Category: Industry

  • More hurdles before Africa’s competitiveness

    More hurdles before Africa’s competitiveness

    To boost intra-African trade by at least 25-30 per cent and enhance the continent’s competitiveness, the African Union (AU), in 2012, set 2017 for the establishment of a Continental Free Trade Area (CFTA). Two years to the deadline, lack of political will, harsh visa policies and dependence on narrow range of primary products, among others, have continued to stall the realisation of the set goal, reports Assist. Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA.

    It’s a clear and depressing verdict: Africa is not trading within itself, despite its potential in terms of population and rich agricultural and mineral endowments. Trade among African countries accounts for a meagre 10 per cent of their total external trade, the lowest of any continental grouping, according to the United Nations (UN) Economic Commission for Africa (ECA).

    The continent’s share in world trade is also not impressive, standing at less than three per cent. This was why in a bid to stimulate intra-African trade by at least 25-30 per cent and, ultimately increase the continent’s share in global trade and competitiveness, African leaders came up  in January 2012 with the idea of establishing a Continental Free Trade Area (CFTA).

    Essentially, their hope was that CFTA would lead to a significant growth of intra-Africa trade and also assist Africa use trade more effectively as an engine of growth and sustainable development.

    It was expected to help Africa participate in global trade as an effective and respected partner. The AU Commission noted, for instance, that between 2000 and 2010, the creation of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) FTA worked magic, leading to a six-fold increase in intra-COMESA trade. So, the AU leaders, after their 2012 week-long meeting in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, set 2017 as target for CFTA. However, two years to the deadline, the strategy appears unrealisable, The Nation has learnt.

    Top on the list of issues posing serious hurdles for the realisation of the target, it was gathered, is inconsistent visa policies. There are also issues around Africa’s lack of right regulatory framework and political will to halt the multiplicity of national borders that have continued to pose barriers to trade, as well as African economies’ dependence on narrow range of primary products, among others.

    The mono-product nature of most economies in Africa, high cost of production due to dearth of critical infrastructure are said to have also combined to frustrate efforts at achieving the target. The situation has left sour taste in the mouths of business operators, particularly manufacturers whose activities are supposed to help increase the level of trade within Africa.

    For instance, Nigeria’s foremost industrialist and Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote recently echoed the frustrations of African businessmen and manufacturers when he lamented that issues around issuance of visa by most African countries remain a hard nut to crack by investors seeking to expand the frontiers of investment in Africa.

    Speaking during the inauguration of the new 2.5 Million Metric Tonnes Per Annum (MMTPA) Dangote Cement plant in Mugher District in Ethiopia, he said only 14 out of the 54 African countries, offer visa-free, or visa-on-arrival to citizens of all African countries, a situation that constitutes serious barrier to intra-African trade.

    Dangote listed the 14 countries to include Seychelles, Mali, Uganda, Cape Verde, Togo, Guinea Bissau, Mozambique, and Mauritania. Others are Rwanda, Burundi, Comoros, Madagascar, Somalia and Senegal. He noted that on the other hand, American citizens visiting most African countries get visa at the point of entry. While describing this development as unhealthy for business, he argued that Africa must therefore, relax its visa policies to achieve true economic integration. He urged other African countries to borrow a leaf from Senegal, which he said has started the issuance of visas on arrival to all nationalities.

    That is not all. Dangote, who is President, Dangote Industries Limited (DIL), also said apart from the need for African countries to relax their visa policies, deliberate efforts must be made to encourage Africans, not just foreigners, to invest in the continent to stimulate intra-African trade and business. “Dangote Cement is currently investing in 16 African countries, with plans to invest in many more over the next few years. There are a number of other successful pan-African brands today, such as MTN, Shoprite and Ecobank.

    “We need to encourage this trend to see more investments in Africa by Africans,” he said.

    The pan-African investor is not done. He spoke of the need to encourage the private sector to collaborate with governments across Africa to address  infrastructure deficit, which has plagued the continent for decades. Apart from the need to ensure political stability on the continent, he also said economic integration in Africa would become a reality only when barriers among countries are broken to allow for free flow of goods and services.

    Dangote was right. Africa remains the most fragmented continent in the world, with 54 countries and numerous border crossings, which impede trade. For instance, for traders and businessmen who ply the Lagos (Nigeria)-Accra (Ghana) route, the journey through Togo and Benin can take a full day, punctuated by arduous border checks, harassment and solicitations allegedly from customs officials. This is despite the fact that only a few hundred kilometres separate Lagos from Accra.

    Such barriers violate the principle of free movement of people and goods within the 15-member Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). It is also due to the slow implementation of regional integration agreements aimed at eliminating tariff and non-tariff barriers in the region. This situation partly explains why Africa is not trading within itself. The level of intra-African trade, according to experts, compares unfavorably with other regions of the world.

    While only 12 per cent of total trade on the continent is among African countries, intra-trade among the European Union (EU) is around 70 per cent, 52 per cent for Asian countries, 50 per cent for North American countries and 26 per cent for South American countries.

    Curiously, no less than 14 regional trade blocs are said to have been launched over the past decades for the purpose of stimulating intra-African trade. But this has not yielded much result, as the share of intra-African trade remained unimpressive. More curious is the fact that Africa boasts tremendous agricultural and mineral resources. Apart from holding 60 per cent of the world’s uncultivated arable land, it is also rich in oil & gas. With relatively cheap labour, young and highly entrepreneurial population, a growing middle class with spending power, large consumer market, and an increasingly stable polity, Africa’s economic future should be looking brighter.

    But unfortunately, agriculture is the sector in which Africa has surprisingly poor trade figures.

    Despite being the backbone of many economies in the region, it accounts for just a small fraction of official trans-border trade.

    Between 2007 and 2011, for instance, Africa imported only 15 per cent of its food items from the rest of Africa, according to data gleaned from the Economic Development in Africa 2013 report by UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). The report noted that African countries export a very narrow range of agricultural products to the continent, adding that there is need to broaden the range of agricultural goods produced and traded within Africa.

    The report aligns with the position being canvassed by President/Chairman of Council, Institute of Business Development (IBD), Mr. Ifeanyi Obibuzor. He said for African countries to capture more trade opportunities they need to diversify their products. While noting that the current challenge of falling oil prices, which affect some oil-producing countries in Africa particularly Nigeria, should indeed, be seen as an opportunity to galvanise activities to diversify their economies, he said: “The oil price crash is a good starting point. It is going to make us think out of the box. No country survives as a mono-economy. Across the world, economies are driven by micro-enterprises.”

    Indeed, one of the challenges facing African countries is how to deal with the Micro, Small, and Medium, Enterprises (MSMEs) sector, which is acknowledged as being responsible for a significant portion of production, trade and services. While the informal sector where the MSMEs play remains the driving force of most economies in Africa, experts says that the sector is largely unregulated, has little access to finance, and is often not taxed and its contribution to the economy is largely unrecorded. What this means is that if the continent must pursue more trade opportunities, there is need to focus on the MSMEs with a view to addressing some of the issues that hold them down particularly infrastructure.

    The consensus is that there is need to increase investment in trade-related infrastructure and other trade facilitation measures to reduce red tape, transaction costs and expedite the movement of goods, services and people across borders. Although, spending on infrastructure has been on the increase in the last two decades, it has been observed that actual spending does not match identified needs.  According to the African Development Bank, African countries need to spend around $93 billion a year to upgrade their infrastructure, but only spend about half of this.

    Beyond the need to step up the tempo of investment in infrastructure particularly power, the Registrar/Chief Executive Officer, IBD, Mr. Paul Ikele, says that the leadership must demonstrate enough political will to harness the abundant resources in Africa. According to him, Africa’s economic future looks bright. Hear him: “Africa is highly endowed; Nigeria is endowed; Ghana is endowed, but let’s look at those opportunities. By utilising their resource capabilities, companies in Africa can improve the lives of people in our continent through increased investment, creating jobs, increasing skills, and developing and providing goods, technologies and innovations.”

    Will Africa demonstrate the required strong and lasting political resolve to remove the identified barriers to intra-African trade? Will they put the right regulatory framework in place to address the high cost of doing business on the African continent, which has seen foreign investors either holding back or preferring other investment destinations despite Africa’s potential for high returns on investment?

    These are some of the issues agitating the minds of operators and stakeholders as the continent has only two years left before the launch of CFTA that would boost intra-African trade.

     

  • World Bank engages 4,000  Delta youths

    World Bank engages 4,000 Delta youths

    About 4,000 youths in Delta State have been engaged from 2013 till date under the State Employment and Expenditure for Results (SEEFOR) project of the World Bank, the Delta Coordinator of the project, Mr Benson Ojoko, has said.

    Ojoko said this at a-one-day empowerment training workshop organised by SEEFOR for beneficiaries of the programme in the state on Tuesday in Asaba, the Dekta Statde capital. According to him, about 4,000 youths have been employed under the SEEFOR programme in the state to create value for the society since the introduction of the programme in 2013.

    “The 4,000 youths were engaged to maintain roads and refuse collection in the six local government areas where the SEEFOR project is currently implemented. The six cities where the programme is being implemented in the state are Asaba, Ughelli, Warri, Uvwie, Sapele and Udu,’’ he explained.

    Ojoko said beneficiaries would be trained on money management, entrepreneurship skills and mentorship. He explained that the workshop would help to empower the beneficiaries for entrepreneurship skills, adding that most of the beneficiaries were from poor background with little or no education.

    He said at the end of the training workshop, those who are interested in acquiring vocational and technical skills will be enrolled for further training.

    Ojoko said the programme, which was for a period of 12 months for each batch of beneficiaries, was geared towards poverty reduction as well as creating employment for the teeming youths in the state.

    Also speaking at the occasion, a former state Commissioner for Commerce and Industry, Mr Kingsley Emu commended SEEFOR for sustaining the programme in the state.

    Emu also commended the beneficiaries for being part of the programme, adding that the state government was ready to support them in acquiring technical and vocational skills.

    “The state government has a total of eight vocational centres and it is ready to support you in acquiring more skills that will help you to be self-reliant in future,’’ he said.

  • ‘Deregulation the way forward’

    ‘Deregulation the way forward’

    Members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) are insisting that deregulating the oil and gas sector is the best way to go in view of present economic realities in the country. They also lamenting the negative effect of incessant fuel scarcity and poor electricity on businesses, insisting that the new administration should prioritise its policy and deal with the twin problem of electricity and inadequate fuel supply.

    Speaking to The Nation in Lagos, Director General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Mr. Muda Yusuf, cautioned against half-measures and “fire brigade” approach at arriving at solutions, noting that for the first time telecommunication companies threatened to shut down their services if the fuel scarcity continued.

    He berated the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) for speaking against calls for deregulation, accusing them of not being in tandem with current economic realities. He reiterated his earlier position that subsidy payment is for the rich and not for the poor as erroneously believed.

    Yusuf advised that the huge subsidy cost, which reportedly runs into trillions of naira, should be used in the provision of infrastructure such as good roads, water, electricity, hospitals and schools that will directly impact on the poor who are in the majority. He said Labour should have a re-think except they are not fighting for majority of their members and the poor in the society.

    On the reforms in the power sector, the LCCI boss regretted that the much touted reforms have not made the much needed impact in the economy, asking that the perimeters be studied and possibly redesigned.

    LCCI Vice President, Chief Micheal Olawale-Cole, said he does not see the fuel scarcity and other related problems easing very soon until the refineries are fixed and subsidy payment regime discontinued.

    He said the current administration may not fight corruption effectively without sorting out the issue of fuel subsidy, as the process is riddled with corruption. His words: “The current administration should revitalize our refineries; look at the short, medium and long term solutions. The medium term solution must be the discontinuation of importation especially by fuel marketers.

    “If any person must import fuel it has to be the government doing it themselves unlike the fraud currently dubbed fuel subsidy. I have always believed that the way out is by encouraging the establishment of modular refineries, which will eventually aggregate to what we need as a country in terms of fuel production.”

  • African leaders  praise NEPAD

    African leaders praise NEPAD

    African leaders have praised  the role of the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) in keeping the dreams and potential of the African continent alive.

    South Africa’s President, Jacob Zuma, gave the commendation during the African leaders 33rd NEPAD, Heads of State and Government Orientation Committee (HSGOC) meeting in Johannesburg shortly before the start of the African Union (AU) Summit.

    Zuma said the continent was now reaping the benefits of responsible macro-economic management and deepening integration into the world economy.

    He noted that an investment in infrastructure programmes, regional integration and intra-African trade was Africa’s solution for sustainable growth and development.

    AU Chairperson and Zimbabwean President, Robert Mugabe applauded NEPAD’s breakthroughs in project conceptualisation and implementation on the continent.

    He said NEPAD had provided critical synergies between and among African institutions, thereby enhancing the much-needed continental integration.

    Mugabe urged NEPAD to play a leading role in capacitating Regional Economic Communities to fast-track Africa’s quest for industrialisation and value addition of its vast mineral resources.

    He said: “Surely, the African people cannot continue to be hewers of wood and drawers of water, while others delight in their resources, in our resources.’’

    Macky Sall, the Chair of the NEPAD HSGOC and President of Senegal, also underscored the achievements made by NEPAD in advancing regional integration through infrastructure and capacity development projects.

    He stressed the need to tackle illicit financial flows from Africa and to enhance the capacities of African member countries to negotiate mining and oil contracts for the social benefit of African people.

    Sall also commended the NEPAD Spanish Fund for African Women’s Empowerment, in line with the 2015 summit theme.

    The NEPAD Agency Chief Executive Officer, Dr Ibrahim Mayaki, reported back on concrete results made for the period January to June 2015.

    He said the agency had achieved greater results and each had quantifiable impacts that were geared toward the industrialisation of the continent.

    Mayaki highlighted some of the key achievements to include the establishment of an Africa Climate Smart Agriculture Alliance aimed at reaching out to 25 million farmers by 2025.

  • ‘Farmers lose 50% of harvest’

    Farmers in Sub-sahara Africa, lose between 30 per cent-to-50 per cent of fruits and vegetables due to inadequate storage, Harvest Protection Network (HPN), has said.

    To address the challenge, HPN has promised to introduce a program to reduce crop spoilage losses in the sub-region. It said its business model will test the premise that revenues from the sale of crops previously lost to spoilage will pay for the buildings.

    “While many programs focus on how to increase food production, HPN will focus on protecting what we already grow. In addition to providing waterproof and pest proof storage, these buildings can serve as a distribution center and/or an indoor market. This program also contemplates outright ownership of these buildings by smallholder farmers,” says HPN’s founder and owner, Ian Bennett.

    Bennett, a Wharton MBA graduate who has been involved in the business of agriculture in Africa for over 40 years, was quick to point out that this is not a “handout” program. He said while participating African countries are not being asked to provide any of the funds to deliver and assemble these buildings, they are being asked to remove any import duty and the participating farmers are being asked to provide the land on which these buildings will be erected.

    Preliminary talks with foundations have been characterized by surprise that HPN is not interested in grant funding. “Our immediate challenge is to confirm that these buildings are self-funding,” he said, adding that if this pilot program is successful, HPN will seek a renewable credit facility to make it possible to continue delivering these buildings to Africa’s farming communities.

  • Govt gets wake-up call on N11.6b LNG cash

    The Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) has urged the Federal Government to recover all revenues due to  Nigeria and expedite action on the implementation of recommendations made by the independent Auditors in the Annual Reports of the Nigeria Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative (NEITI) in the past 10 years.

    In a letter signed by the non-governmental organisation’s (NGO’s) Executive Director,  Auwal Ibrahim Musa, the centre noted the reminder credited to the NEITI Secretariat which alleged that about $11.6 billion (N2.32 trillion), outstanding total dividends arising from loans and interest repayments from Federal Government’s investment in Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), among others, is yet to be remitted into the nation’s coffers. It said the revenue is, therefore, unavailable to finance development.

    Musa said: “CISLAC observes that this figure, if verified, is more than 50 per cent of the total expenditure in the 2015 annual budget. It will also be about 10 per cent more than the allocation for recurrent expenditure, 75 per cent of the provision for capital allocation and about 65 per cent of the fiscal deficit in the annual national budget for the 2015 fiscal year.

    “We reiterate that this state of affairs has resulted because of lack of political will by previous administrations to implement remedial action emanating from recommendations from previous NEITI audit reports, which had been reinforced by the reports of several probe panels and committees.

    We recall that one of the President’s promises during the campaigns was to implement the recommendations from the NEITI reports and believe that the time to start is now. We are aware that lack of political will is what has long hindered the ability of the Inter-ministerial Task Team (IMTT) and the Board of the NEITI to implement these recommendations, block leakages and recover unremitted funds,” he said.

    Musa called on the Federal Government to empower and strengthen the IMTT to effectively carry out its mandate. He added that it might also be necessary to review the NETI Act 2007 to strengthen sanction mechanisms, which are presently weak and probably empower the NEITI Board or some other independent body to enforce more stringent sanctions on erring stakeholders outside of the usually politicized and sluggish Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation.

    “CISLAC is aware of the ability and willingness of the NEITI to provide necessary information to assist the Federal Government in recovering these funds and therefore, there will be no need to invest precious time and resources in setting up of any more superfluous Panels to conduct any fresh probes and investigations, he said.

    He urged the government to expedite action on the recovery of all the monies due to the coffers of the Nigerian people and channel them into people oriented development as a way of ushering in the change that citizens voted for and in fulfilment of campaign promises to the teeming population of highly expectant Nigerians.

    He also urged government to demonstrate the commitment to address the cancer of corruption that has undermined Nigerians’ collective desire for development and good life.

  • Flour Mills celebrates customers, launches new products

    Flour Mills celebrates customers, launches new products

    Flour Mills of Nigeria Plc has held its Golden Penny Customers’ Forum in Lagos.

    At the event,  its customers were rewarded for their loyalty to the company and its products.

    It was also an opportunity for the company to share information on its plans.

    Such plans include the launch of three new products – Daily Delight Instant Cereal, Golden Penny Margarine and Golden Penny Vegetable Oil, which were unveiled and are available in the market and in stores.

    Group Managing Director, Flour Mills of Nigeria Plc, Mr. Paul Gbededo, said the occasion was unique because it was the first time Golden Penny Business partners of both B2B and B2C are rewarded the same day as one Team with One Dream.

    He referred to the customers as partners because without them the company was not complete hence the need to celebrate them. He added that the company has continued to maintain leadership through production of quality, healthy and affordable products to meet the demand of the growing population.

    The company’s Chairman, Mr. John Coumantaros, said the forum was to appreciate the distributors for their unwavering loyalty and commitment in the past 54 years which has seen Golden Penny brands remain the number one family’s choice in Fast Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) segment in Nigeria.

    Coumantaros said the customers of new brands that would be introduced into the market during the year. He reiterated the company’s plan to make Golden Penny brands the first choice for consumers by meeting the needs of all age groups in Nigeria and West Africa.

    Mega Food Basket Distributors were rewarded with mouth-watering gifts ranging from Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs), overseas trips, to the latest 4K Smart TVs.

  • Firm introduces Hyfiba food

    Spectra Industries Limited, a food company, has launched Hyfiba food in Lagos.

    Its Managing Director, Duro Kuteyi, said the product is good for mental growth and protection against cholesterol.

    He said it would boost growth and development in children, adding that it is also  an high-quality product for diabetic and hypertensive patients.

    It is also good for those who are slimming. He advised them to take it for breakfast.

    Hyfiba, he said, is made of various vitamins and minerals.

    Kuteyi said hyfiba can also help to optimise the release of sustained energy from food.

    The product, he said, has high lecithin content.

    Hyfiba is a three-in-one food that can be served as cereal. He said it is ideal for all ages as it is smooth to swallow and does not need to be sieved before preparation.

    Kuteyi noted that local foods are rich in vitamins and minerals, stressing the need to build mechanical processing so that they would serve the people’s need and be more convenient to prepare.

    He said: “Nothing is wrong with our local food; only that non-professionals have spoilt the market, so it it’s time for the professionals to actually come out do what they know best.”

    On the safety of the food, the company boss said hyfiba is a natural food product that has no added chemical or preservatives.

    “As food professionals, we do not believe in adding chemicals. When you we know the implication of chemicals then we should not add it to this type of food that the whole family will eat”, he expressed.

    “With time this chemical will start to accumulate and then give complications. We are preaching against food that can cause cancer, why should we now start adding chemicals in our food, we don’t do it. We don’t even add colour to any of our products,” he assured.

    The product, which was approved by the National Agency of Food and Drug Administration Control (NAFDAC) and the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), he said, would last for about two years

    Kuteyi said Hyfiba Food has spread to about 13 states, including Kano, Kaduna, Nasarawa, Niger, Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Ondo and Ekiti, adding that efforts were ongoing to make the product available in the East.

    General Manager of the company, Olusoga Awonuga, stressed the importance of creating awareness for people to understand what they eat.

    According to him, people these days consume what they don’t know. “They just consume something for the sake of it,” he said, adding: “ hence the introduction of the functionality of hyfiba food product to the public.”

    He said the company is committed to making the product available to  Nigerians and at affordable price.

    He assured that the product would be improved upon.

     

  • WHO urges Nigeria to ratify law against tobacco

    WHO urges Nigeria to ratify law against tobacco

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) has advised the Federal Government to expedite action in ratifying the United Nations Protocol to eliminate the illicit trade in tobacco products.

    The Coordinator of WHO in Lagos, Dr Sunday Abidoye, made the call in Lagos at an event organised by the UN Information Centre (UNIC), the Nigeria Heart Foundation and the UN Association of Nigeria.

    The event, organised to commemorate the World No Tobacco Day, had as its theme: “Stop Illicit Trade of Tobacco Products”.

    Abidoye said it was not enough for Nigeria to only sign the protocol.

    “Recognising the enormity of illicit trade in tobacco products, the international community came together with a protocol to eliminate illicit trade in tobacco products.

    “To date, only 14 countries in the African region have signed the protocol and just two have ratified it. We, therefore, urge the Nigerian government to urgently join other African countries that have ratified the protocol in their countries,’’ he said.

    The WHO official said Nigeria’s domestication of the protocol would protect her from financial, legal, social and health consequences associated with the illicit trade.

    The UN Secretary-General, Mr Ban Ki-Moon, in a message presented on his behalf by UNIC Administrative Assistant, Ms Adeola Adedeji, said the trade was luring younger and poorer groups into addiction.

    Ban said the illicit trade had continued to deplete the ability of states to charge taxes that would have supported health services.

    Director of Tobacco in the Nigerian Heart Foundation,Mr. Dapo Rotifa, said advantage should be taken with the former President Goodluck Jonathan’s signing into law of the Anti-Tobacco Bill.

    According to him, the global tobacco epidemic kills about six million people yearly out of which 600,000 are non-smokers.

    A lawyer and Coordinator of the Coalition Against Tobacco, Mrs Olatoyosi Onaolapo, urged the government to increase taxation on tobacco products to discourage children from smoking.

    She called for the implementation of the ban on tobacco advertisement across the country and the government’s commitment to the enforcement of the anti-tobacco law.

    The event was attended by 40 pupils from three secondary schools in Lagos State.

    The World No Tobacco Day is observed on May 31  yearly to encourage abstinence from tobacco use and to create awareness on the negative health effects of tobacco products.

  • Taraba Govt. approves N8.5m to refurbish water plant

    Taraba State Governor Darius Ishaku has okayed N8.5 million for the overhaul of the Jalingo water plant to ensure potable water supply in the metropolis.

    Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Media and Publicity, Mr. Sylvanus Giwa, made this known to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jalingo.

    He said the governor had mandated the Taraba Water Supply Agency to  commence work on all faulty water pipes in the capital.

    “The governor’s concern is informed by the acute water scarcity in the town, which has forced residents to find alternatives in unsafe water sources that are hazardous to community health.

    “He has, therefore, mandated the overhaul of Jalingo water plant and repairs of boreholes that serve the state capital through pipe networks,” Giwa said.

    He urged officials responsible for carrying out the project to be diligent, adding that the government would not tolerate laxity.

    He further said the government was committed to providing essential services to the people of the state in the months ahead.