Tag: BPE

  • Stakeholders flay BPE, others over INTELS’ crisis

    Stakeholders in the maritime industry have, at a forum in Lagos, urged the management of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) to reconsider its position over the termination of its the pilotage services contract with the nation’s oil and gas logistics giant, Intels Nigeria Limited (INTELS). This, they said, will restore investors’ confidence in the interest of the economy and thousand of Nigerians working with the firm.

    They also berated the previous NPA management and officers of the Bureau of Public Enterprise (BPE) that signed the agreement with INTELS without paying the necessary attention to the constitution.

    With the advertisement placed by the NPA, INTELS, they said, must be given the first offer of refusal if the company applies.

    At the forum organised by importers in Lagos over the ‘INTELS and NPA imbroglio’,  a speaker, Mr Felix Jacob said INTELS must not be punished for BPE officials’ negligence, whose assignment was to consider every aspect of the constitution before any government agency enters into any agreement with private firm.

    INTELS, Jacob said, must also not feel too big to apply for the contract since the company already has its equipment and personnel on ground carrying out the pilotage services.

    He blamed the BPE and the NPA officials  involved in the enactment of the disputed agreement and urged the NPA management ‘to show the world that “its slender harm is full  of  kindness by allowing INTELS to continue with the job if it agrees to the new terms and conditions since the  firm has demonstrated world-class expertise in the business”.

    “The allegation that the agreement signed by the NPA in 2007 with INTELS violateed Sections 80 (1)  of the Constitution shows that the officials of the BPE and the legal entity of the previous administrations failed to pay adequate attention to the Constitution and that the fault is not with INTELS.

    “INTELS  did not prepare the agreement. It was done by the previous management of the NPA in collaboration with the BPE before the current Managing Director, Ms Hadiza Bala Usman was appointed. All the former Managing Directors failed to see or pretended not to have seen  the anormally before Ms Usman came on board. They did nothing to correct the error before they were sacked or removed from office.

    “Those castigating INTELS are only trying to give a dog a bad name in order to hang it. If not, now is the time to invite the officials, who prepared and signed the previous agreement on behalf of the Federal Govenment, and ask them questions on why they threw constitutionalism to the dogs. If senior officials of the BPE cannot represent the government well, who will?” Jacko asked.

    He urged the NPA to open its door for negotiation with INTELS so that local and foreign investors would not be wary of contractual agreement they are going to sign with the Federal Government now and in the future.

    Another speaker and  maritime lawyer,  Mr Dipo Alaka, called for the prosecution of those who prepared the previous agreement on behalf of the Federal Government and asked INTELS to be remorseful.

    “If you are doing business with the government and making enough profit, you must be ready to listen to the same government that is feeding you. This is not the time for INTELS and its officials to war- war, but jaw-jaw. They have have laboured to bring the huge facility at their terminal  to life and that is why we are appealing to the company to eschew ego and find ways to resolve the crisis in the interest of their huge investment and the mation at large,” Alaka said.

  • BPE urges emulation of SAHCOL

    BPE urges emulation of SAHCOL

    The progess recorded by Skyway Aviation Handling Company Limited (SAHCOL), can be replicated in other companies, the Director-General, Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), Alex A. Okoh,  has said.

    Okoh, who spoke when he  undertook a post-privatisation monitoring tour of SAHCOL’s facilities, in Lagos, described SAHCOL’s per formance as one of the success stories of the privatisation programme.

    BPE’s Head, Public Communications, Chuckwuma Nwokoh, in statement yesterday, quoted the BPE’s helmsman as saying that the success recorded by SAHCOL, has justified its hand-over to the Sifax Group in December 2009, following its privatisation by the Federal Government.

    Speaking on the transaction method adopted in privatising SAHCOL, Okoh said the  full privatisation method was deleted in order to ensure that the company had ample opportunity to optimise quality of service delivery devoid of government’s interference.

    He said his observations during the facility tour, reflected the findings of post-privatisation monitoring reports by officials of the Bureau and an adherence to Share Purchase Agreement (SPA) by the core investor. He lauded the management of SAHCOL for efforts made to boost efficiency of service.

    The Managing Director of SAHCOL,  Rizwan Kadri, expressed appreciation for the Bureau’s unwavering support for the company since its privatisation. He pledged to keep up with the standards as well as continue collaboration with the BPE.

  • How Eleme Petrochemical proved privatisation is key, by BPE

    How Eleme Petrochemical proved privatisation is key, by BPE

    The narrative is alluring but few would have bet on that prospect in 2004 when the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) set in motion the privatisatisation process for Indorama Eleme Fertiliser & Chemicals Limited (formerly Eleme Petrochemicals Company Limited). Today it’s a testimonial that privatisation is the way to go, writes AKINOLA AJIBADE

    Eleme Petrochemicals Company Limited (EPCL), located in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, is a petrochemicals complex originally fully-owned by the Federal Government and commissioned in 1996. Although constructed to international standards, located to take advantage of Nigeria’s abundant supplies of natural gas, and designed to manufacture products for which there was consistently high demand, EPCL was never managed properly, at no time operated to its potential, and was a significant loss maker and drain on the state treasury.

    The company operated for about nine years from 1996, never operated effectively, although it was technologically a state-of-the-art facility. Severe management problems and continuing financial losses led to the Federal Government’s decision to privatise it.

    EPCL was one of the most challenging enterprises the BPE has privatised in terms of the impediments, which impinged the company’s ability to achieve near-full capacity and which led to consistent losses .The impediments proved to be enormous challenges, which BPE faced and had to surmount in the course of its quest to privatise EPCL.

    According to Sunday Jonathan and Ehis Nzewuji  of the Public Communications Unit of the Bureau of Public Enterprises, they involved colossal debt burden such as project finance debts: The major impediment to EPCL’s existence and privatisation was the huge project finance debt of $53 million owed to a consortium of international financial institutions. The repayment of the debts was tied to total proceeds from export sales of all the company’s outputs. The consent of the creditors was required before any transfer of ownership (via privatisation) could be effected on the company. This was because of the nature of the loan agreements, which Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) (as EPCL’s parent and guarantor) entered into with the various consortia.

    To begin the privatisation, the BPE sought and obtained the approval of the National Council on Privatisation to constitute a Federal Government team. The team negotiated with the creditors to release EPCL from its loan repayment obligations, as these debts were part of Nigerian’s debt stock to the Paris Club. The team also obtained the creditor’s consent to privatise EPCL.

    There was also the issue of trade debts and statutory debts. EPCL was also indebted to various trade creditors and the Federal Government. These liabilities totalled $259 million as at June 30, 2005. An analysis of the liabilities revealed that 63.6 per cent of the total debt was due to government agencies such as the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and NNPC.

    Other challenges included inadequate working capital caused by the restrictive clauses in the project finance loans, which denied the company access to export sales proceeds of its polyethylene and polypropylene products; and absence of the mandatory turn around maintenance (TAM). EPCL’s plants were terribly dilapidated because it had not carried out the mandatory two-year TAM on its plants since it commenced operations in 1995.

    In  2006, EPCL was privatised by the sale of 75 per cent of its shares to a core investor through a competitive bidding process. Little international interest was attracted. The company was sold to Indorama Group for $225 million, without liabilities which were retained by the government. Much of the acquisition cost was financed with debt, with the International Finance Corporation (IFC) lending Indorama $150 million for the acquisition cost and the new Eleme borrowing $130 million for its turnaround programme and working capital.

    It is interesting to note that the available report on EPCL stated that “the absence of the two-year TAM of the company’s plants and facilities made it impossible for the company to achieve profitability” and “the level of the company’s indebtedness also greatly hampered the company’s ability to achieve profitability”, whereas after four months of turnaround maintenance, the company was operating at a healthy profit; for the first full year of operation earned a net profit margin of 36.1 per cent after tax; and in the second full year of operation had increased its net profit margin to an astounding 43.4 per cent after tax. The company was able to pay its owners a dividend of N9.5 billion (approximately $74 million) after only one year of operation.

    The Share Sale and Purchase Agreement (SSPA) between the BPE and Indorama International Finance was signed on February 27, 2006 and the company was handed over to the buyer on October 26, 2006. Following the hand over, the core investor was required to comply with all the covenants of the SSPA including some specific clauses as described in clauses 8.2, and 8.4 of Annexure 1 for a continuous period of five years after the handover date.

    On March 14, 2014, Indorama Eleme Petrochemicals Limited’s management wrote to the BPE intimating her that the company had complied with all the covenants of the said SSPA, including its specific clauses 8.2, and 8.4 and that the company has completed five years monitoring period as at August 6, 2011 since the handover date of August 7, 2006.

    The Post Privatisation Monitoring (PPM) Department of the BPE consistently carried out performance evaluation of the Strategic Business Plans and monitored compliances of EPCL’s covenants as contained in the SSPA within the five year lock- in- period. The verdict was that the compliance status of EPCL is “highly outstanding and commendable as the company exceeded the projected production targets from the first year of operation to date.”

    For instance, from the SSPA in the first year, the purchaser was to produce 85,200 metric tonnes (MT) of polymers, that is, High Density Polyethylene (HDPE) and Polypropylene (PP) but produced 135,000 MT which exceeded what was contained in the Post Acquisition Plan (PAP). This was more than the sum total of what EPCL produced in its 10 years of operation before privatisation. The plants were fully revamped with the purchaser investing about $170 million for TAM. BPE’s conclusion was that “the company has therefore complied with all the covenants in the SSPA.”

    It was that laudable achievement that made the acting President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo a guest of the company on July 27, when he presented a Certificate of Discharge to the Chairman of Indorama Group, Mr. Sri Prakash Lohia and the Managing Director, Mr. Manish Mundra, for successfully accomplishing the post purchase agreement entered into with the BPE on behalf of the Federal Government.

    “Following the 2006 handover, the BPE carried out routine monitoring on the enterprise to ensure that the core investor adhered to and implemented the post-acquisition plan it had laid out for the company. Today is the culmination of that process of monitoring and oversight by the BPE. I am delighted that it is taking place on an inspiring and hopeful note, and that we are all here today celebrating a thriving and promising company. We should not take this state of affairs for granted,” he said.

    According to Osinbajo, the company has turned out to be a huge success story. “I am glad that we’re here today to see one of the success stories of the Federal Government’s privatisation programme. We will continue to support Indorama Eleme Petrochemicals Limited’s expansion ambitions. Our commitment to the privatisation programme is equally assured, and we will continue to do everything to support investors to maximise the potential of their assets.”

  • BPE to firm: Conclude equity investment in 60 days

    BPE to firm: Conclude equity investment in 60 days

    The Director-General of the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), Mr. Alex A. Okoh, has given Lead Capital Consortium a deadline of 60 calendar days to conclude the strategic equity investment by the National Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) into the Nigeria Commodity Exchange (NCX).

    The deadline was given on Wednesday at the kick-off meeting of the advisory services for the transaction. He pointed out that the main aim of the meeting was to formally introduce the appointed advisor, Lead Capital Consortium, to the key stakeholders including Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment (FMI&TI), Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development(FMA&RD), Federal Ministry of Finance(FMF), NCX and NSIA, and to signal the commencement of the advisory service.

    Lead Capital Consortium emerged the preferred advisor after a competitive bidding process using the Quality and Cost Based Selection Method (QCBS).

    Head Public Communications of the BPE, Mr. Chukwuma Nwoko that made this known in a statement onn Wednesday quoted Okoh as saying that: “This assignment as outlined in the work plan, commences today, June 21, 2017 and to be concluded within a period of 60 calendars days, unfailingly. We, therefore, solicit for the continued support and cooperation of the stakeholders to ensure that this transaction is delivered within the timeframe envisaged.”

    He pointed out that the transaction is unique in the sense that unlike in the traditional privatisation transaction approach where a private sector entity is brought in to acquire government shareholding and take over the management and operation of the public enterprise, “here a Government entity is making a strategic investment in NCX. This is to enable NCX have access to investment capital to develop the infrastructure to carry out its business effectively in facilitating trade and developing settlement instruments and platforms in agricultural produce and basic minerals.”

    The Steering Committee of the National Council on Privatisation (NCP), chaired by the Honourable Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, was charged with the responsibility of midwiving the revitalisation of the NCX through the approved strategic equity investment in the exchange by the NSIA.

    The BPE DG noted that “it is envisaged that within a period of 3-5 years, NCX would have been sufficiently transformed to attract high calibre private sector investors to take over. As such it is very important that an effective monitoring mechanism is put in place to ensure that the investments are prudently used and the business plan faithfully implemented.”

    Okoh thanked the Chairman of the National Council on Privatisation (NCP) who approved that the operations of the NCX should be revitalised through a Strategic Equity Investment by the NSIA for a period of 3 – 5 years.

  • Senate lists BPE, NAMA, NPA, others for submission of budget estimates

    Senate lists BPE, NAMA, NPA, others for submission of budget estimates

    The Senate has listed several federal government agencies expected to submit their 2017 budget proposals to the upper legislative chamber for consideration.

    The agencies are the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASEI), Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC), National Maritime Authority (NMA) and Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC).

    Others are the National Sugar Development Council (NSDC), Nigerian Postal Service (NPS), Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC), National Communications Commission (NCC), National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) and National Broadcasting Commission (NBC).

    Also expected to submit their estimates are the National Insurance Commission (NIC), News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Nigerian Copyrights Commission (NCC), Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS), Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN).

    Others are the Federal Housing Authority (FHA), Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), National Automotive Design and Development Council (NADDC), Nigerian Nuclear Regulatory Authority (NNRA), National Business and Technical Examination Board (NABTEB), Federal Mortgage Bank (FMB), National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA), Industrial Training Fund (ITF), Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and Oil and Gas Free Zone Authority (OGZFA).

  • Okoh takes over as BPE chief

    Okoh takes over as BPE chief

    The new Director-General (DG) of the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), Mr. Alex Okoh, has assumed duties with a pledge to ensure that privatised enterprises service Nigerians well.

    In a statement by the Bureau’s Head, Public Communications, Alex Erons Okoh, the DG noted that the handover held at a brief ceremony attended by the management team of the BPE at his conference room.

    According to Okoh, the new helmsman urged the workers to be dedicated to duty to achieve the desired goal. The BPE chief said his administration would work to sustain the positive image of the Bureau and change the negative perception held by some  about the BPE.

    Okoh promised to step up the bureau’s post-privatisation monitoring to ensure that owners of privatised enterprises live up to the deals they signed with the Bureau so that Nigerians could derive maximum benefits from the privatised enterprises.

    He thanked the former acting Director-General of the Bureau, Dr. Vincent Onome Akpotaire, for piloting the affairs of the Bureau in the last 14 months and called for synergy during the transition.

    Akpotaire said given his background as a seasoned administrator, the management and staff of the Bureau were confident that he would succeed in his new assignment and give the Bureau a new lease of life.

    On their part, members of the management team pledged to cooperate with the new DG to take the Bureau to greater heights.

    They later conducted him round the offices where he familiarised with the workers.

    Before his appointment, Okoh was the Managing Partner of Ashford & McGuire Consulting Limited, and a member of the Presidential Economic Advisory Council. He has 32 years experience, 22 of which were in  banking, where his responsibilities involved general management, leadership and organisational development.

    He was the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of NNB International Bank Plc from 2001 to 2006 where he took the bank from a comatose state to a position of enhanced value for stakeholders.

    He studied Sociology at the University of Benin and holds a Master’s in Banking & Finance from the University of Ibadan. Also a graduate of Harvard Business School’s Advanced Management Programme, he has acquired international working exposure through programmes with Citibank New York, Fidelity Bank London, Swiss Banking Corporation, Zurich and Grindlays Bank, Zimbabwe. He worked for Nigeria International Bank Limited (Citibank) and United Bank for Africa Plc.

  • New DGs for BPE, PenCom, others

    New DGs for BPE, PenCom, others

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday approved appointments for some Federal Government agencies.

    A statement by the Director (Press), Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Bolaji Adebiyi, said the appointments took immediate effect.

    Julie Okah-Donli is the Director-General of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP). Mary Ikpere-Eta was named as the Director-General of the National Centre for Women Development (NCWD).

    For the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), Bayo Somefun is managing director. Tijani Suleiman, Jasper Azuatalam and Kemi Nelson are executive directors.

    Ahmed Dangiwa is the Managing Director of the Federal Mortgage Bank (FMB). Melvin Eboh is Executive Director (Org. Resourcing), Hajiya Rahimatu Aliyu is Executive Director (Loans Department, Securities Issuance and Market Development) and Umaru Abdullahi Dankane is the Executive Director (Policy and Strategy Loans Set-Up and Pay Off).

    For the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), Alex Okoh is Director General.

    Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) has Abdulkadir Saidu Umar as Executive Secretary, Ibrahim Musa Goni is the Conservator-General/Chief  Executive Officer (CEO), National Park Service (NPS).

    Service Compact (SERVICOM) has Nnenna A. Akajemeli as the National Coordinator/CEO.

    For the National Directorate of Employment (NDE), Dr. Nasiru Mohammed Ladan is the Director-General.

    Saliu Dada Alabi is the Director General of the Michael Imoudu National Institute for Labour Studies (MINILS). The National Research Institute for Chemical Technology has Professor Jef. T. Barminas as Director-General.

    The Nigeria Institute for Social and Economic Research (NISER) new Director-General is Dr. Haruna Yerima.

    Sunday Thomas is the Deputy Commissioner for the Nigeria Insurance Commission (NAICOM). The Consumer Protection Council has Tunde Erukera as Executive Secretary.

    Mohammed Bello Tukur is the Secretary of the Federal Character Commission.

    For National Pension Commission (PENCOM), Dikko Aliyu Abdulrahman is the Director-General (Subject to Senate Confirmation). Funso Doherty is the Chairman and Executive Commissioners include Akin Akinwale, Abubakar Zaki Magawata, Ben Oviosun, and Nyerere Ayim.

    Umar Gambo Jibrin is the Executive Secretary of the Federal Capital Development Authority. For the Nigeria Agriculture Insurance Corporation, Mrs. Folashade Joseph is the Managing Director Cecilia Umaru Gaya, is the Director General of Administrative Staff College of Nigeria (ASCON).

    Lagos International Trade Fair Management Board has Mrs. Luci Ajayi as Executive Secretary Nigeria Export Processing Zones Authority has Emmanuel Jimme as Managing Director. Nigeria Lottery Regulatory Commission has Lanre Gbajabiamila as Director-General. Jalani Aliyu is the Director-General of the Nigeria Automotive Design and Development Council.

     

  • BPE to operators: comply with  Power Reforms Act

    BPE to operators: comply with Power Reforms Act

    The Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) has warned operators in the power sector to comply with all the provisions of the Electric Power Sector Reform Act in order to move the sector forward.

    Its spokesman, Alex Okoh in a statement, explained that its acting Director-General, Dr. Vincent Onome Akpotaire, said stakeholders are found of picking sections of the Act, which suit their purpose, disregarding others.

    The statement explained that the use of some sections of the Act against the others has slowed down the growth of the sector.

    It said Akpotaire led a BPE’s team and members of the House of Representatives Committee on Privatisation on oversight visit to the Jos Electricity Distribution Company (JED), to advise stakeholders on the issue.

    ‘’Power generation was at its lowest in the country today not because of privatisation of the generation companies as being erroneously canvassed in certain quarters, but that the crisis in the sector was caused by  partial compliance, by operators, to the power sector reforms Act.

    “Stakeholders such as the Bureau, the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and the National Assembly had the capacity to change the scenario, but that a lot depended on the National Assembly to ensure that the EPSR Act  was  strictly  adhere to by all the operators,” the DG said

    The Managing Director, Jos Electricity Distribution Company (JED), Tukur Modibbo expressed optimism that things would improve in the sector, adding that constant interaction among relevant stakeholders in the industry would provide a clearer understanding of issues.

    He said the interaction with the lawmakers would guide their decisions in charting a way out from the current crisis that has bedevilled the sector.

  • Court admits 373 exhibits in suit against PHCN, BPE

    At least 373 exhibits were on Wednesday admitted in evidence by the National Industrial Court sitting in Ibadan in a suit filed by former casual workers of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) over unpaid entitlement.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that 384 casual workers of the defunct PHCN had filed a suit against the company and Bureau of Public Enterprise (BPE) over non-payment of their salaries and entitlements in July 2014.

    Counsel to the claimants, Mr. Ahmed Tarfa, through his witness, Mr. Rashid Oshodi, tendered the documents which were admitted as exhibits by the court.

    Tarfa relied on the exhibits as defence of the claims in the case and urged the court to grant the prayer of the claimants.

    Justice Firstina Kola-Olalere admitted the documents as exhibits and adjourned cross examination by the counsel to BPE, Mr. Ogala Osoka, till March 9.

  • Multi-billion naira insurance fraud: ‘BPE breaches Procurement Act’

    Multi-billion naira insurance fraud: ‘BPE breaches Procurement Act’

    Members of the House of Representatives investigative panel on the multi-billion naira insurance fraud in Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) between 2013 and this year, were shocked yesterday when the acting Director-General (DG) of the Bureau of Public Enterprise ( BPE ), Vincent Akpotaire, said he was not aware of an investigation of his organisation  by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) over insurance related matters.

    The panel was also shocked when Akpotaire said BPE found it convenient to breach the Pubic Procurement Act on Insurance matters.

    The Hon Adekunle Akinlade-led ad hoc Committee investigating the insurance fraud, described Akpotaire’s response as irresponsible, if as the acting chief executive officer of an organisation, he could claim, under oath that he was not aware of the EFCC investigation.

    At the continuation of the investigative hearing, the Committee had asked the acting DG to justify the selection of just a number of  insurance and brokerage firms by BPE for its insurance policies over the years to the exclusion of others.

    In addition, the DG was also asked why a single company was selected as lead underwriter and lead broker as contained in the documents BPE submitted to the Committee, in addition to several missing details.

    In his response, Akpotaire said the BPE last carried out advertisement for insurance in 2009 and has been carrying out its insurance till date.

    He said BPE has not contravened any law by not advertising for insurance covers since 2009 because the cost of the advert was more than the cost of the insurance during the period under review.

    He also said successful bidders were picked from a pool of firms that met the set criteria and after due diligence was done on their status.

    After being told by the Committee that it was an act of illegality to carry out insurance policies without due process,  Akpotaire said he can not confirm  such claim by the Committee.

    He said: “As I sit here, I cannot confirm that we breached the Procurement Act because for the year under review, we cannot even afford to pay for group life, so there is no way we can advertise.”

    He however said the selection was competitive as successful firms were picked from a pool whose status were confirmed by the Nigerian Insurance Commission (NAICOM).

    At a point, the committee chairman asked if the organisation was being investigated for insurance related matters and the acting DG said he was not aware.