This study presents an empirical review of port operations mechanisms and their influence on container ship trade effectiveness at Tin Can Island Port, Nigeria. Within the context of intensifying inter-port competition in West Africa and persistent congestion challenges in Nigerian seaports, the paper evaluates institutional, operational, and infrastructural determinants of port performance. The analysis is grounded in Bureaucratic Management Theory, Traffic Congestion Theory, Resource-Based Theory, and Frischmann’s infrastructure framework, which collectively explain administrative delays, congestion dynamics, strategic resource deployment, and infrastructure accessibility in port systems. The review synthesizes existing literature on maritime, terminal, and hinterland operational dimensions of port efficiency, highlighting key performance indicators such as vessel turnaround time, waiting time, berth occupancy rate, crane productivity, yard dwell time, and gate processing efficiency. Particular emphasis is placed on Nigeria’s landlord port model, under which terminal operations are concessioned to private operators while the Nigerian Ports Authority retains regulatory and marine service responsibilities. Despite reform efforts and private sector investment, operational inefficiencies persist, reflected in prolonged vessel waiting times, cargo handling bottlenecks, congestion, and rising logistics costs. The study identifies administrative bottlenecks, infrastructural deficits, manpower and technological limitations, policy inconsistencies, and weak stakeholder coordination as primary drivers of inefficiency. Delays are conceptualized as both operational disruptions and economic burdens, generating direct costs and indirect losses in competitiveness and trade diversion. The review concludes that governance optimization, infrastructure modernization, digital integration, and performance-based monitoring are critical to enhancing container trade effectiveness and strengthening Tin Can Island Port’s regional competitiveness.
Okedi-Igwe et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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