Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Diesel is killing Nigeria —Oscar Ibru

THE vice chairman, Ibru Organisation, Oscar Ibru, has called on responsible institutions and individuals to commit their resources to better their immediate environment. Two of recent examples are: Mobil Oil that tarred and electrified former Malu Road, Apapa, Lagos a few years ago and Zenith Bank that last year rehabilitated the dilapidated Ajose Adeogun Street, Victoria Island, Lagos. Ibru has just joined them.

Those who pass through the Oshodi-Apapa expressway from Mile 2 to Wharf, since the oil tank farm of Ibru sprang up in the Ibru Port Complex know that the service lane has for sometime now become a “no go area.”

Oil tankers occupy the entire stretch of the service lane from the DTV/Capitol Oil access road end of Mile 2 to the U-turn at Coconut Bus Stop on the Tin Can Island Port complex end of the 10-lane highway, impeding traffic flow on all sides of the highway. But the worst impact is the total deterioration of the service lane on the tank farm side.

It is a matter of divine providence that a fuel laden tanker had not tipped over, spilling its deadly content on the road to cause monumental havoc.

It was to avert such a catastrophic possibility and reduce the stress that his workers and tenants go through daily when going to and returning from their offices that Ibru undertook to rehabilitate the service lane. The stretch of road is about 1,037 metres long. The tarring and clearing of the gutters, overflowing with silt and solid particles, is costing him in excess of N40 million.

His company, Ibru Organisation, brought the tank farm, reputed to be the largest private enterprise of that nature in Africa, to the area. Today, there are over 12 stakeholders of various sizes stocking oil products in the farm. They include major and small oil dealers in the country. The lure is that the complex has a standard port, built in the 70s by Oscar’s father and chairman of Ibru Organisation, Olorogun Michael C.O. Ibru. It is believed to be the first privately owned port complex in the country.

Ibru recognises that the tank farm is the hub of the fuel business of the nation and the access road to the farm should therefore be in top shape for the lumbering tankers to safely move through. “It bothers me to no end that the roads are continuously blocked,” he said in his office at the Port Complex recently. He also dismissed insinuations from some quarters that the tank farm, in which volumes of highly volatile products are stored, is a threat to the neighbourhood. In the last five years or so, more tank farms have sprung up along the same part of the road. There is one beside the Tin Can Island bus stop, along Olorogun Michael Ibru Boulevard (formerly Creek Road).

To such cries of fear, Ibru said that the Ibru Port Complex was built at the present site before Olodi-Apapa expanded to meet it. He explained that when his father acquired the area, it was all swamp. There was no habitation around, even the expressway had not been constructed.

“The Ibru Port Complex paved the way for the development of the area. Those harbouring fear of fire are simply unaware of what the stakeholders have in place. I can assure you that there will be no fire here, we have the equipment, the manpower and the wherewithal to fight any emergency and with the professionalism of our workers and those of the various stakeholders, I absolutely do not foresee any disaster whatsoever happening. Even the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) is indeed satisfied with what we have on ground to tackle emergencies,” he said.

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