Category: Business

  • Nigeria’s economy expanding, says Jonathan

    Nigeria’s economy expanding, says Jonathan

    Nigeria’s economy is growing at a fast rate, President Goodluck Jonathan has said.

    This, he said, was as a result of the various crucial economic policies made by the government.

    Jonathan, who stated this at the summit of Heads of State and Governments of the Group of Eight Developing Nations (D-8) in Islamabad, Pakistan yesterday, said with the high rate of expansion, the economy is also offering high rate of returns on investments.

    As part of the efforts to sustain the growth, he said his administration has introduced more investor-friendly measures.

    He said: “The Nigerian economy is not only expanding at a fast rate, but also offers very high rate of returns on investments. Only recently, we adopted more investor friendly measures, such as a new long stay visa policy for investors and businessmen and women wishing to do business in our country.

    “We have also strengthened the Bureau for Public Procurement to ensure transparency in the tender process for contracts.”

    The President also told his colleagues that the efforts of his administration are beginning to produce positive results.

    On the gains of D-8, Jonathan said the Nigerian Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture embarked on a trade mission to explore opportunities for joint venture cooperation to three D-8 countries.

    “I believe this is a cooperation model we can all build on, not just to increase D-8 intra-trade volume, but to make our organisation a major actor in the global economic system.

    “With a population of over one billion, D-8 shares a sizeable volume of international trade. If we cooperate and increase the volume of trade among D-8 countries, sooner than later, D-8 will be one of the leading global financial players.

    “The significant increase in the number of cooperative endeavours by member states in the last two years provide evidence of our collective commitment to improve coordination and strengthen cooperation in the D-8’s major priority economic areas, namely, agriculture, food security, trade, industrial cooperation, transportation and energy,” he added.

    Consequently, he said Nigeria was happy to be part of the growing D-8 success story.

    He said it was to expand trade and economic collaboration among members, and to ensure that the D-8 remains relevant as a multi-lateral platform for trade promotion that Nigeria hosted 15 D-8 meetings out of the 36 meetings organised by the secretariat in the last two years.

    He said the interactions facilitated useful exchange of ideas and expertise, as well as serving as building blocks of productive and profitable partnerships among member countries.

    The President said by focusing on the major priority economic areas and promoting cooperation in the field of SMEs, member countries would be able to create employment opportunities, tackle poverty and bring prosperity to their citizens.

    The President said the best gift the group could give their countries  was to accelerate efforts to achieve the targets of the D-8 Roadmap for the Second Decade of Cooperation as adopted at the 6th Summit in Kuala Lumpur in 2008.

    He observed that though the D-8 is moving in the right direction, there is still much work to do to enable the group to achieve its fullest potential.

    Earlier, while handing over the leadership of the group, Jonathan said throughout the period he was at the saddle, he was guided by the vision to nurture the organisation in a way that would empower the private sector in member countries to be the driving force propelling various programmes and activities.

    He said he believed that was the right road to take, because it reflects their shared vision to limit the role of governments in the day-to-day activities of the D-8 to merely that of catalysts and enablers of economic and trade cooperation among various countries.

  • Money laundering: Nigeria to exit non-compliance zone in 2013

    Money laundering: Nigeria to exit non-compliance zone in 2013

    Nigeria will quit the list of countries that failed to implement various anti-money laundering laws in February, 2013, the Director-General, Inter-Governmental Agency Against Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA), Dr Abdullahi Shehu, has said.

    Speaking at the GIABA/Egmont Seminar on money laundering in Dakar, Senegal, yesterday, Shehu said various anti-money laundering measures taken by the Federal Government in recent past, especially the passage and amendment of the Money Laundering Act, by the National Assembly has brighten the chances of Nigeria exiting the non-complaince zone next year.

    He said: We wish to commend Nigeria for their tireless efforts so far at rectifying the deficiencies in Nigeria’s Anti-Money Laundering Law and Control of Financial Terrorism (AML/CFT) regime. We welcome in particular the passage into law by the National Assembly, of the Money Laundering and Terrorism Prevention Amendment Acts in October this year.

    “With this development, we hope that at the next FATF Plenary in February 2013, Nigeria, like Ghana, would be taken off the list of non-compliant jurisdictions.”

    He said Ghana has made significant progress in addressing the strategic deficiencies in that country’s AML/CFT regime, thus culminating in the removal of Ghana from the FATF list of non-compliant countries to the compliance one.

    He said Burkina Faso has attained membership of the Egmont Group of Financial Intelligence Unit (FIUs), thus bringing the number of members of the Egmont Group to five.

    He noted that Nigeria, Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire and Mali have joined the group after an appraisal of their anti-money laundering.

    He said numerous Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) and staff exchange programmes have taken place to strengthen the FIUs of members,adding that the body has been supporting member countries to develop and maintain anti-money laundering standards.

  • NNPC to grow Nigerian Content to 70%, says GMD

    NNPC to grow Nigerian Content to 70%, says GMD

    Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has pledged to partner with the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board in growing Nigerian Content in the oil and gas industry to 70 per cent, a target set by the Federal Government, especially in deep offshore.

    NNPC’s Group Managing Director Andrew Yakubu who spoke at the Practical Nigerian Content Conference, in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, said the participation of Nigerian Content in the industry, especially in the upstream, has substantially increased from a meager 10 per cent before the enactment of the law to more than 30 per cent.

    While siting the recent USAN Deep Offshore Field development, Yakubu said: “These percentages are even higher and in some cases have attained 100 per cent. For example, the Utorogu Gas Plant Expansion Project.”

    He listed other projects with high Nigerian Content value to include the OB3 Pipeline Project, Escravos Lagos Pipeline Phase two, the Aba Depot and Okirika Jetty Rehabilitation Project.

    He explained that windows of opportunities to grow Nigerian Content exist in the upstream, midstream and downstream segments of the oil and gas value chain to grow Nigerian Content.

    He advised Nigerians to set up medium sized companies in exploration and production in areas, such as well services engineering, measurement, mud and logging engineering services.

    The NNPC boss said the monetisation of the country’s natural gas endowments presented other opportunities for growing Nigerian Content, such as the revamping/rehabilitation of existing downstream infrastructure.

    He stated that the enactment of the Nigerian Content by Mr President Goodluck Jonthan had positively impacted on the sector and expressed hope that the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill would enhance benefits from the Nigerian Content Act.

    The Executive Secretary of Nigerian Content Development and Management Board (NCDMB), Ernest Nwapa, said for Nigeria to be a great oil producing nation, stakeholders must make efforts to develop a robust supply chain, including facilities, own assets and stimulate local manufacturing.

    He said there is a compelling need to create legacies from mega industry projects, so that long after contracts have been concluded, Nigerians can be productively engaged and use capacities developed to service other sectors of the economy.

    He canvassed the adoption of a development model that focuses on creating in-country value and building a viable industry, as against just extracting and selling crude oil to earn revenue for the government.

  • Naira advances to two-week high

    The naira advanced to its highest level in two weeks amid increased inflows for purchases of fixed-income securities.

    The currency, according to Bloomberg, rallied for a second day, gaining 0.3 per cent to N157.30 a dollar in Lagos, the strongest on a closing basis since November 8.

    The naira has appreciated 3.2 per cent this year, the second-best performing currency tracked by Bloomberg in Africa.

    The naira’s appreciation could be traced to tight monetary conditions, improved supply of foreign exchange to the market by oil companies and increased inflows from portfolio investors, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Lamido Sanusi said November 20 after the regulator apex bank held its benchmark rate at a record-high 12 per cent.

    “Sales of foreign exchange by oil companies and offshore portfolio investors had a role, too,” Gregory Kronsten, the Head of Economic and fixed-income research at FBN Capital Ltd. in London, said in an e-mailed note.

    Inflation, which accelerated for the first time in four months to 11.7 per cent in October on widespread flooding of farms, is still above the bank’s target of less than 10 per cent.

    Nigeria’s 10-year borrowing costs fell to a record low of 12.01 per cent at an auction on Wednesday after the Debt Management Office (DMO) sold N25 billion ($159 million) of the notes due January 2022, the debt office said yesterday. Demand was more than double the supply. The CBN also sold N116.18 billion of Treasury bills Wednesday.

  • Nigeria to raise Usan crude exports

    Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer, plans to ship four 950,000 barrel cargoes of Usan crude exports for January, one more than December, according to a loading programme obtained by Bloomberg.

    This is the first shipping plan to be released for Nigeria’s oil exports in January. The other grades, including the country’s benchmark, Qua Iboe, were not yet available. Loading programmes are monthly schedules of crude shipments compiled by field operators to allow buyers and sellers plan their supply and trading activities.

  • Court to deliver judgment on $12.4b oil windfall today

    After over two years in court, hope for a definite legal pronouncement and accountability for the missing $12.4 billion oil windfall will become a reality tomorrow, as the Federal High Court in Abuja is set to deliver final judgment in the suit.

    The judgment would be closely watched by millions of Nigerians and national and global human rights and anti-corruption groups. The case would set legal precedents that could be used in other corruption cases in the country.

    This development followed the hearing of arguments and re-adoption of written addresses by lawyers to the parties in September, before Hon Justice Gabriel Kolawole.

    Sola Egbeyinka of Falana and Falana Chambers, Solicitor to the Registered Trustees of Socio-Economic and Accountability Project (SERAP), and five other rights groups that instituted the suit will be present in court for the judgment.

    At the hearing in September, the Federal Government insisted that the enactment by the former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Idris Legbo Kutigi of the Fundamental Rights (Enforcement Procedure) Rules 2009, “exceeded his constitutional powers by liberalising the rules on locus standi, permitting public impact litigation and allowing the inclusion of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights in the Rules.”

    The government also said it could not find the Okigbo report, and had no duty to render account on the spending of the accrued revenue. The Plaintiffs disagreed, arguing: “Such duty exists on the basis of Article 9 of the African Charter, which has become part of our national laws.”

  • Osun establishes bee farm

    Osun establishes bee farm

    The Osun State Government has established a bee-keeping and honey production farm in Asi, Odo-Otin Local Government Area.

    Governor Rauf Aregbesola said the project, tagged O’Honey, is part of his administration’s self-employment programmes.

    He said the farm has the capacity to train 600 bee-keepers yearly.

    The equipment in the apiary,he said, could sustain it for 10 years.

    Aregbesola said: “This programme, which is part of our efforts to revolutionalise agriculture, was designed to banish hunger, unemployment and poverty, which are three important points of our Six-Integral Action Plan.

    “We are similarly aware that there is immense wealth potential to be tapped from tilling the land; all we need do is to get our agricultural act together.

    “To derive optimal benefits from the land, we decided to move our agriculture beyond subsistence to big, money-spinning commercial farming and this is the focus of our Osun Rural Enterprise and Agriculture Programme (O’Reap).

    “The bee-keeping and rearing sub-sector, not unlike other components, also provides nutritious food source in addition to raw materials for agri-businesses and complementary medicinal values.

    “Here, bee keeping and rearing or apiculture is in simple terms the rearing and management of bees for the production of honey and other products of beehive, such as beeswax.”

    The governor said apiculture is a profitable venture, which can supply natural honey for domestic and international consumption.

    Describing the project as another watershed in the effort to revolutionise agriculture in the state, Aregbesola urged the people, especially women and youths take advantage of the programme.

    Coordinator, Osun Quick Impact Intervention Programme (QUIIP), Mr. Dele Ogundipe said bee-rearing creates employment opportunities for many people.

    Ogundipe said the apiary occupies 11.76 hectares of land.

    He said the state plans to establish more bee colonies to meet the local and international demand for honey of the farm.

    The governor also visited the Osun Fish Village (O’Fish) in Okuku, where over 120,000 fishes are being reared. About 30 cadets of the Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (OYES) are undergoing training on fish farming.

    Aregbesola praised the farm manager for managing the farm judiciously.

    He said his administration is willing to partner citizens in legal businesses to eradicate poverty, hunger and unemployment.

  • Reps approve N250b NDDC budget

    Reps approve N250b NDDC budget

    With less than six weeks to the end of the year, the House of Representatives has okayed the Niger Delta Development Commission’s 2012 budget of N250.858billion.

    The budget that would run up to March 2013 showed that 92.5 per cent of the total allocation is dedicated to capital projects.

    The breakdown showed that N232,056,215,560 is allocated to development projects while N1,017,852,000 is earmarked for internal capital projects.

    Personnel expenditure ‘s figure is N10,218,484,743, while N7,565,400,131 is earmarked for overhead expenditure.

    The budget was adopted despite a contentious issue of overhead expenditure raised by Simeon Arabo (PDP, Kaduna).

    He questioned the huge sum allocated to overhead despite the provision of N7.6billion to personnel expenditure under recurrent.

    “It seems the Committee on NDDC only endorsed what was presented to them because it seems the Commission was playing with words here,” he added.

  • Agric road map should promote value chain, says expert

    The Federal Government should promote a competitive market for the agricultural produce at the grassroots, an agriculture business expert, Dr Kola Adebayo , has said.

    In an interview, Adebayo said agricultural development and marketing has been dependant on the value chains. For high value crops, he implored concerned officials to continuously improve the value chain — from research, production, postharvest, processing and marketing — and broaden the domestic and export potential.

    He urged the upgrading of product standards and climate adaptation measures; the opening of in-roads to encourage prospective farmers, young farmers, and retirees to engage in agriculture, fishery and agribusiness enterprises; and improvement of technologies and expansion of knowledge pool.

    Adebayo suggested developing market intelligence information system to assess the target areas in agriculture produce.

    He harped on the need to plan a strategy to market agriculture produce with value addition by the farmers at the local government levels for the farmers’ benefit. He called on authorities and organisations at all levels to work together on issues relating to agriculture, rural areas and farmers as well as the country’s industrialisation and modernisation.

    He urged locals to produce on a large scale, experiment by applying high technology to agriculture.

    According to him, the potential for the development of agricultural value chains is substantial and promising, both from local and international market.

    Meanwhile, the Federal Government said it will soon establish staple crop processing zones in some parts of the country.

    The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr Akinwumi Adesina, said this in Abuja at a meeting with private sector partners in the agriculture value chain convened to garner support for the Federal Government’s Agricultural Transformation Agenda (ATA).

    The minister explained that the idea was to enable processors to establish their processing plants in areas where food production was high.

    He said the Federal Government would prioritise basic infrastructure in these zones.

    ‘’It is the duty of the government to provide all the basic amenities in these zones. We have identified these zones and we know what is needed to make things work, ‘’ he said.

    Adesina urged the private sector to set up an advocacy group that would liaise with the government in terms of policy making.

    He told them to focus on fiscal policy that would encourage local food production, saying that the private sector was crucial to the success of the transformation agenda.

    Adesina promised to always interact with the private sector to ensure that agriculture was restored as the mainstay of the country’s economy.

  • Merck donates 20m Cesol tablets to Fed Govt

    Merck donates 20m Cesol tablets to Fed Govt

    Pharmaceuticals giant Merck has donated over 20 million Cesol tablets to the Federal Government for the treatment of children suffering from worm disease, known as schistosomiasis.

    So far, the company said a total of more than 83 million of the tablets have been distributed and over 21 million children in 10 African countries have been treated of the disease.

    Since 2007, Merck, according to a statement, has been supporting the World Health Organisation (WHO) in the fight against schistosomiasis in Africa and it donates Cesol tablets containing the active ingredient praziquantel to WHO, which is distributing the tablets mainly to African school children.

    The company said Nigeria is one of the countries benefiting from the donation since inception. This year, almost 20million tablets will be donated, making Nigeria the first beneficiary.

    Praziquantel is the only active ingredient with which all forms of schistosomiasis can be treated. In addition, Praziquantel is well-tolerated. It is, therefore, on the WHO list of essential drugs. Praziquantel, which was developed by Merck in the 1970s as part of research cooperation, produces Praziquantel tablets for the donation programme under the brand name, Cesol® 600 in Mexico.

    Merck assumes the logistic costs for shipping to Africa, while the WHO distributes the tablets together with the local authorities on site in the affected regions, in most cases, at schools.