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Onne Welcomes China Mega-Ship

For decades, importers in Nigeria’s South-South and South-East have watched enviously as Lagos ports swallowed the lion’s share of direct Asia services, forcing eastern businesses to pay punishing transshipment premiums and endure weeks of extra delays. That era may finally be ending.

The 294-metre, 5,089-TEU MSC Dorine V – a Liberian-flagged giant sailing straight from China under MSC’s new Iroko Service – made its historic maiden call at Onne Multipurpose Terminal. No more rerouting through Lomé, no more waiting in Durban, no more double-handling charges.

For the first time, a mega-ship has come directly from the Far East to the eastern corridor. This is not just another vessel call; it is a declaration of independence for Nigeria’s eastern ports.

Speaking at the berthing ceremony, OMT Managing Director Nicolo Scannavini did not mince words: “These direct calls eliminate delays, reduce charges, remove transshipment hassles and deliver predictable schedules.” He is right.

The ripple effects will be profound, leading to faster supply chains, cheaper goods on the shelves of Aba and Onitsha markets, and thousands of new jobs in Rivers, Abia, Anambra, Enugu, and Cross River states.
Credit where it is due: the Dr. Abubakar Dantsoho-led Nigerian Ports Authority has moved with a rare purpose.

Deeper drafts, modern gantry cranes, expanded yards, and digital gate systems at Onne did not appear by accident. They are the result of deliberate policy and private-sector confidence, particularly from global terminal operator ICTSI, which has invested hundreds of millions of dollars in the facility.

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The contrast with Lagos could not be starker. While Apapa and Tincan Island remain choked despite billions spent on rhetoric, Onne is quietly becoming the efficient, deep-water alternative that eastern Nigeria has begged for since independence.

Importers in Port Harcourt are giddy, a clearing agent said this will save nearly $2,000 per 40-foot container now that transshipment through Lomé is history.

Multiply that by thousands of containers monthly, and you begin to understand why traders in Nnewi and Calabar believe Christmas has come early.

Of course, one ship does not make a revolution. More direct services are already in the pipeline, and Onne must prove it can sustain weekly mega-vessel calls without slipping into the congestion trap that has crippled Lagos.

For too long, Nigeria’s maritime map has been Lagos-centric by default and by design. The arrival of MSC Dorine V at Onne is the strongest evidence yet that the balance is shifting – and not a moment too soon.

The eastern economy, long starved of efficient gateway access, now has the tool it needs to compete.

If the NPA and operators like ICTSI keep the momentum, Onne will not merely ease pressure on Lagos; it will redefine it as yesterday’s default option.

The East is rising. And this time, the ships are coming straight to its doorstep.

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