Federal College of Fisheries and Marine Technology
The Federal College of Fisheries and Marine Technology (FCF&MT) is a higher education institute located on Victoria Island in Lagos, Nigeria.[1] It is a monotechnic approved by the National Board for Technical Education.[2] The College was originally known as the Federal School of Fisheries, established in 1969 as a vocational training institute for Nigeria's in-shore fishing fleet. It was upgraded to a technological institution in 1992. The college offers courses in fisheries technology, general science, marine engineering and nautical science. It has two hostels, accommodating about 450 students.[1]
The college is headed by a provost who reports the Minister of Agriculture.[1] In February 2009 Samuel Azikwe Zelibe, former head of the Fisheries Department of Delta State University, was appointed provost. In January 2010 the provost warned that despite the N74 million government allocation and a N37.4 million World Bank grant last year, the college had scarcely enough funding to cover basic needs, let alone upgrade facilities and purchase a training vessel.[3] He said more money was needed to develop a Fishery Technology laboratory, raise buildings and build roads.[4]
The college fronts Victoria Beach, which is rapidly eroding. When the building was commissioned in May 1993 the beach was about 150 m wide. Two years later, waves had reached to within a few meters of the foundation of the buildings, forcing construction of a protective groyne.[5]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 "Welcome". Federal College of Fisheries and Marine Technology. Retrieved 2010-03-27.
- ↑ "APPROVED MONOTECHNICS IN NIGERIA". National Board for Technical Education. Retrieved 2010-03-27.
- ↑ AZEEZ FOLORUNSO (12 January 2010). "Our subvention is grossly inadequate, Provost tells govt". Nigerian Compass. Retrieved 2010-03-27.
- ↑ SAM OTTI (January 12, 2010). "Provost seeks better funding of Marine College". Daily Sun. Retrieved 2010-03-27.
- ↑ Regina Folorunsho (13 July 1999). "Transferring a coastal erosion problem: is this a wise practice? / Lagos-Nigeria.". Wise Coastal Practices for Sustainable Human Development Forum. Retrieved 2010-03-27.
Coordinates: 6°25′15″N 3°24′42″E / 6.42083°N 3.41167°E