+86-156-2511-0166[email protected]WhatsApp
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUT
PRODUCTS
All products
APPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUTAPPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp[email protected]
Hanheng RefractoryHanheng RefractoryBuilt for heat. Proven in delivery.

Hanheng Refractory Materials Co., Ltd. supplies shaped bricks, monolithic refractories, tundish materials, and insulation products for steel, ferroalloy, glass, boiler, and other heat-intensive operations.

Quick links

  • Home
  • About
  • Products
  • Applications & Industries
  • Market Support
  • News

Core products

  • Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Alumina-Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Magnesia-Alumina-Carbon Brick
  • Al2O3-SiC-C Brick
  • Calcium-Magnesium-Carbon Brick

Contact

Panpan Road, Zhanqian District, Yingkou, Liaoning, Chinawww.hanhengref.com[email protected]+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp

© 2026 Hanheng Refractory

Project discussionProduct systemPrivacy Policy
Industry update
Published June 25, 2026energylaborlogistics

‘Seafarers vital to Nigeria’s economic growth’

Former Shipowners Association President, Captain Ladi Olubowale, highlights Nigerian seafarers as strategic national assets crucial for economic growth and

Source-backed market reading focused on the local industrial developments, project signals, and operating consequences that are actually worth tracking.

Read Article
Previous article

Former Nigerian Chapter President of the African Shipowners Association, Captain Ladi Olubowale Former Nigerian Chapter President of the African Shipowners Association, Captain Ladi Olubowale, has described Nigerian seafarers as more than just participants in the maritime industry, stressing that they are strategic national assets whose skills and expertise are critical to economic growth, international trade, energy security, national development, and the achievement of Nigeria’s maritime aspirations.

Olubowale made this known in a document obtained by The PUNCH over the weekend ahead of the 2026 Day of the Seafarer, scheduled for 25 June and themed, “Carrying World Trade. Carrying the Risks.” Every year on 25 June, the global maritime community comes together to celebrate the Day of the Seafarer, an initiative of the International Maritime Organisation dedicated to recognising the extraordinary contribution of seafarers to global trade, economic development, and the functioning of modern society.

Speaking further, Olubowale explained that this year’s theme is both timely and profound, stressing that it acknowledges a reality that is often overlooked: “while seafarers are responsible for moving the world’s trade, they also bear enormous risks and sacrifices in the process.

They endure long periods away from their families, physical and mental strain, operational hazards, security threats, uncertainty, fatigue, and the immense responsibility of ensuring that global supply chains remain uninterrupted.” “These men and women are not merely workers within the maritime sector; they are strategic national assets whose expertise contributes directly to economic growth, international trade, energy security, national development, and the realisation of Nigeria’s maritime ambitions.” According to him, behind every vessel that arrives safely at port, every cargo delivered across oceans, and every supply chain sustained during times of global uncertainty, there are seafarers whose dedication makes it possible.

Olubowale lamented that, despite their indispensable role, seafarers often remain among the least visible contributors to economic development. He emphasised that the global disruptions experienced in recent years demonstrated clearly that seafarers are essential workers, adding that while nations closed borders and industries slowed, seafarers continued to work under difficult circumstances to ensure the uninterrupted movement of goods across the world.

Related News LASWA partners NSIB to boost waterways safety Tinubu’s chaotic budget implementation Clean cooking initiative can boost economic growth— Sanwo-Olu’s adviser Olubowale, who is the United Kingdom Ambassador of the International Seafarers’ Welfare and Assistance Network, maintained that as Africa’s largest economy and one of the continent’s most strategically positioned maritime nations, Nigeria’s maritime future depends significantly on the quality, competence, and sustainability of its maritime workforce.

He noted that at the centre of that workforce are Nigerian seafarers, adding that no maritime nation can be built without seafarers. Olubowale, who is also the Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Seamate Maritime Integrated Services Limited, pointed out that throughout history, the world’s leading maritime nations have shared a common characteristic: “they invested deliberately and consistently in maritime human capital.

The maritime success of countries such as Norway, Singapore, Greece, Denmark, Japan, South Korea, and the Netherlands was not built solely on infrastructure, ports, ships, or regulations. It was built on the strength of their maritime professionals. “No maritime nation can build a strong maritime domain without strong seafarers.

Ships alone do not create maritime nations, ports alone do not create maritime nations, policies alone do not create maritime nations.” He mentioned that the long-term success of Nigeria’s maritime sector and blue economy will ultimately depend on its ability to develop, empower, retain, and continuously support indigenous maritime professionals capable of competing on a global scale.

Olubowale stated that for Nigeria to become a leading maritime nation in Africa, local capacity development must move from aspiration to action. He reiterated that the future of the nation’s shipping industry, port system, offshore sector, coastal trade, marine services, and blue economy depends on the strength of its maritime workforce.

Next article

Sources and reading line

Public reports, policy documents, and industry releases cited in this article remain available here for continued review.

View cited sources1 sources

‘Seafarers vital to Nigeria’s economic growth’

Published source

Document: Punch Nigeria Business RSS · Source: Punch Nigeria Business RSS

Open source↗
Continue from here

Continue this article into market review, product systems, and project preparation.

When this signal is already affecting your buying sequence, continue from here into the related market page, product route, or a practical project discussion.

Related market pages

Continue into the country page when destination documents, packing, and delivery timing need a deeper read.

Nigeria industry and refractory demandOpen market page
Project preparation

Share the unit, duty position, target campaign, destination market, and document questions so the next reply can stay practical.

Unit name, exact hot-zone position, and current lining route

Target campaign, shutdown or commissioning window, and expected quantity split

Destination market, delivery route, and the document set needed before quotation

Discuss this articleBack to News