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NNPC Seeks Collaboration to End Cross-Border Smuggling of Petrol
– By majorwavesen

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The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, Sunday, called for increased collaboration with members of the African Union of Transportation and Logistics Organization to address the rising incidents of cross-border leakages of petroleum products.
In a statement in Abuja, Group Managing Director of the NNPC, Mr. Maikanti Baru, said smuggling of petroleum products remained a blight in the nation’s fuel supply and distribution matrix. Baru, who stated this while receiving a delegation of the group led by its President, Mr. Mustapha Chaeun, at the NNPC Towers, noted that the collaboration would not only help to stop the menace but would help rid the West African corridor of other vices that are associated with the illicit fuel smuggling business.
Baru also charged the regional transportation union to ensure that its members comply with extant laws and regulations on speed limits, the axial weight of haulage tankers and other sundry regulations necessary to ensure the safety of high ways across the African terrain.
He said the NNPC was open to new areas of mutual collaboration with the organization while calling on transportation union members to take full advantage of NNPC’s vast business portfolio and strategic position in the West African sub-region and beyond to expand business interest and areas of cooperation.
On his part, Chaeun pledged the readiness of its members to comply with extant laws and regulations in countries where they operate. He said that the composition of the union members which encompasses groups from West, Central, East and North Africa, made it imperative for the union to work with key continental institutions like the NNPC to maximize its strategic role in the region.
“We expect collaboration on many levels: first at the level of development of our sector, the transport sector, and to enhance human resources management. On another level, there is the need for training our professional drivers that work in the transport sector,’’ he noted.
*Sweetcrude Reports

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