This, he said has doubled the cost of delivering international packages and also compounded the challenges faced by most companies as they grapple with the dilemma of making a decision whether to pass the seemingly additional costs to clients or continue to bear the sudden increase in operation cost.
“If you look at the import into Nigeria in the last six months and compare with the same period last year, you will see that it has dropped by almost 50%. So there are fewer things to move. Even the ports, both sea and air, are no longer as congested as they use to be. Our foreign exchange earnings have dropped, exchange rate has gone up and we now have imported inflation”, he noted.
“We were exporting at the rate of 2.2m barrels per day, and we were selling for about $110 per barrel. Suddenly it crashed. As at today, we are exporting about 1.5m barrels per day and we sold at about $50 now. It was below $30 in January and February. So the amount of money in terms of foreign exchange and earnings that is coming to the Federal government has drastically gone down, so there is no other way. If people that were used to eating well, full bread now get half bread, there will be hunger. This is what is manifesting. The government is trying so much to keep the critical sector of the economy moving”, he said.
Red Star Express Group is a premium logistics solution provider in Nigeria with an unrivalled local network coverage and a large market share in the domestic and international market. It enjoys a domestic strength of over 240 offices in Nigeria, delivers to additional 1,800 communities, with over 2,400 highly trained personnel and over 600 delivery vehicles in its fleet. The company has four business units including The Red Star Express which is a licensee of FedEx, the world’s largest express transportation company. There is the Red Star Freight, Red Star Logistics and Red Star Support Services.