reduce costs, improve processes, boost innovation, and increase
productivity.
ICT also makes the public sector leaner, faster and more citizen-friendly.
Port operations involve a network of processes and documentations
along the chain of activities from the port of loading to the port of
destination. Effective coordination of the activities makes the
integration of the processes through automation absolutely necessary in
order to facilitate seamless operations thereby reducing both costs and
time.
It is against this backdrop that we commend the management of
Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) for launching various electronic
platforms including the e-payment, electronic ship entry notice (e-SEN),
Revenue Invoicing Management System (RIMS) and Self Service Customer
Portal as necessary steps towards full automation of processes at
Nigerian ports.
The electronic ship entry notice was adopted to provide shipping
companies with an electronic platform to fulfill the mandatory
requirements of the Federal Government of Nigeria for the issuance of
entry permits to all ships coming into the country while the e-payment
platform was launched to save NPA customers the unnecessary time wasted
in making payments for services rendered by the Authority.
The Revenue Invoicing Management System (RIMS) was launched this
month to complement both the e-payment and e-SEN which have been up and
running for than a year.
NPA’s Executive Director, Finance and Administration, Mr. Olumide
Oduntan said before e-SEN was introduced in 2014, payments to the
Authority took between three to four days before they were confirmed.
Proofs of such payments, he said, had to be physically taken to the NPA
Headquarters at Marina, Lagos irrespective of where the customer is
based. The NPA Headquarters would afterwards take a minimum of 24 hours
to notify the concerned port of the payment, before the ship is allowed
entry into the nation’s territorial waters.
Valuable time and resources were inevitably lost through this laborious process.
The e-SEN changed all of that, allowing immediate confirmation of
payments online, real time with the entire transaction process shortened
to about 45 minutes.
The benefits of the solution include instant payment information,
faster and efficient service delivery, improved vessel turnaround time,
cost reduction and identification and blockage of revenue leakages.
The Revenue Invoicing Management System (RIMS) and Self Service
Customer Portal, which was recently deployed by NPA, will also enhance
processes and block revenue leakage at the nation’s seaports. The new
platform is fully integrated with all existing solutions such as Oracle
Financials, Oracle Human Capital Management, NPA pay direct via inter
switch and the e-SEN.
NPA’s Managing Director, Mallam Habib Abdullahi, while speaking at he
launch of RIMS on September 2 in Lagos said the platform also fully
integrates the electronic flow of information for business-to-customer
and business-to-business streams real-time with higher availability and
flexible architecture.
Abdullahi said the introduction of the system has the potential to
improve service offering, improve partner relationship, create efficient
payment method, maximize revenue and minimize loss associated with
fraud and revenue leakage.
“Also, the customer self-service portal provides a platform for
customers to initiate and conclude their business process with NPA and
also communicate. “Improved customer service delivery, electronic upload
of manifest and e-invoice and e-reciept generation, easy access to
customer accounts status, view of all transactions and status in respect
of bills are some of the key benefits of this platform,” Abdullahi
assured industry stakeholders who turned out in large number to witness
the RIMS launch.
The introduction of these electronic platforms by the Nigerian Ports
Authority is a pragmatic move that is bound to promote efficiency and
enhance transparency in the organisation and at the ports. These
platforms will go a long way in driving the change the country is
earnestly yearning for, check corruption and boost government revenue.
Other parties in the port system must emulate NPA’s example and
endeavour to drive their processes using ICT within the shortest
possible time frame. NPA and the Nigeria Customs Service must also work
together to create an integrated online port community, which will as
much as possible eliminate human contact and discretionary powers by
individuals at the ports.
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