We implement our regulations irrespective of who is involve – NCAA DG
“We are here to help our airlines grow both domestically, regionally and internationally”.
Captain Musa Nuhu, the director general of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, NCAA, is a thorough breed aviation professional with vast experience in the aviation industry. He was Nigeria’s Permanent Representative to the International Civil Aviation Organisation, ICAO.
Before that, he had previously worked with the defunct Nigeria Airways, Aero Contractors and Petrowest, among other organisations.
In this webinar interview with members of the League of Airport and Aviation Correspondents, LAAC, Captain Nuhu speaks on the NCAA autonomy, airline’s international aeropolitics, challenges of Covid 19, economic health of Nigerian airlines among other issues.
Franklin Ihejirika reports
Excerpts
NCAA Autonomy
Yes, NCAA has autonomy in terms of regulations but NCAA cannot totally remove itself from the ministry of aviation. The ministry is responsible for policy development for the industry and we implement those policies through our regulations. So we must have a line of communication and consultations with the ministry and also if you look at the organisational structure of NCAA, we have the Minister, the board and then the DG, so we cannot totally isolate ourselves from the ministry, but l can assure you in term of implementing regulations and otherwise, NCAA is the only body that is doing that and we are doing that without sort of interference with the ministry. There are some regulations that without the political support of the ministry, it will be very difficult to implement those regulations. In the past, when aircraft are grounded, big men went over above the ministry, they even went to the Villa and they have those decisions taken by NCAA reversed, but this time around, it is not so, we implement our regulations irrespective of who is involve and the support of the minister, the political support has make our life easier within our regulations. So anybody that want us to divorce completely from the ministry is not being realistic, it is ministry of aviation.
Aviation goes beyond NCAA, we have other public service providers like the Federal Airports Authority, FAAN, Nigerian Airspace Management Agency, NAMA, Nigerian Meteorological Agency, NIMET, Accident Investigation Bureau, AIB, Nigerian College of Aviation Technology, NCAT, then the private sector, airline operators, ground handlers all under the ministry, we regulate them, so there have some connection between us and the ministry, you cannot say because we are independent in implementing regulations, we mustn’t have some relationship with the ministry. It happens everywhere in the world. In the US, the Federal Aviation Administration, FAA has some connection with the department of transportation. What is important is for the regulatory body to be able to do it statutory responsibility of effective oversight of the system without interference and that we are doing.
Economic health of airlines
The airlines not only in Nigeria, it is a global thing. in the airline industry, the profit margin is very minimal, if you make five percent profit margin in the business, you are considered to have done excellently well, but however, with the Covid-19 and the difficulties, airlines financial positions are not the best, it is a global phenomenon and there are so many other issues that affects the financial health of airlines that is neither in the control of the ministry of aviation nor in the control of the civil aviation regulatory body. For instance, the provision of foreign exchange, it doesn’t come from us. If a country’s foreign earning goes down, the central bank prioritizes, and you can understand due to the lack of maintenance organisations in Nigeria, pilot recurrent training institutions in Nigeria, they have to go outside to do these and that entails a lot of foreign currencies, so it is not easy. Also is Jet A1, that is a major factor that airlines have been having difficulties with, sometime we see it induced scarcity and escalate price, so there are factors that affect the health of the airlines that are not in our direct control. The ministry has tried, it went to the central bank when this government came on board, Nigeria owed foreign airlines about 600 million dollars in arrears, the minister through consultations was able to get that off our back and all the foreign airlines were paid. We visited the NNPC to see what kind of arrangement can be made for the production of Jet A1 and in addition, interest rate, when airlines go borrowing at a very high interest rate which we know is very high in Nigeria. If my profit margin is 5per cent, explain to me if l takes a loan at 20percent, how I can break even and pay them and make profit. These are the micro and macro factors that affect the health of the airlines. We try through our economic regulations to do the financial audits of the airlines and advise them where we see areas of economic difficulties and see how they can be tackled. One of the thing we are doing, we want to really strengthen the function of the economic regulation through more training of the staff of the directorate. As you are aware, we are having some restructuring going on, it is to reposition the regulatory body to able to carry out its responsibilities in a more effective and efficient manner.
Oransoye report
I read the report in the papers the same way you did, nobody has informed us of any merger, l have asked from the ministry there have been no confirmation, I understand this is an old report done over ten years ago, somebody just sit down and brought it out, I am not aware of any merger between NCAA and any agency and I cannot comment on what seem to me an unofficial matter, and by the way, in the US, FAA is the regulatory body and it runs the air traffic services which is the equivalent of NAMA, so it depends on how you run it, I am not saying we are going to do it here because I don’t have anything official but there is this misunderstanding that there is something like that, no Sir. FAA has a specific structure designed in their own case to ensure that there is no conflict of interest. I am not aware of any merger in Nigeria because I have not been given any document officially.
Ill treatment of Nigerian airlines abroad
The advice I will give the airlines is that if you are going to another country to negotiate your services, you should involve the regulatory body, the ministry of aviation and also your embassy in that country. If you as a private organisation you go and negotiate with a government entity that is trying to protect its own airlines, you are going to run into difficulties, but you involve ministry of aviation officials, NCAA officials and embassy officials, the country knows that if they make things difficult for our airlines, we will apply the same reciprocitory measures to their airlines, so it make a big difference. A lot of airlines go and do the deal themselves. They should involve us, carry us along, brief us, we are here to help our airlines grow both domestically, regionally and internationally. I hear them talking about aeropolitics, yes, an airline from Nigeria want to go compete with an airline of another country on their route, of course they will find it difficult, but when carry NCAA officials along, it makes a difference, if you make unreasonable demands on my airlines, I will apply the same to your airlines coming into my country, so it is to their benefits for every airline to come out with good terms for all the airlines.
How Covid 19 affected your plan for the industry
The meeting I had after my hand over from the acting DG, the discussion I had was Covid 19, by then it was not yet declared a pandemic but we could see the trend coming, so had started putting measures in place, firstly, how we are going to run the NCAA as an organisation and business continuity plans in place, how our staff will be working with the development to ensure that whatever happen, we will have people that will be running the organisation regardless of the covid challenge, we ensure we have somebody who will step in, we prepared to reduce the workforce coming, a lot of them will stay at home and we have what we determine is enough that will run the organisation, that was even the government came out with the directives, we were already working on that. Basically at that time, it was the issue of survival, whatever plans has to be put in place, because whatever plans you have, if you don’t survive, your plan are of no use. First of all, we have to survive, ensure the organisation survives, and to put measures for the industry to survive, it certainly delayed our plans but now with the successful resumption of domestic flight and we have not had a significant spike and contamination cases, so all the plans have been delayed but we have successfully resumed the domestic operations, perhaps one or two minor hitches there, nothing significant, and I know you will all agree with me so far so good and the response from the public complying with the protocols have been excellent, we started the international flight operations, with time we are going to increase the number of flight coming in as things stabilizes, we identified hitches that were rectified and we hope things will get much better going forward. So part of the plans we had is repositioning the regulatory body to it a liner more resilience and a body that is flexible to react to changing situation and part of the restructuring we have had is part of this process and in the coming months, we will see the organisation in a good position to deal with challenges and the emerging challenges and as you are all aware, the Covid 19 has change the global industry, the rapid changes in technology is also changing the industry, not only aviation but also the ways businesses are conducted, so we have to reposition ourselves to fit into that so that we can really effectively conduct our regulatory responsibilities.
Scrapping of Consumer Protection
I think there is a misunderstanding. Consumer protection has not been scrapped, it was just downgraded from a full directorate to a unit under the directorate of air transport regulation which is what it used to be. Consumer protection exists in full with all the function it has, we still have consumer protection, it has never been scrap. If you go to the airport you still the staff from the unit carrying out their job without any reduction in their scope.
Impounded aircraft in Dubai
It is not a Nigerian aircraft; it is a US registered aircraft that was brought to Nigeria to operate under the AOC of Nigeria. We have started investigation and forwarded the documentations from our investigation to the authority in Dubai and the US FAA. They asked for additional information which we have given them and I think I saw an email today from Dubai, communicating with the US where the aircraft is registered. We have done our own part and our report has been submitted and we are going to take sanction against those who have violated our regulations. That is all I can say for now.
Med-View Airline to relaunch Yola, Maiduguri flights Dec. 18, increases Lagos-Abuja flights
NCAA warns pilots, airlines against thunder storms
Oil bunkering: Court sentences 8 Bennioise to 4 years imprisonment each
$1.3bn tax assessment: witness’ absence stalls trial in MTN suit against AGF