Category: Industry

  • ARSO forum to drive standardisation in Africa

    ARSO forum to drive standardisation in Africa

    The 21st African Organisation for Standardisation (ARSO) General Assembly meeting, scheduled to hold in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, from August 10 to 14,  is expected to raise the level of awareness among African regulators on the benefits of standardisation on the continent’s  economy.

    ARSO President Dr. Joseph Odumodu said the event tagged: “The role of standards in promoting sustainable Agriculture and Food Security in Africa” is aimed at creating dynamic markets within countries and among regions as part of its agricultural strategy.

    Odumodu said African Union’s (AU) vision for agriculture was to create dynamic markets within countries and between regions.

    “As regional markets become increasingly integrated, divergent and inconsistent, national and regional trade policy and standards issues constrain intra-regional trade of most commodities,’’ he said.

    He said the aim of the African Day of Standardisation was to raise awareness among African regulators, industry, academia, consumers and the entire African citizens on the benefits of standardisation on Africa’s economy. .

    Odumodu listed programmes for the event to include the made in Africa Expo, which aims at providing opportunity to present investment opportunities, strategies and success stories to a diverse range of potential partners for the Public-Private-Partnership (PPP) networks.

    Odumodu said the expo would also provide a platform to exchange evolving business trends to facilitate better positioning of national and sub-regional manufacturing and production enterprises.

    The aim of ARSO General Assembly is to offer a platform for ARSO members and stakeholders to review the programmes and progress of the organisation with respect to its mandate, vision and mission.

  • Man urges members to maintain status quo on MYTO 2.0 

    Members of Ikeja branch of Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) have resolved to maintain the status quo and continue to operate on Multi-Year Tariff Order (MYTO 2.0), pending the determination of the suit they filed at the Lagos High Court challenging the decision of  Ikeja Electric to increase electricity tariff.

    MAN also admonished members to strictly adhere to MYTO 2.0 on tariff and fixed costs, noting that members, who criss-cross, do so at their own peril as it is not acceptable to MAN and Ikeja Electric.

    The decisions were contained in a communiqué issued after a crucial meeting of members of Ikeja branch of MAN, held during the week at the MAN House, to look at the recommendations of a 10-man Joint Committee of MAN/Ikeja Electric earlier set up to brainstorm and proffer solutions to some of the issues raised.

    At the end of the meeting, manufacturers unanimously resolved that manufacturers should effect prompt payment of energy bills as at when due, to enable Ikeja Electric have funds to defray its costs of operation.

    In the communiqué signed by Chairman and Executive Secretary, Ikeja branch of MAN, Prince Oba Okojie and Joseph Emoleke, manufacturers also resolved that Ikeja Electric should appreciate urgently the use of prepaid metres, while MAN and Ikeja Electric encourage and strengthen the stakeholders’ consultative forum as a veritable platform to iron out grey areas.

    The communiqué, made available to The Nation, further said Ikeja Electric needs to upgrade its information technology system and have robust financial platforms to accommodate payments by cheques, drafts, funds transfers etc.

    Besides, Ikeja Electric the communiqué said, should be mindful of losing more customers as some manufacturing companies now generate power. It also said manufacturers are always at a great loss due to the quality of power supply (outages), none metering as the use of best of judgment (BOJ) is not only unfair, but also unethical.

    MAN added that it looks forward to an enlarged working relationship with Ikeja Electric, noting that it is the only way forward.

  • Industries urged on Research, Development

    Industries that are the end users of research results must take interest in the generation of knowledge, former Director-General, National Office of Technology Acquisition and Promotion (NOTAP), Prof. Umar Bindir, has said.

    Bindir made this remark in Abuja during the week while delivering a keynote address on the occasion of the inauguration of the NOTAP-Industry Technology Transfer Fellowship.

    Bindir, who is currently the Secretary, Adamawa State Government, explained that industries must contribute to the generation of relevant knowledge to engender technological development.

    According to him, industries that are the end users of research results must take interest in the generation of knowledge from tertiary institutions and on the proper application of research results.

    “We discover that there is a wide gap between the academia and the industries and in filling this gap, the fellowship is initiated so that industries will take a keen interest in the technological development in the country.

    “Nigeria must emerge as knowledge and learning society built on values; everywhere, universities are sustained and their research results are utilised for technological development. The way forward is for us to commit ourselves and understand that our knowledge institutions must work for Nigeria and their outputs and inputs must be measured,” he said.

    The NOTAP chief noted that Nigeria is not challenging her institutions very well to ensure that they work on problems that are peculiar to the country. “These three aspects must be done in this frame work of change so that we can to tackle our food problems, our water problems, infrastructure problems, and many others,’’ he said.

    Bindir stressed that Nigeria cannot solve these problems by using the same kind of thinking used when it created the problems. “We need to be strategic in solving these problems and the fellowship scheme is one intervention that we belief will proffer the solution that will solve our technological problems,’’ he said.

  • Firm gets ISO Certification

    Firm gets ISO Certification

    The Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has certified Una & Associates Estate Surveying and Valuations firm, having conformed to necessary prerequisites of quality management system of the International standards Organisation (ISO).

    Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the firm, Mr. Pat Una, was presented an NIS ISO 9001: 2008 certificate by Director, Management Systems Certification, SON, Mrs. Oluremi Ayeni, She represented the Director General of SON, Dr. Joseph Odumodu.

    The NIS ISO 9001, 2008 standard is an approval issued to companies who display competence at providing services that meet client’s needs and regulatory modalities. It enables firms and industries to enjoy robust and global recognition in offering applicable solution to challenges associated with business management quality.

    Una described the feat as “fulfilling”, adding that the firm was the first to achieve such in the industry. He said: “We’ve made history as the first estate surveyor and valuation firm to be certified. It is gratifying and humbling to see that we can.”

    He explained that the firm has been committed to offering quality estate surveying and valuation services to its clients in the last 16 years. According to him, the process of ISO certification kick-started in 2013 with immense investment in capital development, infrastructure, time and resources. The system, he said, was subjected to rigorous examination before certification by SON auditors at the end of the assessment.

    He said: “The greatest of the challenges has been building a team in 15years; having a team of committed, dedicated and trustworthy people who are ready to learn. The requirements for ISO is 250, starting from the infrastructure, human capital, training, auditing, documentation and others.”

    Meanwhile, he urged aspiring firms with the right business discipline to come on board, noting that the procedure requires stern discipline and transparency.

    Speaking during the presentation, Mrs. Ayeni said the achievement will not only list the firm among leading class of companies with efficient management framework, but also engender sustainable growth, which the organisation is on course to achieve.

    Emphasising the imperativeness of quality management, she said: “We commend your effort and we actually want others to emulate this as we aim at sustainable development in our nation. Permit me to remind you that the service you are rendering is extremely important to this nation. We are at a very crucial stage in our national development; whatever we do from this time forward, we want to ensure that the growth we achieve either at company level or national level is sustainable.”

    She added that the system will be placed on six months surveillance to ensure complete sustainability and effectiveness. She however, noted that any act of non-conformity should be rectified under a specified timeframe or will otherwise attract withdrawal of the certificate.

  • Fed Govt to establish commodity corporations

    The establishment of commodity corporations in the country will promote greater private sector participation and ownership, Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, Mr. Abdulkadir Musa, has said.

    Speaking in Abuja during a consultative meeting of stakeholders on the proposed establishment of commodity corporations, Musa said the forum was timely, as government was concerned about issues bordering on agric-commodity development as a way of diversifying the nation’s economy.

    “It is important to state that the global market conditions and unsustainable fiscal deficits show that the government can no longer sustain a high level of public expenditures. The liberalisation option of commodity trade should be sustained and encouraged in order to promote greater private sector participation and ownership,’’ he said.

    Musa said the ministry was saddled with the mandate of developing agricultural commodities from processing, packaging, quality certification to standardisation, storage and marketing. He recalled that commodity boards were established in 1977 as a key trade policy on export of agricultural commodities.

    The objectives of the boards, Musa said, were to purchase agric-commodity from farmers and later sell to large buyers while providing incentives to farmers to enable them increase their acreage. The boards also ensured that farmers adopted new technologies in production to increase yield.

    “It was, however, clear that the operation of those boards involved very high administrative costs, unbearable taxation on farmers, gross under-pricing of agric commodities, political interference and non-sustainable infrastructure,’’ he said.

    The permanent secretary said with the introduction of the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) in 1986, government policy direction changed in favour of economic liberalisation that included the trading of commodities.

    As a result of this, he said the liberalisation witnessed lack of requisite experiences, which resulted in the loss of overseas buyers’ confidence in Nigerian agricultural produce for not meeting the minimum international requirement.

    Musa added that in an effort to address the challenges, the dissolution of the marketing boards required the establishment of a market structure to fill the unintended vacuum created. He further said the Federal Government established the Export Commodities Coordinating Committee in 1989 as an inter-ministerial body with members drawn from different ministries.

    He said the committee had brought sanity into the agric-commodity business with the introduction of standards in conjunction with key stakeholders. “I am pleased to inform the gathering that the financial obligation of Nigeria to the International Commodity Organisation to which Nigeria is affiliated has been settled to date.

    “The payment of counterpart funding for counterpart programmes conceded to the country is being settled,’’ he announced.

    On his part, President, Federation of Agricultural Commodity Associations of Nigeria (FACAN), Dr Victor Iyama, urged the Central Bank of Nigeria to provide loans and grants to farmers. He said government must be involved, adding that it should, however, allow stakeholders to drive the process.

    “The government is in the position to support nationals in confronting stiff international economic competition. There should be greater reliance on private sector solutions than on direct government solution whenever and wherever possible. The open market system is far more desirable especially for the upliftment of the farmers,’’ Iyama said.

    According to him, the benefit of trade liberalisation and the scrapping of the commodity boards was that farmers will now get premium price for their commodities. Other benefits, he said, are increase in employment opportunities in the agric-commodity sector, increase and expansion in agricultural commodities production and inflow of foreign exchange into the economy.

  • ‘Nigeria got $30m grant from Korea in two decades’

    The Ambassador of the Republic of Korea to Nigeria, Mr. Noh Kyu-duk, has said his country provided around $30 million in grant and technical cooperation programmes to Nigeria in the last two decades.

    The envoy, who disclosed this in his remark on the occasion of the handing over ceremony of the Nigeria-Korea Friendship Institute of Vocational and Advanced Technology, in Lokoja, Kogi State, said the extended grant focused on education, governance, agricultural production and other areas.

    Harping on the importance of technical and vocational education in nation building, he said when the youths are equipped with updated skills and technologies, jobs would be secured, income generated and poverty reduced to a great extent.

    Commending the Nigerian government on its pledge to build one vocational training centre in each state, he said Kogi State is at the forefront in that direction and remains Korea’s strongest development partner in that regard.

    He enjoined the Nigerian government to pursue an aggressive Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) policy framework, saying without a strong policy drive to beef up the TVET in the 1960’s and 70’s Korea’s economic growth would have been seriously hampered.

    He admonished the Kogi State Government on the proper management of the facility for the desired to manifest. His words: “Without making the best use of these facilities and proper operation and management of this centre, our real mission of producing excellent human resources for the socio-economic development of Kogi and Nigeria may prove difficult”.

    He stressed on the need to strengthen the existing good relationship between the two countries, saying he envisaged the centre developing into a regional centre where it will be providing quality vocational training not only for Nigerians, but also neighbouring countries.

    Kogi State Governor Idris Wada described the Nigeria-Korea Friendship Institute of Vocational and Advanced Technology as a model for technical and technological training that is equipped to produce the best technical manpower to support industrial revolution in Kogi State, Nigeria and indeed the whole of Africa.

    “This institute is a world class institute and every effort will be made to ensure that graduates from the institute are of world standard and will be able to compete favourably with their peers in any part of the world”, Capt. Wada said.

  • Charting a course for Africa’s industrialisation

    Charting a course for Africa’s industrialisation

    Africa’s abundant resources will make other continents envious. But the continent cannot harness these to achieve sustainable development through high value added activities. Instead, it remains a raw materials supplier and a destination for finished products. Expe0rts at the 1st International Business Development Summit organised in Lagos by the Institute of Business Development (IBD), point the way forward for Africa’s industrialisation, reports, Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA.

    The statistics are inspiring and intimidating. Africa offers a consumer base of more than 900 million people. And the demographics bode well for the continent as a market, as more than half its population is under 24 and highly entrepreneurial. The continent also boasts  of tremendous agricultural and mineral resources, holding, for instance, 60 per cent of the world’s uncultivated arable land. It is also rich in oil & gas, complimented by a growing middle class with spending power, and an increasingly stable polity. Regrettably however, Nigeria and other economies in Africa have not been able to harness these resources to achieve sustainable development through technology-intensive, high value added activities.

    At moment, the continent is largely a raw materials supplier, with little or no value addition via processing. Africa consumes mostly imported finished products and the situation, according to development experts, constitutes a stumbling block to Africa’s quest for industrialisation. “We are basically raw materials exporting people; we are supplying raw materials, we don’t process them into finished products. We sell at a pittance to other industrialised countries that process them and sell back to us at cut throat prices. We don’t have a choice,” President/Chairman of Council, The Institute of Business Development (IBD), Mr. Ifeanyi Obibuzor, said, pointing out that the arrangement creates jobs for citizens of the processing countries, leaving citizens of raw materials-endowed economies in Africa poor.

    Obibuzor made the remarks in his welcome address at the 1st International Business Development Summit for Africa 2015 held last week in Lagos, Nigeria. Obibuzor, who was one of the experts drawn from across Africa to brainstorm on how to harness the continent’s abundant human and natural resources for sustainable development, described the theme of the summit, ‘Business Development in Africa: Regional Integration for Sustainable Comparative Advantage’ as “apt and timely.” He said there’s no better time for such thought-provoking seminar aimed at overhauling African economies with clear shift towards technology-intensive, high value added activities than now. He stated that Africa must look towards processing their primary products into finished goods rather than remain basically a raw materials exporter.

    For a start, Obibuzor said African economies must make conscious and concerted efforts to develop their science and engineering infrastructure base. According to him, a robust science and engineering infrastructure base, which consist of the capabilities and physical plants that allow a prolific machine and equipment design and production to take place in the country, is the tonic to stimulate job creation through the proliferation of industries. He said the acquisition of endogenous capability in science and engineering infrastructure would also enable African economies produce basic necessities of life including, but not limited to food and shelter.

    The IBD Council Chairman observed that Nigeria and indeed, Africa’s failure to develop her science infrastructure base is responsible for some of the challenges it is currently facing such as inability to refine and distribute crude oil, translate her agric policy into actual measurable production of food items in sufficient quantities, and outright sale or abandonment of strategic industries in the iron and steel industry. It is also responsible for the unacceptable level of unemployment with its obvious implications, as well as inability to keep the factories/industries, which are employment creators, running. “The old factories cannot be sustained due to lack of endogenous capacity to reproduce spare parts,” he said.

    As Obibuzor explained, the first component of national engineering infrastructure involves the development of well-motivated technical manpower and experts, through local and overseas training, in order to raise the required critical mass of development engineers, technologists, technicians, and managers who possess the necessary know-how and practical skill. The second, he said, involves the establishment of many sectoral Engineering Infrastructure Development Complexes (EIDCs), which develop technologies by research and development (R&D) and by technology adaptation; and the generation of associated private sector satellite industries.

    According to him, there is need to deliberately and carefully encourage, nurture and protect private-sector owned satellite industries and tertiary industries until they mature and thrive. He said they are essential parts of the national engineering infrastructure. While noting that although, the Nigerian government has, over the years, been undertaking some important elements of the national engineering infrastructure initiatives, which are highly commendable such as the Ajaokuta Iron and Steel Complex, Aladja Steel Project, Oshogbo Machine Tools, and the Aluminium Smelter Project, among others, he said such initiatives must be vigorously pursued, completed, and put to full and efficient production.

    Obibuzor was emphatic that “Unless African economies evolve endogenous engineering infrastructure they will continue to pay all the moneys to foreigners and that is what we call capital flight.” He said developing a robust engineering infrastructure would resolve the crisis in Nigeria’s power sector, for instance. “We have a problem with electricity. We can’t generate, transmit or distribute. These are engineering. If we have indigenous capability to design and repair machines that will generate, transmit, and distribute power, we can translate that to other sectors,” he told The Nation on the sideline of the seminar.

    He, however, pointed out that the task of developing Africa’s engineering infrastructure must be done by government because it takes a long gestation period. “There must be commitment from the top to the last person. We must get our priorities right; if we get it right every other thing will follow. That is why I call it ‘Premium Mobile’ (the first thing that moves every other thing). If we develop our engineering infrastructure you multiply chances of jobs in the industries,” he admonished, adding however, that what is required is the political will.

    Registrar/Chief Executive Officer, IBD, Mr. Paul Ikele, could not agree less on the need for governments in Africa to muster the necessary political will to develop the continent’s economy on a sustainable basis placing emphasis on areas where it has comparative and competitive advantage. “We have a lot of resources; we have the manpower, but we are not harnessing it,” he said, pointing out that the problem of Nigeria, which is three fold, namely corruption, dearth of infrastructure, and insecurity, also confronts other African countries.

    “The problem of Nigeria is also the problem of Africa. Nigeria is a giant, but because of corruption, insecurity and under-development of infrastructure, her development is hampered. But let us not bother ourselves about these challenges. A journey of one thousand miles starts with a step. We need to create competitive advantage in areas we have the strength. From there we can see how we can resolve areas we have weaknesses,” he told The Nation.

    Mr. Ikele explained that while last year’s summit was focused on Nigeria, the institute decided to focus on Africa this year because “Africa is the next level of the world. We want to bring Africans together; lets us know what we have and then plan on how to develop them.” He said the idea of the summit came up from what happens in the United Kingdom (UK) where the ‘City Week’ is held every year, drawing up about 2, 500 participants mostly intellectuals and government officials to discuss everything about the UK and the European Union with the aim of finding solutions to their peculiar problems.

    President, World Federation of Business Development Organisations (WFOBDO), Dr Mohammed Kafafy, admitted that the potential in Africa is indeed, huge. While pointing out that Africa is of increasing strategic interest to the global economy, he said China and India, for instance, are rapidly increasing their business dealings with the continent and are often beating out American and European firms.

    “Africa offers a consumer base of more than 900 million people.  While more than half of Africa lives on $1 or less a day, the other half does not,and they are hungry for products and services. Even among the poor, there are surprising opportunities,” Kafafy, who was keynote speaker at the seminar said, noting that the demographics also bode well for Africa as a market, as more than half its population is under 24. “Whilst Europe’s population will lose 60 million people by 2050, Africa will add 900 million – creating opportunities,” he projected.

    Kafafy, an Egyptian, said although, the risks of investing in Africa remain high, just as they are for most emerging markets, but that the perceived risk is much greater than the real risk. He however, said the key is the management of that risk. He also stated that as part of minimizing the risk, the culture of strategic alliance should be imbibed in Africa.

  • Expert urges judicious use of $2.1b World Bank grant

    Expert urges judicious use of $2.1b World Bank grant

    The Federal Government has been urged to use the $2.1 billion World Bank grant to Nigeria for the rebuilding of the North east zone devastated by the activities of Boko Haram insurgents, a Development Expert/Public Analyst, Mr. Benjamin Ogbalor, has said.

    The World Bank grant was sponsored by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the World Health Organisation (WHO), for the rebuilding of Nigeria’s North east region in terms of infrastructure and resettlement of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), who are now more than one million.

    But Ogbalor said with the grant, government is now in a vantage position to develop the region particularly now that the dreaded Boko Haram insurgents are in disarray with no territory and cohesion. He said emphasis should be on creating and encouraging entrepreneurs and the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) that have the capacity to revamp the economy.

    While insisting that the grant must be used to stimulate the economic regeneration of the region and train people in vocations that would make them entrepreneurs, Ogbalor encouraged government to optimize outcome from the grant. He insisted that even war torn countries such as Iraq and Syria never stopped the production of oil.

    He advised government to create incentives in the North eastern part of the country to attract investors to respond to the challenges of rebuilding the region.

    He also urged government not to spread the grant thinly over several areas, noting that if that is done the impact of the grant will not be felt. He said agricultural sector should benefit largely, as the climatic conditions is best suited for it.

    “The impact of women and youth at the micro level is huge, their capacity to  optimize what they are doing is high because they support the family and lift families out  of poverty,” the public analyst added.

  • ‘Access to finance major threat to SMEs’

    ‘Access to finance major threat to SMEs’

    Funding remains a major threat to the growth of Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs), Nigeria Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA) Director-General, Mr. Emmanuel Cobham has said.

    Hailing government for setting up a number of institutions  to support SMEs, he noted that what is required is to strengthen those institutions.

    “We need to implement the various government policies and ensure that intervention funds actually get to the SMEs, knowing that as at date the N220 billion Federal Government Intervention Fund for SMEs as administered by the apex bank through the commercial banks and State Governments, has not been fully utilized,” he said.

    Cobham called for an enabling environment where small business financing and proper operations are taken seriously, where the manufacturing thrives and production capacities of companies are radically improved.

    “Currently, we have more than enough policies and initiatives by the government for the development of the manufacturing and SMEs sector. All we need now is the harnessing and positive redirection to make the process work. We need the political will to ensure that all the initiatives work,” he stated.

    On measures put in place by government to develop the non-oil sector and spur substantial development of the solid mineral sector, he maintained that over dependence on one revenue source is detrimental to the economy hence the need to develop other sources of revenue.

    As strategy to make a success of the non-oil sector, he urged the Federal Ministry of Agriculture to evolve a systemic policy aimed at deliberately reducing the number of peasant farmers through aggressive empowerment.

    “Government should increase the budget for agriculture to at least 10 per cent of the national budget; evolve a policy framework that would encourage commercial farming in order to have an easy transition from peasant farming to commercial farming. Government should also encourage farmers by buying their farm produce to reduce the attendant waste associated with that level of production,” Cobham recommended.

    According to him, this proposed arrangement would ensure that buyers are compelled to buy directly from the government or its agency. He also encouraged the adoption of the One-State-One mineral policy earlier adopted by the Ministry of Solid Minerals. He said this will increase the generation capacity to cushion the nation’s foreign exchange needs and address salient export trade mechanisms.

    Cobham said government can also help the sector by giving special directives to banks to finance this sector, supply equipments, and guarantee the income of the farmers by buying directly from them.

    On the issue of high interest rate raised by manufacturers, he said: “There is no denying the fact that currently many businesses are groaning under the high cost of doing business in the country and this coupled with the issue of high interest rate gives a very wrong signal to the local business man.

    “I believe that tough times call for extra precautionary measures. Given that most businesses are financed by bank loan, equity and the active involvement of most financial institutions at an agreeable interest rate, which presently hovers around 18-30 per cent, what we need to do therefore is to join hands with the regulatory agencies to strengthen the Naira as against other international currency.”

    The NACCIMA Director – General  further called for increase of the nation’s export for better foreign exchange earnings and reduction on import of commodities that have local substitutes.

  • Nigerian is UN-Habitat’s Director, Africa

    Nigeria’s most senior diplomat  at the United Nations (UN) headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya, Prof. Banji Oyelaran-Oyeyinka, has been appointed Acting Director, Regional Office for Africa (ROAF), UN-Habitat.

    The ROAf/UN-Habitat is in 24 countries in the Africa. They include Nigeria, Somalia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia, Madagascar, Mozambique, Kenya, Rwanda, Ghana, Uganda, South Sudan, Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Zambia.

    The key focus areas are: urban land, legislation and governance, especially land management, urban basic services including water, sanitation and the energy sector, risk reduction and rehabilitation, urban planning and design – especially preparation of national urban policies, housing and slum upgrading, urban economy and urban youth livelihoods.

    Oyelaran-Oyeyinka is the first Nigerian professor in Economic Development, Industrial Policy and Technology Management. An erudite scholar, who strives to translate ideas into practical action, he mixes rigorous scholarship with policy advocacy.

    He is a leader in Development Economics and a passionate champion for African development.

    He was first appointed a director at the UN-Habitat in 2007, and during the period, he led several housing, infrastructure, urban and social development initiatives at both states and federal levels in Nigeria, including co-authoring Nigeria’s recently formulated: “Nigeria Land, Housing and Urban Development Roadmap” by the Federal Ministry of Lands Housing and Urban Development, Abuja.

    He led the design and implementation of “City Structure Plan Programmes” in Osun, Kogi, Ondo, and Zamfara states. He  served as Director Monitoring & Research Division in which capacity he provided intellectual leadership for the UN-Habitat flagship reports: “State of the World Cities Report” and the “Global Report on Human Settlements”.

    His postings in the UN was as professor at the United Nations University – Institute for New technologies (UNU-INTECH). He spent six years at this global citadel of research and training in the Netherlands.

    Before then, he was Senior Economic Adviser, UN Centre on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), Geneva where he coordinated a 10-year review of performance of Least Developed Countries. After serving as Senior Research Fellow, he was nominated a Professorial Fellow in Innovation and Development, United Nations University- MERIT, Maastricht, The Netherlands; and Visiting Professor, Innovation and Development, The Open University, Milton Keynes, United Kingdom.

    He is the author of “Rich Country Poor People: The Story of Nigeria’s Poverty in the midst of Plenty” (2014) and co-author of “Urban Innovation in China’s Shanty Towns” (2014) among a dozen other books.

    He is a board member of several academic journals and programmes as well as a fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Engineering.