Category: Business

  • How to secure alternate funding for local carriers, by experts

    How to secure alternate funding for local carriers, by experts

    Experts in the air transport and allied ecosystems have called on policymakers and financial institutions to rethink airline financing emphasising the need for frameworks that reduce risk for local banks while allowing carriers to tap into offshore capital.

    They said if the regulatory and financial structures are not adjusted, Nigerian airlines will continue to be disadvantaged in both domestic and international markets.

    They said while innovative financial instruments exist globally, local regulations and economic volatility restrict Nigerian carriers, affirming that without deliberate intervention, domestic airlines risk stagnation.

    Speaking in separate interviews in Lagos, Chief Executive Officer, TopBrass Aviation , Captain Roland Iyayi , Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Fidelity Bank, Dr. Nneka Onyeali-Ikpe and Managing Director of Ibom Air, Mr George Uriesi said if access to funding and cost of operations is not restructured, the air transport industry will face more challenges.

    On his part, Iyayi said the long term sustainability and competitiveness of local carriers is threatened because of hurdles bordering on accessing alternative funding.

    He said  Nigeria’s financial and regulatory framework makes offshore financing very challenging, because  such funds require in-country guarantees.

    “When a local airline goes abroad to secure offshore funding using, for instance, a U.S. export bank, which requires in-country guarantees, the local banks must first provide that guarantee.”

    The CEO said  Nigerian banks face regulatory and capacity limitations, as  guarantees exceeding a bank’s obligor limits are sometimes converted into loans by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    “What that means essentially is that a local airline now services two loans,” Iyayi explained.

    Iyayi warned that this dual-loan system undermines competitiveness.

    “Imagine having a four-and-a-half per cent interest rate offshore and then being asked to pay another 26 per cent locally. Invariably, the competitive edge is no longer there, and more often than not, the local airline will fail. That’s basically where we are at this point,” he said.

    He stressed that the lack of access to alternate funding affects fleet modernisation, route expansion, and the ability to compete with foreign airlines enjoying easier access to capital.

    According to Iyayi, this alternate funding bottleneck also limits infrastructure investment, reduces operational efficiency, and slows overall sector growth.

    He said :” There is a  need for frameworks that reduce risk for local banks while allowing carriers to tap into offshore capital.

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    He further noted that while innovative financial instruments exist globally, local regulations and economic volatility restrict Nigerian carriers.

    “Addressing these alternate funding challenges is not just about survival. It’s about ensuring that Nigerian airlines can compete on a level playing field globally, attract investments, and support the country’s economic growth,” Iyayi concluded.

    On her part, Onyeali – Ikpe said commercial banks cannot lend to Nigerian airlines at single-digit interest rates because they borrow funds at about twenty percent.

    “Commercial financing by commercial banks… it’s absolutely impossible to lend at nine percent when your deposit cost is twenty,” Dr. Onyeali-Ikpe said.

    “It is just not possible for banks to lend at single digits. The industry needs to borrow at single-digit rates to keep up with the kind of expense they have to deal with.”

    She said  banks face high deposit costs and cannot bridge the gap without incurring heavy losses.

    She explained that the financial spread collapses when banks borrow at twenty percent and then attempt to lend at nine percent.

    She said: “Therefore, the aviation sector must not rely on commercial banks alone for long-term funding. “If commercial banks attempt to provide single-digit interest rates from their balance sheets, the spread simply wouldn’t favour the bank. That’s the truth,” she said. “This is why we need a combination of specialised financial institutions, government support, and innovative funding structures.

    “Given the constraints of commercial banking, alternate funding arrangements have emerged as critical solutions.”

    Dr. Onyeali-Ikpe identified dry lease agreements as a “game changer” for airlines.

    “The dry lease arrangement has been approved for Air Peace,” she explained.

    “With a dry lease, you save over 30 per cent of costs compared to a wet lease, where the lessor provides crew, maintenance, and insurance, which is more expensive. For airlines to qualify, they must meet specific criteria, including insurance and regulatory compliance. It’s a tall order, but it’s the easiest way to put aircraft in the hands of airlines.”

    She said Fidelity Bank is also exploring international funding avenues.

    “Through our Fidelity Bank London, we’re exploring funds from DFIs in Europe, where borrowing rates are as low as 3-4 per cent  Once we secure these funds, we can structure them to benefit Nigerian airlines, providing another viable alternative to high-interest local financing,” Dr. Onyeali-Ikpe said.

    Government-backed guarantees like the National Credit Guarantee Company (NCGC) scheme, provide additional relief.

    “The NCGC guarantee scheme covers 60 per cent  of bank lending to SMEs. Applying this to aviation could ease the burden on banks and make low-interest borrowing more feasible,” she noted.

    Therefore, she urged policymakers to consider such adjustments as part of a broader sector reform strategy.

    She said :” The demand for long-tenor, low-cost funding continues to rise as Nigerian airlines expand fleet capacity and passenger numbers grow. However, high deposit costs remain the strongest barrier to single-digit interest rates.

    “Therefore, the sector must adopt a blended approach involving government intervention, specialist institutions, and innovative lease structures.”

    Dr. Onyeali-Ikpe concluded that aviation remains a high-value industry requiring stable financial planning.

     She said: “In the interest of the country, the airlines need to borrow at single-digit rates.

    “But the reality is that commercial banks cannot lend at nine percent from their balance sheets. That is why we need a combination of specialised financing institutions, government support, and innovative structures to keep the industry moving forward.”

    On his part, Uriesi said

    Nigerian airlines face severe financial strain from overseas aircraft maintenance.

    He described routine checks sent abroad as “unsustainable” , noting that planned budgets of $1.5 million often escalate to $3-4 million per aircraft.

    “Every time we maintain our aeroplanes outside, planning becomes extremely difficult, and costs soar beyond reason,” Uriesi said.

    He warned that this practice undermines airline profitability despite operational growth.

     “We are being taken advantage of. It is a systemic problem for Nigerian airlines,” he added.

    Uriesi stressed that enhancing local aircraft maintenance capability is critical for long-term airline sustainability.

    “We need to start maintaining our aircraft inside Nigeria, at least partially. The current approach of aircraft maintenance is financially crippling and operationally inefficient,” he said.

     “Relying entirely on foreign service providers puts airlines at the mercy of international pricing.

    “Ibom Air operates modern Airbus A220 aircraft, all purchased brand-new. European carriers often secure financing for the same planes at 3-4 percent interest over 15 years, but Nigerian airlines pay roughly 30 percent over seven years.

    “A European operator might pay $100 per month for an aircraft; we pay $500,” Uriesi explained.

     He said this massive disparity inflates costs and restricts fleet expansion.

    He said :” High insurance premiums further exacerbate financial pressure. Ibom Air pays nearly twice what international peers pay for equivalent risk coverage. “Why is Nigeria treated differently?” he asked.

    “The risk level is identical, yet our costs are double. This challenge must be addressed for Nigerian airlines to survive. Taxes and regulatory fees add another layer of difficulty. For example, Lagos-Accra flights incur roughly $185 in combined taxes, while the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority plans to add $11.50 per flight.

    “When you factor in ground handling, fuel, landing fees, and overflight charges, pricing tickets profitably becomes almost impossible,” Uriesi said.

     He noted that these costs affect both profitability and consumer fares.

    Despite these hurdles, Ibom Air has achieved an 88 percent compounded average revenue growth since 2019. Uriesi credited interventions by the Minister of Aviation for reducing some bottlenecks in aircraft acquisition. “Ministerial efforts have helped, but systemic challenges remain, particularly in aircraft maintenance and high-dollar-denominated costs,” he noted.

    Uriesi highlighted the broader aviation ecosystem, including manufacturers, lessors, insurers, and fuel suppliers, noting that airlines bear the brunt of inefficiencies.

     “The airline is the heavy lifter,” he said.

    “We earn in naira but pay in dollars. Every inefficiency in the system inflates costs. Solving maintenance inefficiencies could immediately improve financial outcomes.”

     Uriesi described achieving sustainable profitability in Nigeria as a uniquely difficult obstacle course. “Profitability isn’t just revenue minus costs here. It’s navigating a complex, dollar-based ecosystem with infrastructure, regulatory, and operational hurdles stacked against us. Addressing aircraft maintenance inefficiencies and other bottlenecks could transform the financial health of Nigerian airlines almost overnight,” he said.

  • 2025 oil bid portal opens December 1

    2025 oil bid portal opens December 1

    The 2025 Oil bid licence round is set to commence on December 1, 2025. The Commission Chief Executive, Gbenga Komolafe, an engineer, who made this disclosure in a statement by the Commission’s Head of media, Eniola Akinkuotu, promised to deliver a transparent 2025 licensing round even as he revealed that the Bid portal would go live on the NUPRC’s website on December 1, 2025.

    He further stated that the licensing round will undergo two stages. First will be the technical phase and then those who scale through will progress to the commercial phase.

    The NUPRC boss stated this when executives of Ludoil Energy of Italy visited the Commission’s corporate headquarters in Abuja on Thursday.

    He said: “The portal for the licensing round will go live on December 1. The licensing round will be transparent and fair in line with the provisions of the PIA, 2021. We do not discriminate. We invite all potential investors to participate.

     “The process will be digitised such that winners would know immediately after the exercise whether they won or not. There is no bureaucracy involve,”Komolafe said.

    According to him, the Petroleum Industry Act had restored confidence in Nigeria’s energy sector and provided a stable regulatory atmosphere.

    The NUPRC boss therefore, told the Ludoil Energy executives that this was the best time to invest in Nigeria.

    He argued that with over 37 billion barrels of proven oil reserves as well as its current status as Africa’s largest crude oil producer, Nigeria remained the best place in Africa to invest.

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    Komolafe further noted that with a coastline of over 853km, Nigeria had a strategic advantage of its crude getting to the European market even faster than that of the United States.

    The NUPRC helmsman, therefore, called on investors to take advantage of this opportunity.

    In his remarks, the Group Chief Technical Officer, LudoilEnergy SPA, Mr. Paolo Fedeli, said the company is presently operating in the Republic of Congo but was seeking to expand its footprint in Africa, starting with Nigeria because of its potential as Africa’s largest oil producer. Fedeli added that Ludoil Energy was keen on participating in the 2025 licensing round.

     “We are seeing Nigeria as our next target for growth because Nigeria is the largest producer in Africa. Your next round of licensing is an opportunity for us,” Fedeli said.

  • SMEFUNDS seeks solar adoption in agric

    SMEFUNDS seeks solar adoption in agric

    The Chief Executive, SMEFUNDS, Dr. Femi Oye, has called  for increased participation from the Federal Government and the private sector in solar-powered agricultural projects.  The call comes in response to the launch of the Solar Energy for Agricultural Resilience (SoLAR) project by the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) in Ethiopia and Kenya, a project he sees as a blueprint for transforming Nigeria’s food systems.

    The SoLAR project, funded by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), is expanding beyond solar-powered irrigation—which successfully helped farmers in South Asia reduce their dependence on rainfall—to introduce a comprehensive range of solar technologies. These include cold storage, dryers, milling, and agro-processing equipment.

    “This holistic approach being piloted by IWMI to help farmers lower production costs, reduce waste, and create additional income streams is exactly what Nigeria needs to replicate and scale.”

    We have the sun, we have the need, and the technology is proven. It is time for our government to create the incentives and for the private sector to step up with investment to power our farmlands,” Oye asserted.

    The IWMI initiative is directly addressing critical agricultural constraints in East Africa, challenges that are mirrored in Nigeria. In Kenya, only a fraction of the 3.3 million acres of irrigation potential is currently being utilized. Meanwhile, Ethiopia faces high inefficiencies and rising demand in small-scale irrigation.

    Speaking at the launch, Inga Jacobs-Mata, IWMI’s Strategic Program Director of Water, Growth and Inclusion, highlighted the potential, stating, “Solar energy has the potential to transform food systems, making them more sustainable, inclusive and climate-resilient.”

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    The SoLAR project aims to generate robust evidence to shape policy, guide investments, and develop financing options to make solar technology affordable for all farmers. Furthermore, it focuses on building the skills of farmers and ensuring that women, youth, and disadvantaged groups gain equitable access to these systems.

    Oye stressed that Nigeria must learn from these developments. “The coordinated action being called for in Kenya and Ethiopia to bridge policy gaps and expand financing options for solar technology must be an immediate priority here.We cannot afford to leave millions of hectares under-utilized due to lack of efficient power for irrigation and post-harvest management. The partnership between public policy, private finance, and farmer training is the key to food security,” he said. “

    The SMEFUNDS Chief Executive echoing the project’s focus on skill-building and innovation noted. “We must adopt the ‘living labs’ approach, where farmers and partners test and refine solar innovations tailored to local conditions. Let us power our way to a climate-smart, productive, and financially viable agricultural future.”

  • Firm faults EFCC’s public notice

    Firm faults EFCC’s public notice

    Chappal Energies has faulted the public notice issued by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) declaring its Managing Director, Mr Ufoma Immanuel, wanted.

    The Nigerian-owned energy company said there is a court injunction preventing the anti-graft agency from inviting or arresting its MD.

    The EFCC had in a public notice on Wednesday declared Immanuel wanted for an alleged case of obtaining money by false pretence and forgery.

    But Chappal Energies said enforcement actions under Nigerian law are governed by established procedures that require reasonable attempts at direct engagement through official channels before issuing or acting on a warrant.

    “To our knowledge, no attempt was made to engage Mr. Immanuel or the Company through these channels prior to the issuance of the notice, which creates the unfortunate impression of a public escalation where standard procedures were readily available,” the company said, in statement on Friday.

    The statement, which was made available to The Nation, said both Mr. Immanuel and Chappal Energies remain fully reachable through their established official addresses, phone lines and electronic contacts, all of which are publicly available.

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    It, however, reiterated that “For the avoidance of doubt, Chappal Energies vehemently refutes all allegations cited by the EFCC. The claims are entirely without merit and stand in direct contradiction to the documented facts already before the court.

     “Chappal Energies and its Directors have recently faced coordinated pressures linked to an on-going civil dispute. These developments ultimately led to an order by Hon. Justice J.E. Obanor of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory.”

    According to the statement, Justice Obanor, on 11 September 2025, granted an interlocutory injunction restraining the EFCC and other listed respondents from inviting, questioning, arresting, detaining or otherwise acting against Mr. Immanuel or Chappal Energies.

     “This order remains in force and as such, the circumstances surrounding this public notice, despite a binding court order, create the impression of external actors seeking public spectacle and mischief rather than adherence to legal due process,” Chappal Energies said,

    The company said it continues to respect the roles of all statutory institutions, including the EFCC and remain committed to full cooperation with all relevant authorities through the proper legal channels.

     “However, we will pursue every available legal and formal avenue to challenge these allegations and to protect the integrity of the Company and its leadership,” Chappal Energies said.

    The company stated that its operations remain uninterrupted, and its leadership remains focused on delivering long-term value in line with its commitments to partners, regulators and stakeholders.

  • Experts hinge $3b non-oil target on sunflower value chain

    Experts hinge $3b non-oil target on sunflower value chain

    Nigeria’s pursuit of a diversified economy, with non-oil export earnings recently topping $2.7 billion, is set for a significant boost if the country fully capitalised on the sunflower seed value chain, experts have said. South Africa is currently the African leader in production with an output of over 700,000 tons. Nigeria’s  production is still below 300,000 tons.

    They contended that fully harnessing the agricultural commodity is crucial for realising the long-term, sustainable economic growth that diversification promises, projecting that Nigeria can earn an estimated $1.5 billion from seeds alone and a total of $3.5 billion from the entire value chain.

    One of them is the Executive Secretary/Chief Executive, Institute of Export Operations & Management (IEOM) Ofon Udofia.

    According to him, the appeal of sunflower seeds is twofold, servicing robust international demand from both the food and industrial sectors. “There’s a lot of prospect for sunflower, and the seed is where there’s a lot of much prospect because it is used in pharmaceuticals. It’s also used as an oil seed for vegetable oil,” Udofia noted.

    He confirmed the commodity is “highly sought after internationally, especially in Europe.”

    Udofia explained that the main hurdle preventing Nigeria from realising its potential remains the need for greatly expanded local production and improved logistics. He stressed that compliance and international certification processes must be streamlined to ensure smooth movement of the commodity to global destinations, securing Nigeria’s competitive edge.

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    The oilseed segment provides a healthy, cholesterol-free vegetable oil, which is the fourth most consumed edible oil globally, trailing only palm, soybean, and canola oils. This high nutritional value is fueling the global sunflower seed market, which is projected to reach $2.41 billion by 2035. Furthermore, the seed’s essential use in the pharmaceutical sector provides dual-market access, insulating it from price volatility in a single industry and offering a more resilient source of foreign earnings for Nigeria.

    Despite burgeoning continental demand, Nigeria’s current export revenue from the sunflower value chain is meager, around $200,000, according to stakeholders.

    National President , National Sunflower Growers, Processors and Marketers Association of Nigeria (NSUNGPMAN), Jibrin K. Bukar, noted that  Nigeria possesses immense, yet largely untapped, potential to become a global powerhouse in sunflower production, provided there is substantial investment and farmer support. Bukar stressed that a significant influx of capital is the main catalyst needed to boost the sector. “We need big time investors because by so investing into it, it will propel high level of production,” Bukar stated. He highlighted the country’s natural advantage, noting that “Nigeria has the potential to produce sunflower, to meet up with not only the continental demand but also global demand. Our soil is so good that sunflower grows almost everywhere in Nigeria except where there is waterlogged.”

    Beyond investment in processing facilities, the association leader emphasised the need to incentivize local farmers. “Farmers need to be encouraged, to be incentivised, to be supported with inputs so that by supporting them it will encourage them to produce more.This increased output would directly feed the facilities of prospective investors. “If it is produced more, these investors will offtake it, they will mop it up to feed their facilities, that is their oil mill,” Bukar added.

    According to him, current production figures are inadequate to meet the nation’s needs, despite a recent modest increase. “The figure is a little above 200,000 metric tonnes, but then going by the Nigerian market, it is insignificant. It doesn’t go anywhere because the demand is high,” Bukar admitted, noting that production is currently “not commensurate to the demand.” Massively increased production would lead to export opportunities, “increasing the GDP of our country, it will increase our foreign exchange.”

    Bukar elaborated on the crop’s economic and health significance, noting its diverse applications across major industries. “The major components of sunflower are the food industry that has to do with the oil, the cosmetic industry that has to do with a lot of things, name it, hair shampoo, hair cream, body soap, and all sorts of things as far as cosmetic is concerned, you get it from sunflower. The oil itself is a premium product. Sunflower oil is the second best after olives, and at the global level it is the third most consumed edible oil after soya and palm. Sunflower has a lot of medicinal value, some of which it cures and prevents cancer,” Bukar asserted.

    He believes that integrating sunflower oil into the Nigerian diet “will increase the health status of the citizenry because by using sunflower oil, most of the sicknesses we are suffering from will be reduced drastically.”

    To officially validate these health claims, he said the association is seeking collaboration with government agencies. “We will also need support from the Federal Ministry of Health, more especially the National Institute of Pharmaceutical Research and Development so that we can certify and ascertain the contents… of medicinal values that are there in sunflower scientifically,” Bukar concluded.

    Recently, he stated that production is expected to increase to over 600,000 metric tons if a few large-scale privately owned processing plants are established and could exceed 750,000 metric tons with the addition of more cottage processing plants.

    Chief Executive Officer, Produce Export Development Alliance (PEDA), Adetiloye Aiyeola noted that prospects for Nigerian sunflower exports are “very, very strong,” but realising the potential hinges on urgently addressing fundamental challenges in distribution, supply chain structure, and market access.

    Speaking on the global demand for sunflower products, Aiyeola noted the sheer scale of the opportunity. “Globally, the market is very rich. There’s a demand, global demand, of over 56 million tons of sunflower seeds that was produced last year. And the value of both the oil and both the seed is going to be around $58 billion by 2035,” he stated, adding that “the demand is huge and the demand is not a problem at all.”

    Aiyeola emphasised that Nigeria possesses the natural capacity to produce the crop. “The Nigerian challenge has never been that we cannot grow the crop because we are blessed with abundant land and ecology to support the production, especially really around the northern region or north central region,” he explained.

    The Chief Executive, however, pointed to a critical issue of inconsistency, noting that Nigeria’s sunflower exports were higher in 2021 than in 2023. This fluctuation, he said, “is obviously showing that there’s a real issue in our consistency in the standards, in the aggregation, in the supply chain programmes.”

    Aiyeola stressed that international buyers have strict specifications. “Most buyers, they really want clean seeds. They want seeds with moisture stability and traceability. The consequence of failing to meet these requirements is severe: “Once a shipment fails this specification, the entire country gets downgraded in that product line,” , he said.

    While acknowledging “real interest” in Nigerian sunflower seeds from key markets like Egypt, the Middle East, India, and parts of Europe, Aiyeola maintained that local stakeholders must match the opportunity with organizational rigor.

    “The people that will win are the ones that will organize both the growers and the aggregators and guarantee that priority level so that we can meet the contracts consistently,” he asserted, describing this as part of the work PEDA is currently undertaking.

    He concluded: “The future for sunflower from Nigeria is bright, but it is depending on if we have more structure in our supply chain.”

    “I also think that if we get our supply chain right, if we get the specifications right, if we get the compliance right, traceability right, our supply chains are efficient… sunflower can become a major income crop for farmers and processors, and it can help us establish a stable export line from the country,” Aiyeola affirmed.

    Recently, the  Executive Director/Chief Executive, Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Dr. Ezra Yakusak, affirmed the council’s commitment to this goal, stating, “As a trade promotion organisation, the Nigerian Export Promotion Council sees the urgent need for the sunflower value chain to be developed to the level of being internationally acceptable and highly competitive in the global market, with the high hope of growing our export volume and value.”

    Nigeria’s push comes at a time of significant geopolitical disruption in the global sunflower oil market. Eastern Europe, specifically Ukraine (the largest producer) and Russia (the second largest), accounts for over 50per cent of global output. Geopolitical instability has significantly impacted their exports, causing shortages and price volatility.

    The latest USDA forecasts reflect this instability: The forecast for global sunflower production has been reduced by 1 million tons for the 2025/26 marketing year, largely due to a reduced harvest in Ukraine and Russia, though partially offset by an increase in Argentina.

    This supply uncertainty, coupled with rising global demand for healthier cooking oils like sunflower oil—prized for its high Vitamin E and unsaturated fats—creates a timely opening for reliable new suppliers.

    For Nigeria to convert its vast potential into tangible economic gains, scaling production and achieving certification are the twin steps it must take.

    Africa’s Refined Sunflower and Safflower Oil Market report said the market is set to reach 15 million tons and $20.2 billion by 2035. According to it, African continent is a critical player in the global sunflower oil market, with consumption of edible oils rising due to population growth, urbanization, and rising incomes. Countries such as Egypt (the largest importer), South Africa, and Nigeria are major importers, with Nigeria’s retail consumption growing quickly, driven by its population of over 200 million.

  • Schneider Electric, FUTO partner on energy

    Schneider Electric, FUTO partner on energy

    As part of its global commitment to youth education and entrepreneurship, the Schneider Electric Foundation has provided industry-specific training equipment to the Federal University of Technology Owerri (FUTO), situated in the Imo State. The initiative aims to equip students with practical, energy-related technical skills aligned with global industry standards.

    The donation is part of Schneider Electric’s broader Access to Education training programme in West Africa, which has seen the company’s surpassing its goal of training one million people in energy management by 2025, a cornerstone of its commitment to inclusive energy transition and youth empowerment.

    It also follows a similar donation earlier this year to three technical colleges, the Government Technical College Agidingbi, Government Technical College Ikotun, and Government Technical College Ikorodu which form part of the Lagos State Technical and Vocational Education Board (LASTVEB).

    At FUTO, students in electrical and engineering fields will now have access to customized didactic benches covering domestic wiring and industrial motor starter applications. These benches provide hands-on training opportunities that bridge the gap between classroom theory and real-world industry practice.

     “On behalf of the Electrical Engineering Department at the Federal University of Technology, Owerri, we extend our sincere appreciation to the Schneider Electric Foundation for their generous donation of Didactic training bench equipment.

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     “This contribution is helping bridge the gap between theoretical instruction and industrial practice, significantly enhancing the hands-on learning experience for our students and technical personnel,” HOD, Electrical Engineering Department at FUTO, Prof Matthew Olubiwe, said.

    Schneider Electric Foundation Delegate for West Africa, Funmilayo Olakitan, said: “Universities play a critical role in developing Nigeria’s future workforce. By partnering with FUTO, we are ensuring that students gain exposure to the same tools and technologies used in today’s energy industry. This positions them not only for local employment but also for global competitiveness.”

    The strategic partnership with FUTO also expands the Schneider Electric Foundation’s footprint beyond Lagos into eastern Nigeria. With universities offering longer, more comprehensive programmes of study, Schneider Electric sees FUTO as a vital partner in shaping engineers and entrepreneurs who will drive the energy transition.

    Alongside the equipment, Schneider Electric also facilitated intensive training for the university instructors.

    “Our vision is not simply to donate equipment, but to invest in the future of Nigerian youth, by embedding industry knowledge into education, we are empowering the next generation to take their place in the continent’s energy transition,” Olakitan said.  

  • Southwest leads voice calls, internet subscription

    Southwest leads voice calls, internet subscription

    Among the entire six regions captured in a new report, the South West region posted the highest numbers both in the voice call and internet subscription segments of the Nigerian telecom market.

    With a total number of 45,272,427 active voice subscription representing 28per  cent of the total number 164,505,060 of both prepaid and post-paid mobile subscribers and 185,475 subscribers indicating 65per cent of the total subscriptions, the region led the table last year, according to the latest stats compiled by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC).       

    The report, under the Market Share of Active Voice Subscriptions (Mobile GSM Segment – December 2024) segment noted that the “Market share of mobile operators were analysed through the breakdown of each operator`s subscription; [MTN; AIRTEL; GLO and EMTS] each recorded 84,607,831; 56,619,381; 20,137,951 and 3,283,270 subscribers respectively. In that order MTN; AIRTEL; GLO and EMTS (trading now T2) had 51.39per cent; 34.39per cent; 12.23per cent and 1.99per cent share of the mobile GSM market respectively in the month of December 2024.

    Prepared by the Policy, Competition and Economic Analysis Department of the Commission,  said in analysing the annual trend of the active voice subscription services in the country, for all market segments; the growth in voice subscription was ultimately driven by the mobile (GSM) market segment which accounted for 99.8per cent, while, Fixed Wired/Wireless and VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) market segments each accounted for 0.1per cent each of the entire market share in terms of technology deployment.

    Analysis of the prepaid & postpaid mobile voice subscriptions during the year under review (2024) further showed that total prepaid mobile voice subscriptions decreased from 217,143,995 in December 2023 to 161,470,725 in December 2024 indicating a decline of 25.63per cent in prepaid mobile voice subscriptions.

     “Postpaid mobile voice subscriptions decreased from 7,457,744 in December 2023 to 3,034,335 as at December 2024 indicating a drop of 59.32per cent in postpaid mobile voice subscriptions as at year end 2024.  In summary, the above analysis indicates that about 98.16per cent of mobile subscribers are prepaid subscribers while only about 3.3per cent are postpaid,” the data showed.

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    The Southwest’s 45,272,427 was followed by Northwest’s 32,003,370; Northcentral’s 29,436,490; Southsouth’s 23,183,403; Northeast’s 18,291, 541, and Southeast’s 16,739,368.

    On Active Internet Subscribers per region, the regulator noted that upon analysing the ISP (internet service providers (ISP)segment, an illustration of the total distribution of internet subscribers per region as at December 2024 showed the total number of ISPs in the six geopolitical zones was 285,605.

     “The breakdown of the analysis is as follows:  South-West had the highest number of Internet subscribers in December 2024 with 185,475 subscribers indicating 65per cent of the total subscriptions; North-Central had the second highest with 48,754 subscribers (17per cent); South-South had 28,779 (10 per cent) subscribers; North-West had 12,381 (four per cent) subscribers; South-East had 6,671 three per cent) subscribers.  North-East had 3,545 (one per cent), which was the least subscription of all the regions,” the report noted.

    As at December 2024 the total active internet subscriptions decreased to 138,983,537 from 163,603,459 subscriptions reported in December 2023. This indicates a 15.05per cent decline in total active internet subscriptions year on year.

    MTN Nigeria in Dec 2023, had 70,659,889 which increased to 72,221,248 in Dec 2024 with a difference of 1,561,359 representing a 2.21 percentage change; Glo  had 43,998,101 in 2023; 17,076,430 in 2024 representing -61.19 per cent and a difference of 26,921,671; Airtel had 45,064,857 in Dec 2023 and 47,412,761in 2024, a difference of 2,347,904 and a 5.21 percentage; EMTS (T2) had 3,630,796 in 2023 and 2,064,533 in 2024 with a difference of 1,566,263 and marking -43.14 percentage change; SMILE had 246,199 and  208,565 for 2023 and 2024 respectively with a difference of 37,634 and a -15.29 per centage change; and NTEL’s 3,617.

    Total subscription in 2023 was 163,603,459 and 138,983,537 in 2024 with a difference of 24,619,922 and a -15.05 percentage change.

  • ‘Efficient maritime policing can cut logistics costs, others’

    ‘Efficient maritime policing can cut logistics costs, others’

    Nigeria stands to save trillions of naira in logistics cost and enhance port competitiveness if the country’s maritime policing becomes more efficient and collaborative.

    This was the submission of stakeholders in the maritime sector at the weekend during a one day specialised lecture on maritime policing. It had as its theme: “Facilitating Port Efficiency: The Strategic Role of Maritime Police”.

    Delivering his paper, titled “Police as agent of Economic Change Matrix, Port Efficiency and Global Competitiveness”, the Registrar, National Association of Government Approved Freight Forwarders (NAGAFF) Academy, the training arm of the association, Francis Omotosho, said Nigeria cannot achieve the desired efficiency in port operations unless policing is modernised to support automation, multimodal transport systems and faster cargo handling.

     “If regulators and law enforcement continue working in silos, Nigeria will keep losing revenue. But if we coordinate our roles, this economy can save trillions,” he said.

    According to him, maritime police officers must understand the strategic role they play in supply-chain governance and economic regulation, adding that their actions directly influence inflation, turnaround time, cargo dwell time and overall ease of doing business.

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    “Every delay you cause becomes a cost on the cargo owner. That cost feeds directly into national inflation,” he said.

    Omotosho explained that Nigeria’s logistics cost remains one of the highest in the region because of weak coordination among security units, multiple roadblock syndicates and prolonged detention of cargoes.

    He insisted that the maritime police must lead the shift toward intelligence-driven, technology-backed policing.

    Before outlining reforms, he emphasised the need to understand what a port represents—a structured environment built for cargo evacuation, vessel operations, and economic facilitation. “A port is not just a checkpoint. It is a natural or artificial harbour where infrastructure must support seamless movement of goods,” he said.

    He stated that indiscriminate stoppages, extortion, delays and poor collaboration among agencies fundamentally undermine trade facilitation. “Your job is to secure the supply chain, not to constitute barriers,” he reminded the officers.

    Omotosho warned that Nigeria has effectively opened a massive economic coastline from the port gate to more than 400 nautical miles offshore, yet the policing architecture has not expanded to cover the growing scale of activity. “More activities will take place there—legal, illegal and everything in between. The maritime police must already be thinking about how to cover this expanded zone,” he said.

    He added that new coastal settlements emerging from Lekki to Calabar, supported by fresh road access, will attract traders, logistics operators and smuggling networks. “More crime and more trade are coming. We must modernise our policing tools to match this reality,” Omotosho said.

    He further stressed that the police must understand the full structure of Nigeria’s maritime boundaries, including the territorial sea, contiguous zone, continental shelf and Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), all of which fall within their enforcement responsibility.

    On port charges, Omotosho cautioned against turning port dues into informal taxes, warning that doing so distorts market operations and threatens investor confidence. “Port dues must never acquire the character of taxes. They represent payment for facilities and must reflect service rendered,” he said.

    He criticised prolonged detention of cargoes beyond the allowed timeframe and urged the police to adopt global best practices where admiralty courts resolve matters swiftly within port precincts. “If you detain cargo beyond 24 hours without proper procedure, you have already disrupted trade,” he said.

    Calling for inter-agency harmony, he reminded officers that NPA handles technical regulation, Customs protects government revenue, NIMASA manages maritime safety and environmental compliance, while the Shippers’ Council regulates service quality. “The police must stay within their lane and avoid overlapping mandates,” he said.

    He urged the police to embrace digitised surveillance, intelligence-sharing mechanisms and technology-enabled enforcement, especially under the Deep Blue Project and other innovations that support maritime domain awareness. “You cannot police a 21st-century maritime economy with outdated tools,” he said.

  • MTN seeks robust Nigeria-South Africa bilateral framework

    MTN seeks robust Nigeria-South Africa bilateral framework

    In a major push for regional economic integration, MTN Group and the Federal Government of Nigeria have rallied key private sector players to deepen collaboration between Nigeria and South Africa.

    The call was made at the Nigeria–South Africa Presidential Trade and Investment Breakfast Dialogue, supported by MTN ahead of the G20 Summit. The event served as a platform to harmonise the private sector’s push for integration with the Federal Government’s economic blueprint.

    Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, addressed the gathering to provide government assurance on the safety of capital. Edun told investors that the administration has cleared the path for entry, stating firmly, “Nigeria is open for business, safe for investment.”

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    Ralph Mupita, MTN Group President and CEO, told the gathering that the private sector’s role in fostering this unity is paramount. “Today’s engagement underscores our shared belief that by working together we can create an Africa that is more resilient, more competitive and better positioned to seize global opportunities,” Mupita said.

    The meeting highlighted that a robust bilateral framework is central to advancing trade, investment, and the government’s wider agenda for innovation across Africa.

  • ‘Quantity surveyors key to ethics in construction’

    ‘Quantity surveyors key to ethics in construction’

    The Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Ahmed Dangiwa, and the President of the Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors, Kene Nzekwe, have reiterated the key roles played by  quantity surveyors in the construction sector.

    They agreed that the profession promotes transparency, accountability and efficiency in the sector as the nation  intensifies fiscal and governance reforms.

    Speaking at the NIQS conference over the weekend,  with  the theme  “   Rebuilding Nigeria: Enhancing National Development through Fiscal Reforms, infrastructure planning and the new governance imperative”.

      Nzekwe said the theme of the meeting was timely, coming at a period when Nigeria faces economic turbulence, infrastructure deficits and governance challenges.

    He said, “The country stands at a critical juncture, seeking to diversify its economy, improve infrastructure and enhance governance.

    “Project delivery can promote transparency, accountability and value for money in public spending.

    “Our skills can help deliver quality infrastructure, stimulate economic growth and improve living standards.”

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    Commending recent government reforms, Nzekwe added, “I would like to use this occasion to commend the government of the day for directing Nigeria towards a cleaner tax system expected to  generate more funds for infrastructure development.

    He stated that quantity surveyors are “custodians of efficiency who ensure that all types of construction projects are delivered on time, within budget and to the highest standards of quality.”

    “Nigerians expect stronger transparency and better value for public funds. Your Institute sits right at the centre of these expectations,” he said.

    According to him, the NIQS is adopting new reforms to strengthen service delivery in the construction sector, noting that the industry requires knowledge-driven professionals equipped with high-level capability and efficiency.

    Also addressing participants, Dangiwa said, “Together, we can strengthen a construction industry built on transparency, a housing system anchored in affordability and accountability, and an infrastructure landscape that meets global standards and Nigeria’s aspirations.”

    He added that the ongoing fiscal reforms and growing infrastructure demands have placed quantity surveyors at the centre of national development.

     “We are navigating a period of economic transition where fiscal reforms are accelerating. Infrastructure needs are also rising,” he said.

    Dangiwa noted that public expectations for accountability are increasing.

    According to him, the NIQS is adopting new reforms to strengthen service delivery in the construction sector, noting that the industry requires knowledge-driven professionals equipped with high-level capability and efficiency.

    Also addressing participants, Dangiwa said, “Together, we can strengthen a construction industry built on transparency, a housing system anchored in affordability and accountability, and an infrastructure landscape that meets global standards and Nigeria’s aspirations.”

    He added that the ongoing fiscal reforms and growing infrastructure demands have placed quantity surveyors at the centre of national development.

     “We are navigating a period of economic transition where fiscal reforms are accelerating. Infrastructure needs are also rising,” he said.

    Dangiwa noted that public expectations for accountability are increasing.

    Nigerians expect stronger transparency and better value for public funds. Your Institute sits right at the centre of these expectations,” he said.

    According to him, “You give structure to budgets, credibility to contracts and confidence to project delivery.”

    In response, the Government under has strengthened fiscal and governance reforms aimed at tightening public expenditure, boosting non-oil revenue, curbing leakages and attracting investment into critical infrastructure.

    Recall that Quantity Surveyors are responsible for cost estimation, contract management, procurement oversight and value engineering and have increasingly become central to these reforms.