Author: The Nation

  • Lift Africa leads push for digital safety, safe schools and Kano VAPP law passage

    Lift Africa leads push for digital safety, safe schools and Kano VAPP law passage

    Lift Africa Foundation has launched the 2025 United Nations 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence with a nationwide call for stronger digital safety policies, improved school protection systems and the urgent passage of the Harmonized VAPP provisions in Kano State.

    The Foundation made the appeal during a press briefing in Abuja, where it aligned with the global campaign theme, “UNiTE: To End Digital Violence Against Women and Girls.” It warned that technology-facilitated abuse is now one of the fastest-growing forms of violence affecting women and girls across the country.

    Executive Director of Lift Africa Foundation, Aisha Hamman, said that up to 95 per cent of deepfake pornography targets women, while 58 per cent of women worldwide have experienced online violence. She described the trend as both alarming and deeply harmful. “Digital violence is real violence,” she said. “Its impact on mental health, safety, education, democratic participation, and human rights is severe — and Nigeria cannot treat it as an afterthought.”

    The organisation also drew attention to Kano State’s persistent failure to domesticate the VAPP Act, making it the only state in Nigeria yet to adopt the law ten years after its passage. With a population of more than 20 million people and only one Sexual Assault Referral Centre, the state remains one of the most difficult environments for survivors seeking justice and medical or psychosocial support.

    Hamman disclosed that Lift Africa’s six years of advocacy helped develop the Harmonized VAPP Provisions, which have been integrated into Kano’s Penal Code Amendment framework and now await passage by the state assembly. “Kano cannot continue to address violence with outdated, fragmented laws,” she said. “The legal gap is leaving women and girls unprotected — and it must be closed urgently.”

    The Foundation also expressed concern over recent abductions of schoolgirls in Kebbi and Niger States, describing them as direct attacks on girls’ rights to safety and education. Hamman urged the Federal Government to fast-track the implementation of the Safe Schools Initiative, insisting that insecurity continues to derail gains made in girls’ education. “We welcome the government’s declaration of a state of emergency on security,” she said. “But what Nigerians need now is visible, timely action — especially around school safety.”

    As part of its activities for the 16 Days campaign, Lift Africa announced that it will host the Kano Gender Justice Summit on December 10, coinciding with Human Rights Day. The event, themed “Building Pathways to Protection: Advancing Legal Protections and Strengthening Community Action Against Gender-Based Violence,” is expected to convene justice actors, policymakers, traditional and religious leaders, digital safety experts, survivor advocates, youth groups and development partners. The summit will culminate in a Community Declaration for Protection and Justice to guide coordinated GBV response across Kano’s five emirate councils.

    Lift Africa Foundation will also roll out a series of activities across Kano and Adamawa States, including media advocacy, radio sensitisation, digital violence awareness campaigns, youth-focused dialogues, disability inclusion engagements, government MDA collaborations, community sensitisation, a Zero-Tolerance Football Match targeting men and boys, and community awareness walks.

    Hamman reaffirmed the organisation’s commitment to advancing safety for women and girls nationwide, saying, “There is no excuse for physical, psychological, or digitally mediated abuse. Every woman and girl deserves to live, learn, speak, lead, and thrive without fear.”

  • New NEITI boss vows to amend act

    New NEITI boss vows to amend act

    The Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) Executive Secretary, Hon Musa Sarkin Adar on Thursday vowed to amend the 2007 Act establishing the watchdog organisation to address its lacuna.

    He said the inability of NEITI to get the required legislative powers to effectively police and monitor the oil, gas and mining industry is hindering the transparency needed in the sector.

    He made this known at the NEITI House, Abuja, as the ex-Executive Secretary, Dr. Orji Ogbonnaya Orji officially handed over to him.

    He recalled that the former Executive Secretaries, Dr. Waziri Adio and Ogbonnaya had once complained to him in the House of Representatives that there were some gaps in the Act that established NEITI.

    He said since the watchdog is to oversight powerful energy firms, it needs adequate legislative power to act.

    Adar said, “I looked at the act before it is handed over to me officially. I know it before I came here. I shared my opinion with Wazir Adio, equally with Orji Ogbonnaya Orji at one time in my office in the National Assembly, that there is lacuna in the act that established this institution.

    READ ALSO: I’ll serve Oyo state people till my last day in office – Makinde

    “And it needs to be strengthened by an act of parliament. And that is going to be one of our major tasks.

    “I wonder how an institution like this, who’s going to oversight very powerful mafias in the economy of this world, and you don’t have any teeth that you can bite. Lack of those teeth to bite is hindering our performance, our career performance.”

    Meanwhile, Orji stated that the Federal Government was able to recover $3 billion and more than $6 billion in outstanding revenues and liabilities was identified through evidence-based reporting.

    He said his achievements strengthened domestic resource mobilisation and fiscal transparency in the extractive sector.

    “When I assumed office on 19 February 2021, NEITI faced a convergence of operational, governance, and institutional challenges—threatened eviction from rented offices, a vacant NSWG, strained stakeholder relations, inadequate tools and infrastructure, low staff morale, and a rapidly evolving extractive governance landscape demanding climate reporting, systematic disclosure, beneficial ownership transparency, and data-driven accountability.”

    He stated that the institution was able to rebuild trust across government agencies, extractive companies, civil society, and the media and was able to maintain full global compliance with the consistent publication of Oil & Gas, Solid Minerals, and FASD Reports, advancing key reforms including PIA implementation, beneficial ownership transparency, contract disclosure, licensing accountability, environmental reporting, and subnational governance.

    “Despite the complexities surrounding the 2023 Validation cycle, Nigeria achieved 92/100 in Outcomes and Impact and 90/100 in Transparency, reaffirming NEITI’s standing as a leading global reform institution.”

    He urged the staff to be loyal to the new Executive Secretary.

  • African Energy Bank ready for APPPO, Afreximbank opening

    African Energy Bank ready for APPPO, Afreximbank opening

    Arising from the inspection of the furnishing of the African Energy Bank (AEB) corporate head office in Abuja yesterday, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, has expressed satisfaction at the completion, noting that the bank is now ready for commissioning by the African Petroleum Producers Association (APPO) and the Afrexim Bank.

    He described the promoters as the drivers of the AEB, insisting that Nigeria has fulfilled its obligations as the host country, furnishing the bank to taste in the best location.

    His words: “I came to inspect the headquarters furnishing of the Africa Energy Bank and I am happy to disclose to the world and Nigerians and Africans that Nigeria has delivered on all the obligations made for us to fulfill as host country.

    “The headquarters is ready, tastefully furnished in the best location and so we are ready for the bank to take off. So, we are waiting for, you know, APPO and African Exim Bank that are the drivers of this process, you know, to facilitate the takeoff.”

    He reiterated that it is noteworthy to say that the building is set and the next thing is to invite the promoters: Afrexim and APPO to declare it open.

    READ ALSO; No Boko Haram suspects held in Lagos, CP Jimoh

    He said, “But what Nigerians, you know, and the world need to know today is that as a host country we have met all our obligations and the building is ready. The bank is ready to go.

    “But we’re trying to invite, you know, the APPO, you know, ministers, you know, to come to Nigeria so that we can show to them and say, look, this is what we promised. We fulfilled it. The building is ready.”

    Continuing, Lokpobiri said, “The important point is that we have met our obligation.

    “As a host country, we provided, you know, everything that is expected of us as host country, you know, to provide. So, is this an indication that the bank is well on its way? Yes, absolutely.”

  • Dangiwa makes case for 3% budgetary allocation for land titling

    Dangiwa makes case for 3% budgetary allocation for land titling

    The Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Ahmed Musa Dangiwa, has urged state governments to dedicate between one and three per cent of their annual budgets to land administration and systematic land titling.

    He said credible land governance is the country’s strongest lever for building a trillion-dollar economy.

    Dangiwa made the call in a keynote address at the opening of the 30th Conference of Directors of Lands in the Federal and States’ Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs).

    “I strongly recommend and charge that Nigerian State Governments ring-fence between 1 and 3 per cent of their annual budgets for land administration and systematic titling during the reform and scaling phase,” he stated.

    The theme for the 30th Conference is ‘Nigeria Land Titling, Registration and Documentation Programme (NLTRDP): Implementation Mission’

    Dangiwa explained that international evidence shows very clearly that ministries responsible for land administration around the world operate on about one per cent of the total public budget.

    He said “ based on these global benchmarks and our own national realities … a sustainable allocation of 0.5 to 1 per cent will be sufficient to maintain digital registries, continue systematic documentation, and keep the cadastre up to date”

    READ ALSO; No Boko Haram suspects held in Lagos, CP Jimoh

    The Minister further stated that half of the allocation must go directly to real service delivery- systematic titling, digitisation, modern registries, surveys and dispute-resolution-not vehicles, furniture or overheads.

    “If we spend on impact, not overheads, every state will unlock revenue, citizens will gain secure property rights, and land will become a true economic asset, not dead capital. And let me say this confidently: the success of the Land4Growth Programme is Nigeria’s surest bet to achieving the $1 trillion economy,” he remarked

    Accordingly, Dangiwa stated that land becomes bankable when citizens can use it for credit, when investors trust the registry, and when states earn sustainable revenue from property markets.

    He said: “We will unlock growth on a scale that can transform our national economy. That is how land becomes wealth, and how this sector can power Nigeria’s economic future.”

    The Minister further disclosed that in the last World Bank Doing Business ranking on Registering Property, Nigeria performed poorly due to excessive procedures, long timelines, and high costs, which create uncertainty for investors and unnecessary hardship for citizens.

    He noted the identical challenges across the states as complex manual workflows, fragmented and outdated paper records, corruption risks, tenure insecurity for vulnerable groups, and very low revenue collection despite huge potential.

    Dangiwa also told the participants that under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, land administration will be treated not as routine bureaucracy but as a strategic economic reform, adding that government had begun to translate the commitment into concrete action.

    “ I have directed the Director Lands to make sure every Director has a copy of the Concept Note and Framework. Embrace it and properly guide your State Governments to adopt it and work with us at the Federal level to implement it,” Dangiwa said.

    The Minister, however, said: “ We are not yet where we want to be, but we are certainly not where we were last year. We are moving – and we are moving with purpose

    “We have within this period introduced the Nigeria Land Titling, Registration and Documentation Programme (Land4Growth) to unlock an estimated $300 billion in dead capital, and are finalizing a partnership with the World Bank and state governments to register, document, and title land nationwide.”

    Earlier in his opening remarks, the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, Dr. Shaiub Belgore, stated that the annual Conference of Directors of Lands has served as a key platform for professional exchange over the years.

    He said: “ As we mark the 30th edition, it is important that this gathering does not remain a yearly talk shop. The true value of this conference will not be measured in speeches, communiqués or photographs, but in how the knowledge gained here is translated into practical reforms in your States.”

  • Tinubu’s electricity reforms attract $2billion investment

    Tinubu’s electricity reforms attract $2billion investment

    The Federal Government’s power sector reforms are yielding measurable results, with over $2 billion in fresh capital flowing into the industry since the current administration took office, the Minister of Power, Chief Adebayo Adelabu, has said.

    He made this known in Lagos during the PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC’s) Annual Power and Utilities Roundtable 2025, with the theme, ‘Nigeria’s Multi-tier Electricity Market: Imperatives for Successful Evolution.’

    At the heart of the power sector reform agenda is the long-standing metering crisis where, for instance, six million consumers have been metered, out of 13 million registered power consumers in Nigeria.

    However, this leaves nearly half of electricity users on estimated billing, a system widely criticised as unreliable and exploitative.

    To close this gap, Adelabu said the government has launched an aggressive metering rollout through two major initiatives: the Presidential Metering Initiative—backed by N700 billion to deploy 10 million meters over five years—and the $500 million District Sector Recovery Programme.

    READ ALSO: I’ll serve Oyo state people till my last day in office – Makinde

    The later, according to him, will add another 3.45 million meters and introduce modern meter-data technologies for real-time monitoring. “Remote tracking of meters will improve collections, boost liquidity, and ensure that consumers pay only for what they use,” Adebola said.

    The Minister also said beyond consumer-level reform, Nigeria is implementing deeper structural changes in how electricity is generated, sold, and regulated.

    He stated that one of the most consequential shifts has been the decentralisation of the electricity market through the Electricity Act 2023, enabling state governments to independently generate, transmit and distribute power.

    This has triggered the emergence of state-level electricity markets for the first time in history, allowing regions to design local energy solutions tailored to their economic needs.

    Accompanying this shift, the Minister noted, is the development of a National Integrated Electricity Policy—approved in February 2025 after more than two decades without a sector-wide roadmap—defining the responsibilities of regulators, utilities, investors, technical operators and consumers across traditional and renewable energy sectors.

    The commercialisation of the industry is also reshaping sector economics. For instance, in 2023, electricity revenue at the distribution level was about N1 trillion. By 2024, that figure had jumped to N1.7 trillion—a 70 per cent increase—with projections nearing N2.3 trillion by December 2025.

    The Minister stressed that this increase is not the result of higher consumer tariffs but a strategic reallocation of spending away from diesel, petrol and generator costs toward grid-based supply.

    He also said a series of technical milestones reinforces the sector’s stabilisation trajectory. He said, for instance, that installed generation capacity has risen from 13 to 14 gigawatts, and the country recorded an all-time peak generation of 5,801.44 MW, along with its highest-ever energy trading volume of 128,370.75 MWh.

    Grid stability has also improved significantly after 12 system-collapse incidents in 2024. Only one collapse occurred in 2025, with power restored within hours.

    Perhaps the most strategically important development is Nigeria’s first successful synchronisation of its transmission grid with the West African Power Pool.

    After a failed 2007 test that lasted just seven minutes before collapse, the 2025 test held firm for over four hours, allowing seamless interconnection across 14 countries.

    A final test slated to last four days could enable permanent grid integration, positioning Nigeria to export power to neighbouring countries using existing infrastructure—unlocking new sources of foreign exchange.

    Still, Adelabu insists the reform journey is ongoing. He emphasised the need to strengthen regulatory capacity at both federal and state levels, refine consumer protection mechanisms, and deepen public-private partnerships.

    “Nigeria’s transition to a multi-tier electricity market is not optional—it is a necessity,” he said, adding, “To build a reliable and competitive power sector, we must face our challenges directly and implement practical, realistic solutions.”

    With rising investment, falling subsidy burdens, improved liquidity, growing generation capacity and state-driven market participation, Nigeria’s electricity landscape is shifting from a fragile state-owned model toward a scalable, commercially-sustainable power economy—one capable of driving industrial growth and supporting a modernising nation.

    The Commissioner for Energy and Natural Resources, Lagos State, Engr. Abiodun Ogunleye, said the roundtable gathering will help shape the evolving relationship between Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and the emerging State Electricity Regulatory Commissions (SERC).

    “Today, our key focus is the interaction and jurisdiction between federal and state regulatory frameworks. I believe most of us now recognise the importance of this new path, and for any who remain uncertain, I’m appealing for patience.

    “Give us three years. If after that period we have not delivered meaningful impact at scale—if we have not seen visible progress—then bring forward whatever reforms or adjustments you wish. But for now, I’m asking: allow this model to run, allow it to mature, and allow it to demonstrate results.

    “Yes, a multi-tier regulatory architecture will be complex and challenging at the outset. But Nigeria deserves the opportunity to try a different model—one that can break the entrenched pattern of inefficiency, stagnation, and darkness. We cannot keep doing the same thing year after year and expect transformation”, Ogunleye remarked.

    Regional Senior Manager at PwC, Sam Abu, in his opening remarks, said: “We are here today because Nigeria’s power challenges are still real and unresolved. My hope is that we will one day reach a point where there is no longer a need to hold conversations about electricity—because the issues will have been solved.”

    He said for nearly 15 years, this platform has convened the key players shaping Nigeria’s electricity landscape. “And today, more than ever, we are gathered not just to examine the challenges, but to chart real solutions. This year’s focus is timely, coming after the Electricity Act of 2023 — which opened a critical new chapter,” he stated.

    This legislation, Abu said, represents one of the most transformative shifts: for the first time, states can build and regulate their own electricity markets. “We are moving from a single, centralised model to a dynamic, multi-layered energy ecosystem — one that can drive competition, spur innovation, and deliver meaningful service improvements,” he said.

    This transition, Abu further stated, will require strong regulation, investment, and thoughtful coordination across all levels of government and industry. According to him, “If we execute this well, Nigeria stands to win immensely.”

    Abu said PwC remains committed to working with governments, regulators, DisCos, investors, development partners, and private stakeholders to build a stronger electricity market.

    “Nigeria’s power reform is not an instant event — it is a journey that requires vision, discipline, cooperation, and bold investment. Today’s roundtable is another step on that path, another opportunity to shape the energy future of over 200 million Nigerians — and ultimately, millions more across Africa,” he stated.

  • Nigeria targets higher global inflows with shorter settlement cycle

    Nigeria targets higher global inflows with shorter settlement cycle

    The Nigerian capital market will today transit from a four-day settlement cycle to a three-day cycle in a major change aimed at enhancing liquidity and investment activities by foreign and domestic investors.

    The transition from previous T+3 cycle to T+2 settlement cycle enhances the global competitiveness of the Nigerian market, providing investors with greater turnaround time while reducing counter-party risks.

    With the transition, all trades executed from today will now settle two business days after the trade date, as against the previous cycle when trades were settled or completed three days after the trade date.

    Turnover at the Nigerian stock market had doubled to all-time record of N9.57 trillion in the first 10 months of this year, with foreign portfolio investors accounting for more than one-fifth of transactions at the market.

    Managing Director, Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) Plc, Haruna Jalo-Waziri, said the transition, which becomes effective today, represents a significant milestone in the ongoing modernisation of Nigeria’s post-trade infrastructure and reflects the market’s collective commitment to global best practices.

    READ ALSO: I’ll serve Oyo state people till my last day in office – Makinde

    According to him, the achievement strengthens operational efficiency, enhances market liquidity, and significantly reduces counter-party risk, ultimately improving investor experience and ensuring quicker access to funds and securities.

    “The transition also positions Nigeria more competitively within the global capital market landscape, where shorter settlement cycles are increasingly becoming the standard,” Jalo-Waziri said.

    He expressed confidence in the readiness of the market, noting that the successful commencement of the T+2 settlement cycle is the product of extensive collaboration, rigorous testing, and the unwavering commitment of all market stakeholders.

    He said: “We are proud to lead this change at a time when efficiency and resilience are critical pillars for market competitiveness.

    “As we embrace the T+2 framework, we are unlocking efficiencies that will shape the future of Nigeria’s capital market for years to come. This milestone sends a clear message that the Nigerian market is evolving, forward-thinking, and determined to match and surpass global benchmarks in post-trade operations”.

    He pointed out that the CSCS had worked closely with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), exchanges, market operators, custodians, and key trade associations to ensure smooth implementation.

    According to him, comprehensive readiness assessments, industry-wide testing, and participant engagements were conducted to guarantee that systems, processes, and operational frameworks were aligned with the new cycle ahead of today’s launch.

    He assured that as the market adjusts to this new settlement environment, CSCS remains committed to providing continuous support and guidance.

    He added that the company has also made implementation procedures and guidelines available to all market participants to aid operational clarity and ensure seamless adoption.

    “The T+2 transition marks another bold step in CSCS’s long-standing mission to drive innovation and operational excellence across Nigeria’s capital market. The organisation will continue to champion initiatives that strengthen market confidence, promote efficiency, and align the Nigerian market with global standards,” Jalo-Waziri said.

    Analysts said the transition further ensures that all other tradable instruments across the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), NASD OTC Securities Exchange, and Lagos Commodities & Futures Exchange (LCFE) align with fixed income and commodity instruments which already operate a T+2 settlement cycle.

    Analysts at United Capital said the transition was designed to give investors faster and smoother investing experience.

     “What this means for you, as an investor: From November 28, all equity trades will settle two business days after you make them. If you buy shares or other equities on a Monday, your trade will settle by Wednesday. If you sell shares or other equities on a Monday, your money will also be available by Wednesday,” United Capital explained.

  • CBN reports N74.41tr credit to private sector in one month

    CBN reports N74.41tr credit to private sector in one month

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has reported N74.41 trillion  credit to the private sector in October 2025, its money and credit statistics, has shown.

    The figure represents improvement from N72.53 trillion in September, and an increase of about N1.88 trillion represents a month-on-month growth .

    It represents the strongest positive movement so far in 2025.

    The jump came immediately after the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) cut the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) by 50 basis points to 27 per cent at its September 2025 meeting, the first policy rate reduction since 2020, as inflation began to ease and foreign exchange conditions improved.

    At its November 2025 meeting, the MPC then held the MPR at 27 per cent, while tweaking the corridor around the rate to discourage banks from simply parking liquidity with the CBN, signaling a cautious approach to managing system liquidity and inflation.

    On a year-on-year basis, credit to the private sector increased only slightly, from N74.07 trillion in October 2024 to N74.41 trillion in October 2025.

    The modest annual gain shows that while the stock of private credit is broadly back to where it was a year earlier, the real story is the short-term rebound that followed the September rate cut.

    Across 2025, the pattern of private sector credit has been choppy rather than steadily expansionary. It started the year at N77.38 trillion in January, slipped to N76.26 trillion in February and N75.98 trillion in March, then recovered to N78.07 trillion in April.

    READ ALSO; No Boko Haram suspects held in Lagos, CP Jimoh

    It softened again to N77.97 trillion in May and N76.13 trillion in June, hovered around N75.88 trillion in August, then dropped sharply to N72.53 trillion in September before the October bounce to N74.41 trillion.

    Between January and February, private credit fell by about N1.12 trillion, a decline of 1.45 per cent. It dipped again in March, although by a much smaller N0.28 trillion, or 0.36 per cent. April then delivered a strong rebound, with credit rising by about N2.09 trillion or 2.75 per cent, pushing the stock back above N78 trillion.

    From April to June, the direction turned down again. Credit fell slightly in May, then more sharply in June, losing about N1.84 trillion between May and June. By June, private credit stood at N76.13 trillion, below January’s level despite rising prices and nominal incomes.

    There is a gap in the series for July, but by August, private credit was N75.88 trillion, only marginally below June. The more notable movement came in September, when credit dropped by about N3.36 trillion from August, a fall of 4.42 per cent. That slump set the stage for the October recovery.

    In October, the private sector accounted for about 75.0 per cent of total domestic credit, with the government taking up the remaining 25 per cent.

    The split is calculated from the N74.41 trillion in private credit and N24.79 trillion in government credit relative to total domestic credit of N99.20 trillion. In September, the shares were almost identical, with the private sector at about 75.0 per cent and government at 25 per cent.

    This composition has shifted notably compared with a year earlier. In October 2024, total domestic credit stood at N113.46 trillion, of which N74.07 trillion went to the private sector and N39.39 trillion to government.

    That meant private credit represented about 65.3 per cent of domestic credit, while government borrowing made up 34.7%. By October 2025, the private share had risen by almost 10 percentage points, driven mainly by the steep fall in government credit.

  • 10 deals worth $100m underway, says Finance Minister

    10 deals worth $100m underway, says Finance Minister

    • Fed Govt calls for stronger intra-African trade

    With at least 10 major trade deals worth a minimum of $100 million currently being negotiated between African and Arab markets, the Federal Government has urged African countries to deepen intra-continental trade and investment as development aid to the continent continues to shrink.

    Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr. Wale Edun, made the appeal in Abuja on Thursday at the 5th B2B Agribusiness Matchmaking Event, warning that African economies must increasingly rely on regional markets and private capital to sustain growth.

    Edun said recent trends showed a sharp retreat in global support to developing countries, stressing that concessional financing and overseas development assistance have continued to decline.

    According to him, Africa recorded a nine per cent drop in 2024 and is projected to face a further 17 per cent decline in 2025, based on estimates by the African Development Bank.

    He told participants that the shift in the global economic environment demands a new approach. “African countries are faced with high debt burdens in many cases, high debt servicing requirements that are gulping funds that could otherwise be used for public investment,” he said.

    He added that it was clear during discussions that “the private sector is the real source of investment, whether it’s foreign direct investment or domestic investment.”

    READ ALSO; No Boko Haram suspects held in Lagos, CP Jimoh

    Edun noted that multilateral support structures built over decades are fading rapidly. “The world has turned away from multilateralism. If you take out maybe the willingness for international cooperation in perhaps the health sector in some cases and definitely in the area of climate, the multilateralism of the last decades since the Bretton Woods institutions rose up is fast receding,” he said

    The Minister said the reality of declining aid flows requires African countries to look inward. According to him, “Concessional financing and even overseas development assistance flows to developing countries, to Africa, have turned negative.

    “They were down by nine per cent last year 2024. By 2025, the flows will be down by perhaps 17 per cent, according to AFDB estimates. So, we have to look inward, we have to trade more with each other, we have to grow our economies together, the savings of our people being invested in productive activity.”

    At the event, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Welcome 2 Africa International, Bamidele Seun Awoola, confirmed that the organisation, working with its partners, aims to facilitate at least 10 trade agreements worth no less than $100 million between African and Arab markets.

    Speaking at the matchmaking forum, Awoola said her organisation had set clear internal targets focused on unlocking new commercial linkages, spurring value addition and strengthening regional ties.

    While declining to estimate the current size of Africa–Arab trade, she said the level of investor interest and ongoing engagements already pointed to opportunities that “far surpass the $100 million target.”

    She said one of the organisation’s priorities is to drive industrialisation through joint ventures that bring manufacturers and processors into Nigeria.

    According to her, Nigeria’s agricultural strength must be backed by processing capacity to create jobs, increase value addition and accelerate economic growth.

    By linking producers with processors and structuring partnerships, she said her organisation hopes to help Nigeria build a stronger industrial base that supports communities and expands regional commerce.

    Awoola noted that the matchmaking event was designed to generate concrete business outcomes. She said her team conducted detailed market analysis to determine what African countries, especially Nigeria, can competitively supply to the Arab market, and invited only participants positioned to close real transactions.

    She expressed confidence that with the strong engagements recorded on the opening day, the event would produce partnerships, joint ventures and wealth-creating ventures aligned with Nigeria’s development goals.

    A major outcome of the Abuja meetings was the signing of two Membership Agreements with Nigeria and Côte d’Ivoire. The agreement signed by the Federal Republic of Nigeria, represented by the Federal Ministry of Finance, formally admitted the country into the Arab Africa Trade Bridges (AATB) Programme.

    The programme promotes trade facilitation, improves export competitiveness and targets key sectors including agribusiness value chains and small and medium enterprises. It also assists member nations in areas such as logistics, industrial development and expanding access to regional and global markets.

  • NLNG, NCDMB to partner on asset intervention

    NLNG, NCDMB to partner on asset intervention

    Nigeria LNG Limited (NLNG) and the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) have engaged in productive discussions towards collaboration in support of NLNG’s planned revamp and enhancement of key operational facilities in Trains 1 to 6 of the NLNG plant.

    In a statement on Thursday by Sophia Horsfall, General Manager, External Relations and Sustainable Development (NLNG) and

    Dr. Obinna Ezeobi, General Manager, Corporate Communications Division (NCDMB), the organisations said the initiative is aimed at improving asset performance and overall productivity.

    The collaborative meeting took place during the Nigerian Content Stakeholders Retreat hosted recently at NLNG’s operational base at Finima, Bonny Island, Rivers State.

    During the retreat, the General Manager Production, NLNG, Nnamdi Anowi outlined the company’s revamp programme named “Accelerated Asset Intervention (AAI).”

    READ ALSO: I’ll serve Oyo state people till my last day in office – Makinde

    He explained that the initiative is expected to commence in 2026 and will require NCDMB’s support and relevant approvals to enable timely execution. According to him, the AAI programme is intended to overhaul the Trains and Common Facilities, which are key to operations.

    “The goal is to implement predictive maintenance and continue to deliver sustainable top quartile and reliability performance, continue to deliver gas and value to the country and retain NLNG’s position as the best company in the country,” he said.

    Responding, the Executive Secretary of NCDMB, Engr. Felix Omatsola Ogbe, represented by the Director of Capacity Building, NCDMB, Engr. Abayomi Bamidele, pledged NCDMB’s support for NLNG’s plans, in line with the existing close collaboration between the organizations and NCDMB’s role as a regulator and business enabler in the oil and gas industry.

    He noted that NCDMB and NLNG had collaborated successfully to develop the first Service Level Agreement (SLA) between an operating company and a regulator in the Nigerian oil and gas industry and are currently working on other technical capacity building initiatives.  

    He recalled that NCDMB granted accelerated approvals for key projects in the NLNG Train 7, which enabled the project to commence in 2020 at the height of COVID-19 pandemic. NCDMB equally granted speedy approvals and support for the new gas projects, which will provide feedstock for Train 7, he stated.

    The Executive Secretary emphasized the need for NLNG to optimize Nigerian content and utilize in-country capacities in the proposed packages, in line with the provisions of the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development (NOGICD) Act.

    Speaking later at the Award Gala Dinner marking the formal conclusion of the Nigerian Content Stakeholders Retreat and Appreciation Night 2025, the Executive Secretary commended NLNG for the giant strides it had recorded with the Train-7 Project.

    He expressed delight that the Train-7 Project currently employs thousands of workers, describing it as a huge contribution to the nation’s economy.

    Pioneer Executive Secretary of the NCDMB, Dr. Ernest Nwapa, noted that NLNG’s leadership in local content development went back many years, recalling that the company stood out as an early “icon of Nigerian Content” because of its voluntary compliance.

     He added that NLNG also commissioned the industry’s first skills gap analysis, promptly circulating the findings to guide stakeholders and policymakers on priority capacity-building needs to strengthen in-country value addition.

    He also commended the NCDMB for remarkable success in implementation of the NOGICD Act and achievements made so far.

    The climax of the event was the presentation of awards to outstanding companies and individuals for their contributions to Nigerian Content development in Nigeria.

  • Govt should increase security funding, says Ndume

    Govt should increase security funding, says Ndume

    Senator Ali Ndume yesterday called for increased security funding and provision of technological equipment for soldiers to fight terrorism.

    He also advised government to cut down some discretionary services, including the activities of the National Assembly, to redirect funds toward tackling rising insecurity

    Ndume, who spoke on the Channels Television, suggested that lawmakers could meet on a quarterly basis, adding that compensation to lawmakers can then reflect the adjusted sitting schedule.

    He said Nigeria should reduce spending on areas that do not significantly benefit the majority of citizens and focus instead on ensuring public safety.

    READ ALSO; Will Sujimoto bounce back?

    Ndume, who represents Borno South, said: “Urgently, we must discard everything as far as I am concerned and even if it is necessary to shut down some discretionary services, starting with the National Assembly. You can cut it off and ask us to sit, maybe in a quarter, for example “

    He frowned at the recurrent and overhead costs despite the unresolved 2025 budget.

    Ndume said: “We sit for some time, depending on the workload that we have, and are paid accordingly. And now, the 2025 budget is not running; we are in 2025, but the recurrent and overhead costs are running, and who is benefitting?

    “Less than five per cent of Nigerians, and it is a lot of money. So, why don’t we shut down all these things and use the money to secure the people first?” he stated.

    Acknowledging that his proposal may create friction between him and his colleagues at the National Assembly, Ndume said he was not worried about any potential backlash.

    He said he is  long standing legislator, adding: “I have been in trouble before so many times.”

    Ndume stressed: “I am not saying you should shut down the National Assembly, let me clear you, and it is not because you have scared me now. What I am saying is realistically, our house is on fire, and we need everything to put that fire out.

    “So, if that means the National Assembly will have to reduce their activities so that we pay you less and then use the money to concentrate on security, I am sure many of my colleagues will agree to that,” Ndume added.

    The senator raised concerns about the country’s limited technological capacity, lamenting that  Nigeria currently operates only a few satellites, which are insufficient for effective security surveillance.

    He expressed worry over the constraints by security agencies who are unable to monitor the activities of terrorists due to inadequate tracking infrastructure.

    Ndume said: “You know that one of the fundamental problems we have in the security sector is that we don’t have the ability to track criminals in real time, and the satellite we are talking about, Nigeria has only four and one has issues.”

    He also said although the existing satellites provided some capability, they were not enough to address the scale of the security challenges.

    Ndume said: “Why were we not able to trace the general who was missing in action? It was because we don’t have adequate tracking systems.”