Tag: Access

  • Access, Diamond Mobile Apps to run side-by-side

    Customers are at the centre of the Access Bank, Diamond Bank merger to create a leading outfit. Diamond Bank customers will lose nothing under the new arrangement. Access Bank will bring to bear on the deal its commitment to customers, financial inclusion, sustainability, corporate expertise and strong balance sheet. Both banks’ Mobile Apps will run side-by-side until when they become so much alike that their 13 million customers will not bother about their integration, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

    Globally, business combi-nations are seen as the surest route to achieving greater impact and giving customers the more values and enhancing profitability for the entities.

    The merger deal between Access Bank Plc and Diamond Bank Plc, which will be concluded in April, presents great benefits to customers especially in the deployment of technology in providing banking services.

    Based on the agreement reached by the boards of the two financial institutions, Diamond Bank shareholders would receive a consideration of N3.13 per share, comprising N1 per share in cash and the allotment of two New Access Bank ordinary shares for every seven Diamond Bank ordinary shares held as at the Implementation Date. The offer represents a premium of 260 per cent to the closing market price of N0.87 per share of Diamond Bank on the NSE as of December 13, 2018, the date of the final binding offer. Immediately following completion of the merger, Diamond Bank would be absorbed into Access Bank and it will cease to exist under Nigerian law.

    “Together, we will bring the power of banking to millions across Nigeria, focused on speed, service and security. We are determined to ensure that both Access Bank and Diamond Bank customers will experience no distruption to normal banking services while we join forces to create Nigeria and Africa’s largest retail bank by customers. While there may be some changes in due course, we are committed to inform you ahead of time and in a way that is most convenient for you,” both lenders said in an emailed statement.

    Executive Director, Personal Banking, Access Bank Plc,  Victor Etuokwu, had during a media briefing in Lagos gave insight on what the future looks like for both lenders.  He said: “ It is a merger of two big banks to meet the needs of customers. We are going to run the mobile Apps of both banks side-by-side until when they will look alike, and when eventually integrated, customers will not even know. We know that Diamond Bank Mobile App is a market leader and we will leave it that way and same thing applies to the Diamond Extra”.

    Continuing, he explained that where there are two close branches of both lenders, the customers will be the ones to determine which one will be closed, based on performance.

    “If we have two branches like in Gbagada, Lagos, we will keep both of them open for one or two years. Then we will see where the customers go. Our customers will decide where they want to go. For us, we believe that the customer is king, and this merger is about giving the customer the best of services and value,” he stated.

    Findings also showed that existing Diamondxtra customers have nothing to worry about as the reward scheme is not changing and winners will continue being paid while new winners will continue to emerge. Infact, with the merger with Access Bank, Diamondxtra will become bigger and better as the scheme will also be opened to Access Bank customers. The merger will create about 13 million mobile customers, 3,100 Automated Teller Machines, over 600 branches and 29 million customers.

    Besides, Diamond Bank customers can now enjoy instant borderless banking from any Access Bank branch.

    “When they walk into any Access Bank branch and initiate payment in their local currency, the beneficiary will receive an instant direct credit to their account or cash in their local currency. This service is available in all Access Bank subsidiaries – Nigeria, Ghana, The Gambia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Zambia and Sierra Leone,” the bank said.

    Financial analysts said some other objectives behind mergers of the banks include increasing customer base and expanding into new activities.

    Another important advantage of merger is that the process reduces competition and eliminates competitors from the banking industry.

    Announcing Access Bank as the preferred bidder, Diamond Bank’s Chief Executive Officer, Uzoma Dozie, said the potential merger of the two banks would create Nigeria’s and Africa’s largest retail bank. He added that the transaction, to be completed in the first half of the year, is in the best interest of all stakeholders.

    Dozie also stated that the completion of the merger is subject to certain shareholder and regulatory approvals, adding that the proposed merger would involve Access Bank acquiring the entire issued share capital of Diamond Bank in exchange for a combination of cash and shares in Access Bank via a Scheme of Merger. Based on the agreement reached by the boards of the two lenders, Diamond Bank shareholders will receive a consideration of N3.13 per share, comprising N1 per share in cash.

    Dozie said the transaction would include the allotment of two new Access Bank ordinary shares for every seven Diamond Bank ordinary shares held as at the implementation date. He said the bank’s shares would be absorbed into Access Bank at the completion of the merger and Diamond Bank would cease to exist under Nigerian law.

    “ The board of Diamond Bank believes that the proposed combination of the two operations provides an exciting prospect for all stakeholders in both businesses,” he said.

     

    Access Bank CEO speaks

    Access Bank Plc Group MD/CEO Herbert Wigwe said the bank has a strong acquisition and integration track record.

    Speaking to the conclusive acquisition of Diamond Bank, Wigwe said the banks involved have complementary operations that will ensure benefits for customers of Access Bank and Diamond Bank. “Access Bank has a strong track record of acquisition and integration and has a clear growth strategy,” Wigwe said via a joint statement with Diamond Bank.

    “Access Bank and Diamond Bank have complementary operations and similar values, and a merger with Diamond Bank, with its leadership in digital and mobile-led retail banking, could accelerate our strategy as a significant corporate and retail bank in Nigeria and a Pan-African financial services champion. Access Bank has a strong financial profile with attractive returns and a robust capital position with 20.1 per cent Capital Adequacy Ratio as at 30 September, 2018. We believe that this platform, together with the two banks’ shared focus on innovation, financial inclusion, and sustainability, can bring benefits to Access Bank and Diamond Bank customers, staff and shareholders.”

     

    Stakeholders speak on the deal 

    Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) Director-General, Muda Yusuf, said the first gain of the takeover is that Diamond Bank has been saved from going under and the economy protected from the consequences of such occurrence.

    “Today, the good thing is that depositors fund is safe. Some of the employees are not likely to lose their jobs since it is acquisition, and that is good for the economy. If Diamond Bank had failed completely, there would be systemic effect. In terms of foreign perception, acquisition or merger is better than bank failure,” he said.

    Yusuf, however, advised shareholders to be more active in knowing how their banks are run. “Shareholders should provide effective oversight to ensure that their investments are protected,” he said.

    Also, former Diamond Bank’s General Manager, Richard Obire, said Diamond Bank has such a brilliant brand name and customer base and these are what Access Bank will inherit. “The name Diamond Bank is gone forever and the next will be integration, which will lead to exit of the bank’s management team.”

    Former President/Chairman of Council, Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN), Okechukwu Unegbu, said the process of takeover of Diamond Bank was an improvement from what happened at defunct Skye Bank.

    According to him, the decision is a proactive step when compared to that of Skye Bank because Diamond Bank investors will even gain in the new arrangement.

    “I think that shareholders of Diamond Bank did not lose much. Whether it is merger or acquisition between the two banks, the fact is one big bank is better than two weak banks.

    “With this development, one expects a strong, virile and capable institution in the future that will equally protect the interest of the investors,” he said.

    He, however, said the CBN should institute new measures that ensure that people who violate banking rules are punished.  “The CBN is the regulator and is expected to monitor and punish some of the recklessness of some of the banks and their managing directors. Banks’ boards should be held accountable. Again, there should be extra-ordinary shareholders’ meeting to approve the acquisition and possibly plan for a seamless integration process,” he said.

    Michael Azu, a Lagos-based financial analyst, said the acquisition would boost stability and investors,w adding that it was a welcome development instead of allowing Diamond Bank to face regulatory sanctions and possibly liquidation for its poor liquidity positions.

    “The merger has helped to protect investors’ and depositors’ confidence. It has ensured that depositors’ funds are protected from undue risk, and also removes the issue of systemic failure in the financial system,” he said.

     

    Diamond Bank’s position

    Diamond Bank had earlier announced its decision to drop its international operating licence to focus on national operations following capitalisation issues.

    Dozie said: “The re-licensing as a national bank supports Diamond Bank’s objective of streamlining its operations to focus resources on the significant opportunities in the Nigerian retail banking market, and the economy as a whole,” he said in a statement.

    “The move follows Diamond Bank’s decision to sell its international operations, which included the disposal of its West African Subsidiary in 2017 and Diamond Bank UK, the sale of which is currently in its final stages.

     

  • Access shifts Diamond takeover to April

    Access Bank Plc, which plans to buy Diamond  Bank Plc, said it will conclude the transaction about two months earlier than initially expected.

    The deal, which was set to close in June, will be completed in the second quarter, the lender told Bloomberg yesterday. Access Bank also canceled a planned N75 billion ($207 million) rights issue as it’s no longer needed to meet the central bank’s minimum capital thresholds, Chief Executive Officer Herbert Wigwe said on an investor call.

    Access Bank agreed last year to buy Carlyle-backed Diamond Bank in a deal worth about $200 million. It said last week it obtained “approval-in-principle” from Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission and the Central Bank of Nigeria to proceed with the merger.

    By the conclusion of the deal, Access’s assets could swell to about $17 billion from $12.5 billion, according to Bloomberg calculations. Zenith Bank Plc is currently the largest Nigerian lender, with $15.4 billion of assets.

     

    Berkshire Partners LLC acquired a stake in Teraco Data Environments Pty Ltd., becoming the biggest shareholder in Africa’s largest data-center to capitalize on growing demand for internet and cloud-based services on the continent.

     

    The Boston-based private-equity firm is sweeping in on Johannesburg-based Teraco as technology plays a more integral part in the life of consumers and businesses. Teraco was expected to fetch between $600 million and $1 billion, including debt, people familiar with the matter said in November.

     

    “Berkshire Partners is a committed long-term partner that will assist us with future growth plans and additional investment,” Teraco Managing Director Jan Hnizdo in an email. The value of the transaction wasn’t disclosed.

     

    The purchase comes after London-based Permira Holdings LLP, which backed a management buyout of the company in 2015, sought a buyer for part of its stake in the company, which also operates data centers in Cape Town and Durban. Permira will stay on as a shareholder in Teraco, Michail Zekkos, a partner in the firm, said.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Access, Diamond offer free ATM services to customers

    Access Bank Plc and Diamond Bank Plc customers will from today have access to 3,100 Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) that will provide free and seamless banking services to them.

    This follows the planned merger of the two Systematically Important Banks (SIBs) which is expected to be concluded in the first half of this year. The merger of the two lenders will give their customers access to the largest ATM network in the country.

    According to the two lenders, starting from today, their customers will have access to 3,100 ATMs free of charge.

    “Access Bank and Diamond Customers now have access to over 3,100 ATMs free of charge. This means that from January 1, 2019, you can use any Diamond Bank ATMs without paying the usual charges that apply on withdrawals from other banks’ ATMs. We are closer to you than ever before,” the bank said in emailed note to The Nation.

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had last month, gave a “No Objection” nod to the merger plans of Access Bank Plc and Diamond Bank Plc, the boards of both banks said yesterday.

    The deal is expected to be completed in the first half of this year.

    The merger will form a leading Tier 1 Nigerian bank and the largest bank in Africa by number of customers, spanning three continents, 12 countries and 29 million clients.

    The combination of our two businesses will create the largest retail bank in Africa by customer base and a very significant player in the Nigerian market.  This is a huge step towards the delivery of our goal to bring the power of banking to millions of people across Nigeria and an exciting transaction for Access Bank and Diamond Bank’s customers, staff and shareholders.

  • CBN okays Access, Diamond merger

    THE Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has given a “No Objection” nod to the merger plans of Access Bank Plc and Diamond Bank Plc, the boards of both banks said yesterday.

    The deal is expected to be completed in the first half of 2019. Transaction completion is subject to Access Bank and Diamond Bank obtaining shareholder and regulatory approvals (CBN, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Federal High Court (FHC) and the National Pension Commission (PenCom).

    Following the signing of the Memorandum of Agreement and announcement of headline terms, which valued Diamond Bank at approximately N72.5 billion (about $200 million) and will see Diamond Bank shareholders receive N3.13 per share in cash and shares, Access Bank and Diamond Bank are announcing further details, including the rationale and benefits of the deal, the estimated cost synergies, the capital management plan and the timetable.

    The merger will form a leading Tier 1 Nigerian bank and the largest bank in Africa by number of customers, spanning three continents, 12 countries and 29 million clients.

    It will bring also together treasury, risk management and corporate banking expertise with strong retail and digital banking capabilities to create a financial institution operating across the full suite of products for all customer segments.

    The transaction will be concluded via Scheme of Merger following Access Bank and Diamond Bank Court Ordered Meetings billed for March 2019 to approve terms. Subject to shareholder approvals, final approvals by SEC, CBN and PenCom regulatory and FHC sanction are expected before the end of first half of next year.

    Cost of synergies conservatively estimated at N30 billion per annum, pre-tax, to be fully realised within three years post-completion.

    Further revenue and balance sheet synergies are to be evaluated by joint implementation committee.

    The pro-forma capital position of the merged bank will be in full compliance with regulatory requirements for significant financial institutions with an international banking presence.

    However, in order to meet international standards of best practice and ensure a robust capital buffer, both banks expect to achieve a post-completion Capital Adequacy Ratio (“CAR”) of 20 per cent at the bank level and 22 per cent at the group level.

    The key elements are – Diamond Bank to take further impairments in line with IFRS9, to be reflected in year end 2018 results.

    Access Bank has finalised terms and obtained regulatory approvals for a Tier II capital issuance, which will raise $250 million, available for drawdown in January 2019.

    Commenting on the proposed merger, Access Bank’s Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Herbert Wigwe said: “I am delighted to announce that we have received the necessary regulatory approvals to pursue a merger with Diamond Bank, one of Nigeria’s foremost digital and retail banks, subject to final regulatory and shareholder approvals.

    “The combination of our two businesses will create the largest retail bank in Africa by customer base and a very significant player in the Nigerian market.  This is a huge step towards the delivery of our goal to bring the power of banking to millions of people across Nigeria and an exciting transaction for Access Bank and Diamond Bank’s customers, staff and shareholders.

    “We have a clear plan to maintain our capital strength and are announcing today decisive steps by both banks to ensure their financial stability throughout the process.

    “The overall outcome will be a stable institution with an extremely strong capital adequacy ratio of more than 20 per cent following completion of the merger, which will be a leading competitor in all the markets in which it operates.”

    Diamond Bank’s CEO Uzoma Dozie said: “The merger is positive for all of Diamond Bank stakeholders, including customers, employees and shareholders. In particular, customers will benefit significantly through the unrivalled combination of the best of Diamond Bank’s retail and digital leadership with the size of Access Bank’s balance sheet, corporate names and geographical reach.

    “In reaching this decision, the shared passion for leveraging Nigeria’s youthful and entrepreneurial talent, and a commitment to better outcomes through financial inclusion have convinced us that this is the right combination.

  • Access to World Bank’s $750m loan, grant coming, says Fed Govt

    The World Bank’s $750 million loans and  grants will soon be accessed by the 36 governments and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    The Minister of Finance, Mrs. Zainab Shamsuna Ahmed, broke the news at the seventh Community of Practice (CoP), which comprise state Commissioners of Planning and Budget, in Abuja at the weekend.

    She said: “We are in the process of going to the Federal Executive Council (FEC) to get the approval; the World Bank on its own has already approved this and others.”

    Mrs. Ahmed expressed optimism that states would continue with their fiscal responsibility, which would serve as a platform to access the loan and grant.

    “So, we hope that you will continue to implement your fiscal responsibility so that you will qualify for this facility as well as the grant,” she said.

    The Community of Practice meetings enhance Commissioners of Planning and Budget’s capabilities to perform their functions, and serve as platforms for facilitating peer learning and information exchange, strengthening co-ordination, collaboration and networking.

    A statement by the Special Adviser to the Minister of Finance on Media and Communications, Paul Ella Abechi, quoted the minister as saying during the meeting: “We had the benefit of hosting the World Bank and several other communities, including the Governors’ Forum”.

    She  continued: “During  this exercise, the Ministry of Finance had to, on instruction from the President, provide bailouts to the states because at one point they were not able to pay salaries.

    “Part of the conditions that was given for those bailouts is a fiscal responsibility plan, which needed to be implemented for the states to continue to be qualified to access the funds that the Federal Government was giving.

    “This FRP was quite successful because as a result of that we saw improvements in the public financial management in a lot of states, some of which are evident in the increase in their IGR and also the increase in the frequency of the preparation of financial statement in the availability of budget that used to never been found anywhere.

    “This year, it was so good that the World Bank said this group has done well and therefore, we are going to give $750million in the form of concession loans and grant which will be available soon for the states to access.

    “Those principles agreed by NEC are still as relevant today as they were in 2016. So I want to urge the CoP to ensure that the monitoring aspect of this is still continuing in one way or the other” Mrs. Ahmed told the states.

  • NEXIM Bank urges S/East, Delta SMEs to access N550b export facility

    NEXIM Bank urges S/East, Delta SMEs to access N550b export facility

    The Nigerian Export-Import Bank (NEXIM) has called on export-oriented Small and Medium Entrepreneurs (SMEs) in the Southeast and Delta States to access the N500 billion Export Stimulation Facility (ESF), and the N50 billion Export Development Fund being managed by the Bank.

    The Managing Director/CEO, Abba Belloto said the facility is meant to boost their businesses, create more jobs, and contribute to the foreign exchange revenue earnings of the country.

    The bank’s Enugu Regional Office, in a statement after a one-day seminar titled: Leveraging NEXIM Bank Facilities to Unlweash Your Export Potential; held at the Oaklands Centre, Enugu, said the facilities were made available to NEXIM Bank last December for onlendig at a maximum of nine per cent interest rate.

    The statement said the funds were designed to redress the declining export credit to SMEs and reposition the non-oil sector to increase its contribution to the country’s revenue generation and economic development, pointing out that the improved export financing for non-oil exporters will enable them to upscale and expand their businesses and improve their competiveness.

    Speaking on behalf of the bank’s MD/CEO, the Head of the Bank’s Enugu Regional Office, Mr. Chinedu Moghalu said the funds are being made available to the NEXIM by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)  at a time the bank has decentralised its operations to all the regions of the country for easier accessibility of its products and services to maximise their impacts.

    He said: “NEXIM Bank is determined to ensure these funds achieve the desired impact of triggering non-oil export development, growth and economic progress in line with its mandate as the trade policy bank of the Federal Government and the applicable CBN guidelines for the implementation of the facilities.”

    The representative of  Enugu State Governor and Special Assistant on SME Development, Anayo Agu, said the programme has come at the right time.  “The opening of NEXIM Bank Regional Office for the Southeast and Delta states in Enugu, and the invitation to the SMEs to access affordable non-oil export facilities, had been the missing link in the efforts of various governments in the region to derive maximum benefits from their investments in the SME value chain, especially in the agriculture and other non-oil sectors. It provides us the platform to reach heights we could only dream about before now.”

    The objectives of the ESF as contained in the CBN guidelines are to improve access of exporters to concessionary finance to expand and diversify the non-oil export baskets;  attract new investments and encourage re-investments in value-added non-oil exports production and non-traditional exports;  shore up non-oil export sector productivity and create more jobs. Others are support export oriented companies to upscale and expand their export operations as well as capabilities; diversify and increase the level of contribution of non-oil exports revenue towards sustainable economic development; and broaden the scope of export financing instruments.

    The transactions permissible for funding under the ESF include, export of goods wholly or partly processed or manufactured in Nigeria; export of commodities and services, which are permissible and excluded under existing export prohibition list; imports of plant and machinery, spare parts and packaging materials, required for export oriented production that cannot be produced locally.

    Other businesses eligible under the ESF are export value chain support services such as transportation, warehousing and quality assurance infrastructure; resuscitation, expansion, modernisation and technology upgrade of non-oil exports industries. Stocking facility and working capital can also qualify for funding under the ESF.

    Potential applicants to the ESF can either send their requests through their local commercial banks or directly to NEXIM as the revised CBN guidelines assigns the bank a dual role of both manager and participating financial institution.

    The N50 billion Export Development Fund will be managed by NEXIM and implemented in collaboration with the state governments. NEXIM has earmarked at least N1 billion for each state under the State Export Development Programme component aimed to catalyse and incentivise export investment to promote diversification and industrialisation.

    Through the programme, NEXIM Bank will also have a programme for women/youth development, especially to provide support to industries that are involved in apparel/garmenting, cashew, shea, and others.

    CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele had stated during the announcement of the funds in December 2017 that the ESF can also be implemented by adapting the Anchor Borrowers Programme framework while promoting the PAVE initiative.

    According to Moghalu, “The overall aim of the ESF and EDF is to lower the costs of Nigerian exporters so that their products can be priced at a level where they can compete with other products around the world.”

    The NEXIM Bank regional head urged eligible export-oriented companies in the Southeast and Delta states with permissible transactions under the schemes to participate in the funding scheme by submitting proposals for consideration through the financial institutions of their choice or directly to NEXIM Bank.

  • 57m Nigerians lack access to safe water, says report

    About 57 million Nigerians have no access to safe water, over 130 million others have no access to adequate sanitation, representing two third of the population.

    Also, around 45, 000 children under five years die yearly from diarrhoea caused by unsafe water and poor sanitation.

    These are contained in a latest report by WASHwatch, the collaborative monitoring platform set up by WaterAid, an international development organisation. The report was in commemoration ‘World Earth Day’ which is observed globally on April 22.

    In keeping with this year’s theme ‘Environmental and Climate literacy,’ GROHE, a German brand in sanitary fittings, provided key tips for saving water, especially in Africa.

    For GROHE, sustainability is a corporate value with a tradition and a future. GROHE has developed a wide portfolio of advanced product technologies and also launched a series of awareness campaigns and programs to change mindsets and habits.

    For instance, since 2009, GROHE has launched the Green Mosque Initiative in many countries, whereby the company partners with local entities to install water-efficient products in the ablution rooms of mosques to help the respective regions achieve sustainable reduction in water consumption.

    According to GROHE, muslim worshippers’ ritual ablutions consume between 10 and 15 litres of water per day. The initiative has reduced water consumption for the cleansing rituals by roughly 30 per cent, which is good for the environment and helps cut costs.

    “Water saving taps and showers and water saving flush systems are two of the main ways that everyday citizens can contribute to protecting the environment, and sustainability is one of the core values and a top priority in the creation of every GROHE product for bathrooms and from the design to development stages.” says Mohammed Ataya, Vice President, GROHE Egypt, North and West Africa.

    Ataya added that “Quality materials, first-class design and advanced engineering all play an important role in saving water. For example, GROHE EcoJoy™ hand showers feature either an integrated flow limiter, or an Eco button or spray dimmer, which lets you choose when to reduce the water flow.”

    According to Ataya, GROHE agrees strongly with the Earth Day ethos that everyone needs to be empowered with the knowledge and the products to inspire action and protect the environment.

    He said the individual choice to reduce water consumption is only one of the many strategies needed to address the issue of water scarcity, but it gives each person a role to play in protecting the planet.

  • ‘How to access the miraculous’

    The Pastor of Gospel Faith Mission International (GOFAMINT) Region 8 Lagos, Clement Abe, has stated strong faith and determination are required to move the hands of God.

    He spoke at the March edition of the monthly interdenominational service of the church tagged a unique encounter with Jesus.

    The special service, which has been growing in leaps and bound, has attracted thousands with testimonies of deliverance and breakthroughs.

    Addressing participants, Abe said: “God is moved by faith and determination. Those who trust Him never go unrewarded and empty.

    “He always shows up for the faithful and determined. Once our faith is strong and we are determined, we can be sure God will reach out to us.”

    A woman testified of how she got married for five years without any issue until she attended the service.

    “I went to several medical doctors and hospitals. I tried local herbal practice but I couldn’t get pregnant. I came to encounter with Jesus and now I am two- month pregnant,” she shared.

    Abe said General Overseer of the church, Pastor Dr Elijah Abina, was the brain behind the service.

    He said participants are told to come fasting because of the needs to concentrate for divine attention.

  • ‘Why access to power remains poor’

    Nigerians are not getting enough electricity because of the few investors in the sector, Vice President, Green Electric, a France-based Renewable Energy firm, Dr Albert Okorogu, has said.

    In a telephone interview, he listed other reasons as low level of confidence by investors in the sector, huge interest rates imposed by banks on loans and frictions between the investors and the community, where the project will be sited.

    He said: “Many power projects are abandoned across the country because there is no money to finance them.The banks are not ready to provide loans to investors in the sector. Often times, banks made investors to repay the loans at double-digit rates of between 25 and 28 per cent, and short tenor. Cases abound where the Chief Executive officers (CEOs) of banks prefer to lend to bigger investors, and not smaller ones who are in the sector.

    He said generation, transmission and distribution of electricity have suffered neglect in recent times, adding that no government could provide electricity for its people once there are problems in the three areas.

    He said the grid needs repair to provide power to the 11 electricity distribution companies (DisCos) for supply to their customers.

    He urged the government to invest in renewable energies, such as solar, coal and wind to reduce burdens on the grid, arguing that renewable energy is key to the growth of the sector.

    “Access to power by people living in the urban and rural areas in Nigeria is very low. In the rural areas, access to power is very bad.The rural dwellers neither enjoy power from the grid nor electricity from solar and other forms of renewable energies. This is the reason behind poor living conditions of people in the rural areas,” he said.

    Okorogu said many investors would have invested in 100 kilowatts, 200 kilowatts and 300 kilowatts of electricity in rural areas, if they have the money.

    He said when a company either through solar or wind generates, for instance 100 kilowatts of electricity in rural areas, such firm has helped in boosting the socio-economic activities of the people.

    He urged the Federal Government to provide an enabling environment for investors in both grid and off-grid electricity generation, noting that only holistic and well implemented policies would revive the nation’s power sector.

    Okorogu, also a former Executive Director, Niger Delta Power Holding Company (NDPHC) Limited that oversees National Integrated Power Projects (NIPP), said besides communal clashes, stable power would not be realistic if the government and stakeholders fail to develop the sector well.

    The sector generates about 3,500 megawatts of electricity, which implies that Nigeria has a long way to go to meet its targets of 20,000 megawatts of electricity by 2020.

  • Herbert Wigwe in  moment of glory …as Access Bank wins  double recognition

    Herbert Wigwe in moment of glory …as Access Bank wins double recognition

    SOME are born great, some achieve greatness while others have greatness thrust upon them. Herbert Wigwe, the Managing Director of Access Bank Plc could be said to belong to the first category, having climbed the ladder of success through hard work and perseverance.

    The winsome helmsman bank executive may also have had greatness thrust upon him in the form of the awards and recognitions he has been enjoying from his peers in the banking industry. As the Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Access Bank, Wigwe was recently voted the Bank Chief Executive Officer of the Year at the annual BusinessDay Awards.

    To make it a doubly joyous occasion, Access Bank, which he has headed since the departure of his immediate predecessor, Aig Imhokhuede, in 2013, also carted home the Bank of the Year award.

    And while he is basking in the euphoria of his accolades, the banking guru remains his humble self, attributing his accomplishments to the support and cooperation of the staff and customers of Access Bank.