Category: Industry

  • Powder Three Crowns Milk unveiled

    Powder Three Crowns Milk unveiled

    Are you a mother? Here is good news for you – dairy giant FrieslandCampina WAMCO Nigeria Plc has launched powder Three Crows Milk.

    According to the firm, it is to enable mothers to have more ways of caring themselves and their families.

    Its Director of Communication, Ore Famurewa, said the introduction followed the demand of consumers, especially mothers. “Three Crowns milk has repositioned as the brand that cares for mothers so they can continue to take extra care of the family,” he said.

    “The brands new pay-off: ‘Healthy mums, happy families’ define its role as mum’s best friend in caring for the family. Mothers, therefore, choose Three Crowns out of the love they have for their families and their need to take extra care of them,” Mrs Famurewa said.

    The Sales Director (General Trade),  Adewale Arikawe, said: “The new 380g powder is available in the open markets, neighbourhood stores and modern retail outlets.

    He said an integrated marketing and communication campaign has been developed to support the product.

  • Ex-Newswatch editor bags PhD

    Head of Corporate Communications/Special Adviser to the Managing Director of Indorama Eleme Petrochemicals Sir Jossy Nkwocha, has bagged  a Doctorate Degree (PhD) in Marketing  at the 44th Convocation of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN).

    Nkwocha and Benedict Odigbo  have emerged the first PhD holders in that field from UNN.

    Nkwocha’s doctoral dissertation is titled: A comparative evaluation of the effectiveness of corporate reputation management strategies employed in selected oil & gas companies in Nigeria.

    Nkwocha is also a Fellow of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR). He is the author of Effective media relations: issues, strategies & dynamics (1999).

    Nkwocha is former General Editor of Newswatch magazine.

  • Wanted: Accredited labs for export  products  

    Wanted: Accredited labs for export products  

    Product rejection is a pain in the neck for manufacturers. Local products and services are denied access to international markets because they lack quality certification, which experts blame on inadequate accredited metrology and test laboratories. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA writes on how the establishment of more internationally accredited laboratories can spur industrialisation.

    It’s a paradox. Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy, with Gross Domestic Product (GDP) estimated at $509.9 billion (about N80.3 trillion), has only 84 accredited laboratories to test locally manufactured products or services for international standards.

    South Africa with a GDP of $370.3 billion has 340 accredited labs. China the world’s second largest economy, boasts of 337, 033 labs, according to the ‘2013 International Standards Organisation (ISO) report on the distribution of management system certification’. The United States has 13,000 accredited labs. South Korea has over 7,000 labs.

    Germany, India, Brazil, Egypt have thousands of accredited laboratories each, while Tunisia, Morocco, Kenya and Algeria have hundreds of laboratories each. Other prosperous countries have vibrant, fully accredited and certified laboratories to give their locally manufactured products and services the required competitive edge in international trade. But this is not so in Nigeria where manufacturers, especially as those in the export business continue to agonise over recurring issues of product rejection due to lack of global quality certification caused by inadequate test and metrology labs.

    While certification from internationally accredited labs builds integrity in manufactured products by ensuring that they are tested just once and accepted sequentially anywhere in the world, metrology, which is the science of measurement, determines the right calibration, which is accepted all around the world.

    According to a Quality Management Practitioner and National President of Association of Systems Management Consultants, Mazi Colman Obasi, the need for a metrology lab cannot be over-emphasised. He said such a lab would obtain, conserve, develop, and disseminate the basic requirements and the highest level of calibration standards.

    Obasi told The Nation that it would also provide traceability to the national system and ensure that international technical guidelines are followed for the metrological performance and testing procedures of measuring instruments subject to legal controls. He added that from the point of view of manufacturers, it ensures that their products meet international specifications. He said once a functional metrological lab is established, it is easier for companies, research institutes, testing labs, and institutions of higher learning to interact and collaborate, and find more efficient production processes and new products for the markets. The quality of goods produced will also be more consistent with international standards, hence facilitating commercial transactions, he added.

    Although Nigeria, through the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) recently recorded a feat when she got the approval of the International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation (ILAC) for her Food Laboratory, stakeholders consider it a drop in the oceanconsidering that the approval covered only Nigeria’s food export commodities, which can be tested at the SON’s laboratory in Lekki, Lagos. For instance, stakeholders in the minerals and mining sector whose activities also form part of the new strategic emphasis on growing the non-oil sector are agonising over the rejection of their mined products.

    They blamed poor quality control, poor regulations and the high rate of illegal/informal mining in the sector as reasons for the rejection of mined products in the international market. To them, the absence of internationally accredited test laboratories and metrology labs constitutes a major technical hurdle for their participation in international trade, so the establishment of more labs to cover the mining sector, for instance, is urgently required.

    Indeed, experts have identified the existence of few laboratories, which have been accredited in line with the requirements of ILAC as one of the major challenges to Nigeria’s quest to participate in international trade. For instance, the President, Champions of Development Nigeria (CDN), Mr. Jonas Yomi, in a recent statement, lamented the non-existence or insignificant number of accredited labs in Nigeria. He noted that accredited labs are the backbone of valid testing results without which products or services cannot be said to be certified or conforming to requirements.

     According to an expert, the benefits of having such internationally accredited labs are numerous and cannot be ignored if Nigeria must take its pride of place in the global market. For one, local products will  be standardised and certified, thereby reducing substantially the preponderance of fake and substandard goods. Besides, access to certification will also drive down costs based on the fact that Nigerian officials will no longer need to travel abroad to get samples of products tested. The reduction in the cost and, indeed, the time taken for certification will be reflected in the economy through a reduction in the prices of goods and services. Cost of output will drastically reduce for the manufacturers through the SON’s intervention.

     That is not all. If Nigeria has her own accredited lab, it will save the nation from the situation whereby multiple testing of product samples are carried out in various countries where they are taken to for marketing and sales. With her accredited lab, products from Nigeria will not be tested more than once, and this will be done here instead of at the convenience of other countries, when they choose to.

    More importantly, with local produce being tested locally and sent all over the world without any hindrance, exports will receive significant boost. This will, in turn, develop the nation’s agricultural sector, as Nigeria has comparative advantage in agricultural products.

     Estimates by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the U.S Department of Commerce show that standards and related conformity assessment (checking that products and services measure up to standards) have an impact on 80 per cent of the world’s trade in commodities.The World Trade Organisation (WTO) requires its members to use international standards of the type developed by ISO to avoid the technical barriers to trade owing to differing national or regional standards. What this implies is that the more accredited labs a nation acquires, the more products or services it is able to export with ISO’s authorisation.

    Indeed, various studies undertaken by development experts have proven that countries with higher number of accredited labs have higher economic performance and productivity than those with lower accredited laboratories. Because of inadequate accredited test labs and metrology labs in Nigeria, goods produced or originating from the country cannot gain acceptance in any country to which they are sent. The only condition for acceptance will be that such goods are subjected to further scrutiny, inspection and testing before being certified in the countries to which they are being exported to, strictly on the terms and conditions set by those countries.

    At moment, Nigeria depends on American standard bodies to get international referencing for its own products, while samples of products to be tested in Nigeria are flown to other foreign countries, such as Ghana and South Africa for testing to occur.

    Expectedly, this has not gone down well with operators and stakeholders in the real sector, including the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), and Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA).

    To them, the situation is responsible for why Nigeria remains uncompetitive in global trade, which is why they are calling for the adoption of an integrated quality management approach.

    Incidentally, such call is coming at a time the Federal Government is shifting focus to the non-oil sector in the hope of warding off the impending economic crisis arising from the continued plunge in oil prices.The Federal Government through the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga, recently gave vent to its push for economic diversification when it listed 13 National Strategic Export Products (NSEP) to replace oil.

    The Minister, during an unscheduled inspection and a meeting he held with the Executive Director of Nigerian Exports Promotion Council (NEPC), Mr. Olusegun Awolowo, and members of the management team in Abuja, listed the 13 NSEP in three categories, including agro-industrial- palm oil, cocoa, cashew, sugar and rice); mining related- cement, iron ore/metals, auto parts/cars, aluminium and oil and gas industrial products – petroleum products, fertiliser/urea, petrochemical and methanol.

    Aganga noted that originally 12 products were identified, but that the number was increased because the Executive Director of NEPC made a strong case for the inclusion of cashew on the list. He, however, charged NEPC to deploy its capacity for kick-starting the diversification of the country’s economy in line with the government’s agenda. He said Nigeria could no longer continue to be an import-dependent country. According to him, the nation is, at moment, wasting its foreign reserves on imported products most of which can be produced locally.

    Awolowo agrees with him, noting that NEPC had long recognised the need to develop the non-oil export sub-sector and had in the process held strategic meetings with stakeholders for the development of ideas aimed at improving the foreign exchange earnings by Nigeria through different avenues. These, he said, include the development of a four-year Strategic Plan, One State One Product (OSOP), Nigerian Diaspora Export Programme (NDEX) and the development of new markets for new products.

    As highly commendable as moves by the Minister and the NEPC to diversify the economy by riding on the back of non-oil export is, the challenge again remains the insignificant number of accredited labs and metrology labs in Nigeria. While real sector operators, including the President, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Alhaji Remi Bello, have thrown their weight behind the emphasis on non-oil economy, insisting that it is more inclusive, growth-oriented and characterised by high economic linkages and more sustainable, lack of internationally accredited labs to test and ascertain that locally manufactured export products meet international standards, might throw spanner in the works in nothing is done.

    SON is aware of this danger, which was why the agency inaugurated a committee to establish the National Accreditation Body in May 2013 to draw the roadmap for the nation’s accreditation and certification schemes. The agency also went a notch higher, inaugurating the National Quality Policy Committee on September 26, 2013. The inter-ministerial committee was given the mandate to streamline the regulatory frameworks, and to institute infrastructure development models and modalities for national total quality concept practices that will form the basis for standards in both the public and private sector.

    Although, two of SON’s food technology laboratories were accredited by AALA – ISO/IEC 17025 for chemical and biological testing, while others are said to be at various stages of accreditation, the standard regulatory body is also encouraging private investors to set up laboratory facilities in the country.

  • ‘Import substitution policy to ward off economic crisis’

    ‘Import substitution policy to ward off economic crisis’

    As the harsh reality of plunging crude oil prices continues to dawn on the Federal Government, the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment is determined to champion the import substitution model to tackle the  country economic crisis in the country.

    The Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga, who spoke during a visit to Secure ID Limited, Lagos, said Nigeria could no longer continue to be an import-dependent country.

    According to him, the nation  is wasting its foreign reserves on imported products, most of which can be produced locally.

    Dr. Aganga noted that there is need to  urgently steps in the next four years to address more of the challenges hindering economic growth. “If we do not address the import situation in the next three to four years, we will be in a very big trouble in terms of our economic development,” he warned. The minister praised the factory’s efforts at boosting industrialisation, maintaining that the country is wasting its foreign reserves importing products it can produce.

    His words: “The message of this administration is very clear. We can no longer be a country that is import dependent, especially on products we can produce in this country. There are many actors we should have developed as a country, but we relied for decades on exporting raw materials which is oil.  That era is gone and this is why the president launched the Nigeria Industrial Revolution Plan (NIRP) in 2012.”

    The Minister disclosed that under the NIRP, government’s approach is to diversify the nation’s revenue sources to boost economic growth. He said going by the plan, Nigeriaby 2018, will no longer import petroleum products into the country and this will save the nation a minimum of about $10 billion. “We spend about $3 billion importing steel; we spend about $6 billion importing cars and spare parts and also spend about $1.7 billion importing sugar where we can grow sugar cane to get sugar,” he said.

    While insisting that “Jonathan is the solution to the debacle we have had for decades and the idea is a matter of time to let him get the plan completed,” he said the falling oil price and devaluation of the naira have gotten Nigerians all surprised because for decades, the country adopted the wrong policies.

    In line with the new strategic thinking in favour of import substitution,the Federal Government had, as part of its emphasis on rapid growth of the non-oil sector for exports, listed 13 National Strategic Export Products (NSEP) meant to replace petroleum products whose prices have continued to tumble on the international market and in the process, threatening the stability of the economy.

    Aganga, during an unscheduled inspection and a meeting with the Executive Director of Nigerian Exports Promotion Council (NEPC), Mr. Olusegun Awolowo and members of the management team in Abuja, listed the 13 NSEP in three categories including; agro-industrial- palm oil, cocoa, cashew, sugar and rice; mining related- cement, iron ore/metals, auto parts/cars, aluminium and oil and gas industrial products- petroleum products, fertilizer/urea, petrochemical and methanol.

    The Minister noted that originally 12 products were identified, but the number increased because the Executive Director of NEPC made a very strong case for the inclusion of cashew on the list. Aganga, however, charged the NEPC to deploy its capacity for kick-starting the diversification of the country’s economy in line with the government’s agenda.

    Mr. Awolowo noted that NEPC under his leadership had long recognised the need to develop the non-oil export sub-sector and had in the process held series of strategic meetings with stakeholders for the development of ideas aimed at improving the foreign exchange earnings by Nigeria through different avenues. These, he said, included the development of a 4-year Strategic Plan, One State One Product (OSOP), Nigerian Diaspora Export Programme (NDEX) and the development of new markets for new products.

    Others, the NEPC boss said, include special initiatives on the Sub regional Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) markets, multi-stakeholders’ engagement of the export community, especially deepening of relationship with key stakeholders such as the Manufacturers Association of  Nigeria (MAN), Chambers of Commerce, National Cashew Association of Nigeria (NCAN), Cocoa Association of Nigeria (CAN), among others initiatives.

    Awolowo assured that the agency would do its best in collaborating with other stakeholders to ensure increasing foreign exchange earnings by Nigeria with a view to reducing the effects of the current fall in oil prices at the international markets.

  • Fed Govt revokes 1,200 quarry, 44 coal licences

    The Federal Government revoked 1,200 quarry licences and 44 coal mineral titles last year, the Director-General (DG), Nigeria Mining Cadastre Office, Mr. Mohammed Amate, has said.

    Amate told  the News Agency of Nigeria that the office issued over 3,000 quarry licences out of which 1,200 were revoked.

    He Nigeria has 1,800 valid registered quarry licences on its data base, and that the Office intended to issue between 250 to 300 quarry leases this year, adding that quarry was one of the major mining operations in the country. According to him, operators are expected to commence work within 18 months of issuance of a quarry licence.

    “If we discover that, after 18 months, the operator has not commenced operation, the law requires that we withdraw the lease and re-issue it to more serious investors,” he told NAN.

    The director-general said this was to ensure that committed investors had access to the mineral resources. He noted that most of the quarry licences were used in the construction industry.

    Amate said quarry was important for the nation’s economic development, adding that it accounted for the granite used for construction of roads, bridges and houses, among others. “A single quarry employs between 200 and 300 people annually. Each year, we issue nothing less than 200 to 250 quarry leases. If you multiple this, you will see that it is a major employer,” he explained.

    He said statistics available had shown that quarry employed from 60,000 to 70,000 people annually. Amate said the Federal Government made it mandatory for any foreign mining company in the country to employ 75 per cent of its workforce from Nigeria. “A lot of nationals such as Chinese and others are establishing more quarries, but we insist that a certain population on their payroll must be Nigerians.

    “We liaise very closely with the Federal Ministry of Interior so that it does not give them unnecessary waivers to bring personalities from either China or any other country,”Amate said, adding that the quarry minerals being mined included granite, marble, laterite, kaolin, limestone, gypsum, feldspars, pyrite, bentonite.

    The DG also disclosed that 44 coal mineral titles were revoked last year for being idle.

    He said in 2014 the Office issued 4,027 mineral titles, which covered exploration, mining, quarry and small scale mining licences.

  • ‘OPS yet to access N220b MSME fund’

    The Onitsha Chamber of Commerce has decried the inability of members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) to access the Federal Government intervention fund for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME). The President of the Chamber, Dr Tim Anosike, expressed this concern in an interview with reporters. “The OPS is still having difficulties in accessing the Federal Government’s N220b MSME fund,” he said.

    Dr. Anosike disclosed that the problems facing the sector included the complicated procedures in accessing the fund and lack of interest of many banks in the programmme. “The current N220 billion MSME intervention fund by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is a laudable initiative. This chamber believes that if the fund could be made available for the target groups, the national economy would received a significant boost at the end of the day.

    He said this is more, considering that 60 per cent of the fund goes to women entrepreneurs. He, however, expressed fears over the complicated

  • How to boost indigenous capacity

    How to boost indigenous capacity

    The local content policy seeks to increase indigenous participation in the oil & gas industry. Nearly five years into its implementation, stakeholders say although the policy has made some progress, government must demonstrate enough political will and commitment to address the gray areas in its implementation, particularly the abuse of expatriate quota by foreign operators, if it must  stimulate growth of indigenous capacity, reports Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA.

    The Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development (NOGID) Act 2010 signed into law by President Goodluck Jonathan on  April 22, 2010, was received with so much enthusiasm and expectations by stakeholders across the sectors. The law was seen as providing the needed impetus to build local capacity and adding value to the economy. It was supposed to help Nigerians have greater access in the management of the nation’s  natural resources, which have been in the hands of foreign multinationals.

    Essentially, the NOGID Act  seeks to stimulate the growth of indigenous capacity by increasing local participation in the lucrative oil and gas industry by prescribing, among others, minimum thresholds in relation to the utilisation of local manpower, services and goods as avenues of adding value to the economy. In other words, the law is expected to promote the ownership and employment of Nigerians through a paradigm shift in the way service and maintainance contracts, as well as jobs are dished out to non-Nigerians or expatriates by oil and gas operating and service companies, and halt the resultant huge capital flight, which acted as drain tothe economy.

    About five years down the line, the question remains unanswered whether the NOGID Act has attained  its set objectives.

    This is the crux of the matter, as the assessment of the policy’s performance has become a subject of heated debate amongst stakeholders. While the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), the ombudsman for the local content policy, including Immigrations Department of the Ministry of Interior, Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), the Navy and the Marine Police, among others, say the policy has made significant progress, some  stakeholders’ assessment of the initiative is unflattering.

    For instance, an Abuja-based Oil & Gas Consultant, Ifeanyi Izeze, is piqued by what he described as the flagrant abuse of expatriate quota by foreign operators. He decried the rate at which oil and gas operating and service companies flout the local content laws, especially in the area of expatriate quota, insisting that it is largely responsible for the increasing rate of unemployment in the country.  Izeze, a Geologist, told The Nation that the implementation of the Act is skewed in favour of foreigners to the detriment of Nigerians.

    He said the International Oil Companies (IOCs) and other foreign operators have been observing the aspect of the Act that deals with personnel only in the breach and by so doing short-change Nigerians. He said the IOCs have taken advantage of government’s lack of political will to monitor, implement, and enforce the Act to bring in expatriates to take over jobs meant for Nigerians with all the benefits that accrue to the positions, while Nigerians, who in most cases are better qualified are denied such opportunities.

    Although, the oil & gas expert described the policy as ‘a laudable initiative aimed at building local capacity and adding value to the economy’, he expressed fears that all the institutions involved in the monitoring, implementation, and enforcement of the Act, especially the aspect of expatriate quota , have been politicised. He said they have all been working at variance with the provisions of the Act by granting all sorts of waivers to the detriment of the nation’s interest.

    The alleged that the abuse of expatriate quota has also not gone down well with the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN). Its President, Comrade Francis Johnson, observed that non-adherence to the principle of expatriate quota and the absence of a definitive provision for job security in the NOGID Act, are major defects that have hampered the efficasy of the law.

    Johnson, who spoke after he emerged President of the Association at its 4th Triennial National Delegates Conference in Abuja, noted that the Act was framed within the context of growth of Nigerian entrepreneurship and the domestication of assets to fully realise Nigeria’s strategic developmental goals.

    “How do we derive maximum benefits from oil and gas operations through optimal use of local competences and resources as practiced in Indonesia, Brazil, Norway and Venezuela, for example? Although these countries started oil exploration and production activities after Nigeria, they have recorded remarkable success in their efforts to grow their local content in this strategic industry, he said, wondering why Nigeria’s case is otherwise.

    For Obiora Akabogu, a Lagos-based lawyer and public affairs analyst, the answer lies in corruption, which he said was the response for the lack of will and commitment by the government agencies and institutions to implement the Act. “The labour leadership has been compromised; relevant committees of the NASS have been compromised and they looked the other way. It’s still part of that general corruption, which will go when the polity is sanitised,” he told The Nation, adding that it takes a lot of political will to achieve genuine local content.

    He, therefore, called on the oversight committees of the NASS, which enacted the Act, including labour leaders and the Federal Government, to monitor and implement the overseas training aspect of the policy. According to him, Nigerians need to be sent abroad for training before they can take over from expatriates. He said most of the jobs in the industry require specialised skills and trainings and Nigerians are supposed to undergo apprenticeship for sometime before they can master the jobs.

    Akabogu urged that Nigerians should be patient and carefully understudy the expatriates to acquire the specialised skills.  He said within the Nigerian business environment, an average apprentice undergoes apprenticeship for at least five. “But in this case we are talking about complex technology, which most Nigerian universities don’t offer in their curriculum. Besides, the onus is on the investor to hire hands they deem necessary and such hands are mostly expatriates with the necessary skills. So, it goes beyond economic nationalism,” he said, adding that it is only when Nigerians acquire the necessary skills that adequate sanctions could be meted out to the multinationals where they fail.

    Incidentally, this is coming at a time some operators are making a case for the policy to be replicated in other sectors. For instance, the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) called on the Federal Government to formulate and implement local content policy in the construction industry to check the expatriate quota abuse as it did for the oil and gas industry. Its President General, Comrade Peter Esele, decried the rate at which employers in the construction industry have continued to flout the country’s laws, especially in the area of expatriate quota. He lamented that the practice contributed largely to the increasing rate of unemployment in the country.

    Similarly, President-General, National Union of Civil Engineering Construction, Furniture and Wood Workers (NUCECFWW),  Comrade Amechi Asugwuni, accused the Federal Government of failing to prevail on Chinese construction companies to adhere to the expatriate quota policy. “The non-adherence to the provisions of the local content policy by Chinese construction companies has made human resources/industrial relations practice difficult,” he said, noting that this is why about 90 per cent of Nigerians in the employ of Chinese construction companies are casuals.

    Operators in the automobile industry are also clamouring for increased local content. ThePresident/Chairman of Council, Institute of Business Development (IBD), Mr. Ifeanyi Obibuzor, noted that although, the National Automotive Policy (NAP) is a beautiful idea, there must be increased local content for it to have the desired impact. He told The Nation on the sideline of the association’s Business Development Week/Summit in Lagos, that if the auto policy must be implemented for the benefit of the sector’s investors and the economy, more Nigerians must be encouraged to participate.

    “What is the local content of the auto policy? How many of our engineers are actually participating?,” he asked, pointing out that in some projects worth billions of naira, not many Nigerian engineers are understudying the process for them to take over. According to him, what obtains at the moment is that critical aspects of the jobs in the auto industry are usually done at odd hours when Nigerian engineers are not there to know what is happening or how the jobs are done. While insisting that the practice amounted to defrauding the economy,  he said the “government must be awake to its responsibility.”

    The Executive Secretary/Chief Executive Officer of NCDMB, Mr. Ernest Nwapa, said the fact that the telecoms sector is trying to copy not only the Nigeria Content policy, but the implementation model that was used to push it thus far, lends credence to its positive impacts on the industry. According to him, the same thing is happening in the power sector where the Board is in constant engagement with the Ministry of Power to see how to make things happen.

    Citing Nigerian ownership of the foundation of the oil & gas industry, the exploration and production side of it, and other impacts, Mr. Nwapa, said the policy has been hugely successful. He said, for instance, before now, the nation’s marine sub sector of the oil industry relied completely on foreign vessels. But today, 60 per cent of the vessels operating in the waters are owned by Nigerians. While also noting that the number of Nigerians working in the industry has more than doubled over the years, he said there is a clear evidence that the engineering work being done in Nigeria by Nigerians has increased.

    The level of investment has also increased. The Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, disclosed recently that the Nigerian content implementation has attracted foreign direct investments worth over $500m (N78bn) in the manufacturing of equipment components for the oil and gas industry. She said the equipment components manufacturing initiative of the Board is an effective way to drive industrialisation and is already creating over 1000 skilled jobs in Nigeria. According to her, the initiative, which mandates original equipment manufacturers to partner with their representatives to set up facilities to manufacture or assemble equipment components in the country, ensures the retention of spend-within-the-economy on critical industry equipment such as valves, pumps, electrical and instrumentation products.

    Between 1956 when oil was discovered and 2010 when the policy came into place, Nigeria reportedly recorded an estimated capital flight of $380 billion to foreign companies and contractors. This was because of lack of indigenous capacity in manufacturing, fabrication and engineering design of production platforms, marine vessels, drilling rigs and other equipment used in the industry. Virtually all categories of contracts in the oil and gas sector were executed by foreign firms. The engineering designs of production platforms were neither done in Nigeria nor manufactured locally.

    Indeed, things are gradually looking up for the local operators. Already, a number of them are said to have acquired enough capacity to hold their own following the divestment of some International Oil Companies (IOCs) from Nigeria. The IOCs’ divestments are seen by some industry watchers as representing the single largest opportunity for Nigerian operators with the requisite expertise and capital to emerge as major upstream players. Already, a number of local oil companies have taken up the challenge, acquiring several oil blocks across Nigeria’s oil-producing regions.

    Some local oil companies that have emerged formidable players, The Nation learnt, include Seplat Petroleum Development Company, an independent oil and gas exploration and production company incorporated and operating in Nigeria; Oando Plc, one of Africa’s largest integrated energy solutions providers; Spectra Energy Services Limited, a fully Nigerian owned oil and gas service company, among others. Seplat has since become a leading indigenous oil and gas operator in Nigeria with crude oil production capacity inching closer to 100, 000 barrels per day.

  • ‘Import substitution policy to ward off economic crisis’

    ‘Import substitution policy to ward off economic crisis’

    As the harsh reality of plunging crude oil prices continues to dawn on the Federal Government, the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment is determined to champion the import substitution model to stem the economic crisis in the country.

    The Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga, who spoke during a visit to Secure ID Limited, Lagos, said Nigeria could no longer continue to be an import-dependent country. According to him, the nation at moment, is wasting its foreign reserves on imported products most of which can be produced locally.

    Dr. Aganga noted that there is need to take urgent steps in the next four years to address more of the challenges hindering economic growth. “If we do not address the import situation in the next three to four years, we will be in a very big trouble in terms of our economic development,” he warned. He commended the factory’s efforts at boosting industrialisation, maintaining that the country is wasting its foreign reserves importing products it can produce.

    His words: “The message of this administration is very clear. We can no longer be a country that is import dependent, especially on products we can produce in this country. There are many actors we should have developed as a country, but we relied for decades on exporting raw materials which is oil.  That era is gone and this is why the president launched the Nigeria Industrial Revolution Plan (NIRP) in 2012.”

    The Minister disclosed that under the NIRP, government’s approach is to diversify the nation’s revenue sources to boost economic growth. He said going by the plan, Nigeriaby 2018, will no longer import petroleum products into the country and this will save the nation a minimum of about $10 billion. “We spend about $3 billion importing steel; we spend about $6 billion importing cars and spare parts and also spend about $1.7 billion importing sugar where we can grow sugar cane to get sugar,” he said.

    While insisting that “Jonathan is the solution to the debacle we have had for decades and the idea is a matter of time to let him get the plan completed,” he said the falling oil price and devaluation of the naira have gotten Nigerians all surprised because for decades, the country adopted the wrong policies.

    In line with the new strategic thinking in favour of import substitution,the Federal Government had, as part of its emphasis on rapid growth of the non-oil sector for exports, listed 13 National Strategic Export Products (NSEP) meant to replace petroleum products whose prices have continued to tumble on the international market and in the process, threatening the stability of the economy.

    Aganga, during an unscheduled inspection and a meeting with the Executive Director of Nigerian Exports Promotion Council (NEPC), Mr. Olusegun Awolowo and members of the management team in Abuja, listed the 13 NSEP in three categories including; agro-industrial- palm oil, cocoa, cashew, sugar and rice; mining related- cement, iron ore/metals, auto parts/cars, aluminium and oil and gas industrial products- petroleum products, fertilizer/urea, petrochemical and methanol.

    The Minister noted that originally 12 products were identified, but the number increased because the Executive Director of NEPC made a very strong case for the inclusion of cashew on the list. Aganga, however, charged the NEPC to deploy its capacity for kick-starting the diversification of the country’s economy in line with the government’s agenda.

    Mr. Awolowo noted that NEPC under his leadership had long recognised the need to develop the non-oil export sub-sector and had in the process held series of strategic meetings with stakeholders for the development of ideas aimed at improving the foreign exchange earnings by Nigeria through different avenues. These, he said, included the development of a 4-year Strategic Plan, One State One Product (OSOP), Nigerian Diaspora Export Programme (NDEX) and the development of new markets for new products.

    Others, the NEPC boss said, include special initiatives on the Sub regional Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) markets, multi-stakeholders’ engagement of the export community, especially deepening of relationship with key stakeholders such as the Manufacturers Association of  Nigeria (MAN), Chambers of Commerce, National Cashew Association of Nigeria (NCAN), Cocoa Association of Nigeria (CAN), among others initiatives.

    Awolowo assured that the agency would do its best in collaborating with other stakeholders to ensure increasing foreign exchange earnings by Nigeria with a view to reducing the effects of the current fall in oil prices at the international markets.

  • Fed Govt revokes 1,200 quarry, 44 coal licences

    The Federal Government revoked 1,200 quarry licences and 44 coal mineral titles last year, the Director-General (DG), Nigeria Mining Cadastre Office, Mr. Mohammed Amate, has said.

    Amate told  the News Agency of Nigeria that the office issued over 3,000 quarry licences out of which 1,200 were revoked.

    He Nigeria has 1,800 valid registered quarry licences on its data base, and that the Office intended to issue between 250 to 300 quarry leases this year, adding that quarry was one of the major mining operations in the country. According to him, operators are expected to commence work within 18 months of issuance of a quarry licence.

    “If we discover that, after 18 months, the operator has not commenced operation, the law requires that we withdraw the lease and re-issue it to more serious investors,” he told NAN.

    The director-general said this was to ensure that committed investors had access to the mineral resources. He noted that most of the quarry licences were used in the construction industry.

    Amate said quarry was important for the nation’s economic development, adding that it accounted for the granite used for construction of roads, bridges and houses, among others. “A single quarry employs between 200 and 300 people annually. Each year, we issue nothing less than 200 to 250 quarry leases. If you multiple this, you will see that it is a major employer,” he explained.

    He said statistics available had shown that quarry employed from 60,000 to 70,000 people annually. Amate said the Federal Government made it mandatory for any foreign mining company in the country to employ 75 per cent of its workforce from Nigeria. “A lot of nationals such as Chinese and others are establishing more quarries, but we insist that a certain population on their payroll must be Nigerians.

    “We liaise very closely with the Federal Ministry of Interior so that it does not give them unnecessary waivers to bring personalities from either China or any other country,”Amate said, adding that the quarry minerals being mined included granite, marble, laterite, kaolin, limestone, gypsum, feldspars, pyrite, bentonite.

    The DG also disclosed that 44 coal mineral titles were revoked last year for being idle.

    He said in 2014 the Office issued 4,027 mineral titles, which covered exploration, mining, quarry and small scale mining licences.

  • ‘OPS yet to access N220b MSME fund’

    The Onitsha Chamber of Commerce has decried the inability of members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) to access the Federal Government intervention fund for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME). The President of the Chamber, Dr Tim Anosike, expressed this concern in an interview with reporters. “The OPS is still having difficulties in accessing the Federal Government’s N220b MSME fund,” he said.

    Dr. Anosike disclosed that the problems facing the sector included the complicated procedures in accessing the fund and lack of interest of many banks in the programmme. “The current N220 billion MSME intervention fund by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is a laudable initiative. This chamber believes that if the fund could be made available for the target groups, the national economy would received a significant boost at the end of the day.

    He said this is more, considering that 60 per cent of the fund goes to women entrepreneurs. He, however, expressed fears over the complicated