Tag: capacity

  • Foundation, LASIEC partner on capacity building

    Foundation, LASIEC partner on capacity building

    The International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) will support Lagos State Independent Electoral Commission (LASIEC) to conduct free, fair and credible elections into the state’s 57 councils. The state has 20 local governments and 37 Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs).

    At a meeting with LASIEC, the foundation’s representatives, Mrs Uloma Osuala and Mr Obaje Ukeh, said IFES was ready to hold a capacity building seminar for electoral officers and others on voter education. It will also develop manuals for the commission, design voter education materials and establish an election support centre to enable the commission monitor progress and development on the field on election day.

    They hailed LASIEC for having a data base of ad-hoc staff it engaged in the last council election in the state.

    Stressing the need for more effective collaboration between Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and State Independent Electoral Commissions (SIECs), the foundation called for the establishment of a functional secretariat for the Forum of State Independent Electoral Commissions of Nigeria (FOSIECON), an umbrella body for the country’s 36 SIECs.

    LASIEC Chairman Justice Abdul-Fatai Adeyinka said the delineation of wards and creation of additional polling units embarked upon by the commission were intended to deepen democracy and make it more inclusive for those at the grassroots.

    IFES is a Washington–based international non-profit organisation founded to provide assistance and support for elections in new and emerging democracies.

  • TCN shortlists investors for 8,000Mw transmission capacity

    TCN shortlists investors for 8,000Mw transmission capacity

    • N15b needed yearly for three years

    The Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) has shortlisted over 30 local and foreign investors for investment in the transmission infrastructure to enable it attain its target of 8,000 megawatts (Mw) capacity by end of next year.

    The firm has set a target to achieve the capacity to transmit 8,000Mw of power by the end of next year considering the continued improvement in power supply.

    Its Managing Director, Dr. Abubakar Rasheed Tambuwal, an engineer, said the management was being proactive in order not to be caught unprepared.

    He said that the step being taken by the management was important because the Federal Government would not be part of the funding. The investors will bring in their money and TCN will pay them back within an agreed period.

    Abubakar said the TCN wheels out 4662Mw and has capacity for 5300Mw.Although the company can transmit 4662Mw and has capacity to wheel out more, it has to prepare for more power generation and shouldn’t wait for the government before taking steps to achieve that. This is why  management seeks private sector investment.

    To achieve 8,000Mw transmission capacity, TCN needs an investment of about N15 billion yearly over the next three years, he added.

    He said: “We are looking at a minimum of about N15 billion yearly over the next three years if we should be able to achieve the 8,000Mw. Therefore, with regard to the investor financing scheme (IFS), we have just shortlisted investors from within and abroad that are interested in the project. “We have over 30 of them that we feel will be able to deliver on some projects that they have chosen. I cannot tell you the names of the shortlisted investors for now until the deal is sealed and delivered. We are trying to see that they are capable technically and financially because once they come in; they are expected to execute the project themselves with the funding they are able to galvanise from either externally or within the country.

    “We have shortlisted them and we are in the process of coming up with a framework from which they can recover their investment with time. Since the Federal Government will not give them sovereign guarantee, we are coming up with modalities of repayment from the wheeling charges from our internally generated revenue over a period of time. It has not been finalised. We are still working to get all the support that is needed from the government for us to be able to achieve this.”

    He said internally generated revenue is  part of the moneyTCN collected from the customers by the distribution companies, noting that considering the quantum of power generated, TCN’s portion of the collection will be substantial enough to sustain its operation and pay back to the investors in the project.

    On the level of funding from the government, Abubakar said funding has not improved considering the fact that a lot of projects are in the pipeline, which need to be funded and because of the present situation, there is need for additional funding even from what the firm used to have. ‘’We are making all efforts to ensure that we bring funds outside appropriation of government. We have investors who are ready to come in and participate in our investor financing scheme. The scheme is still at preliminary stage but as soon as we finalise it, we will have investors who are willing to put in their funds to develop our transmission infrastructure. We also expect more funding from the Federal Government to be able to achieve the mandate we have set for ourselves to improve on the transmission capacity,” he said.

    Abubakar also explained reason for the improved power supply being experienced. He said generation has improved because gas supply has improved tremendously to generating stations and have been able to generate the highest ever peak in July of 4662Mw. “Our transmission capacity is a bit above that. We are capable of transmitting 5300Mw at the moment. But as generation is improving, we are expected to expand our transmission capacity to be able to evacuate the extra capacity being generated at the station for distribution companies to use. I can assure you that we have our plan, our project that are very critical has been mapped out so that within the shortest possible time, we will be able to reach 8000Mw transmission capacity, by end of 2016.

    “We have never transmitted more than 5000Mw to the customers due to many factors. When you generate, you transmit and utilise in the distribution, the distribution arm has to be ready to receive the quantum of power that has been generated. But I must tell you that transmission is capable of wheeling out 5,300Mw from generation down to distribution. It is only what the distribution companies can collectively take that is what is wheeled as the maximum energy at any given time.”

  • Emirates doubles capacity to tourism hotspot Seychelles

    Emirates doubles capacity to tourism hotspot Seychelles

    Emirates is set to increase its capacity to the popular Indian Ocean Island of Seychelles, when it switches from the current Airbus 330-200 used on one of the two daily services to a larger Boeing 777-300ER from June 1.

    The introduction of the Emirates Boeing 777-300ER, which operates as flight EK705 from Dubai and as EK706 on the return flight, will increase overall capacity on the route by 1,722 seats per week and will make the route an all-Boeing 777 operation.

    56-57 Tourism 18-04-2015.“The Seychelles is a very popular leisure destination, and we have experienced consistent growth on the route since we started operations to the island on January 1, 2005 with three weekly flights using an Airbus A330-200.

    “Since then, we have had to gradually increase our frequencies and deploy larger aircraft to meet growing demand, and now ten years later, starting from June 1, we will have two Boeing 777s on the route,”said Laurie Berryman, Vice President, UK & Ireland at Emirates.

    “The island draws a lot of leisure travellers from across our network, with many coming from the Middle East, Europe and Russia. In 2014, Emirates carried well in excess of 200, 000 customers to and from the Seychelles,” he added.

    The Boeing 777-300ER will have a three- class configuration, with eight First Class Private Suites, 42 lie flat seats in Business Class and 310 spacious seats in Economy Class.

    Customers on Emirates flights enjoy the famed hospitality of its multi-national cabin crew, including nationals of the Seychelles, and gourmet cuisine.

    “The announcement by Emirates that they will be introducing a second Boeing 777 on the Seychelles route is indeed good news for the tourism industry of our islands.

    “This announcement also guarantees our visitors that they can now enjoy the Dubai – Seychelles service with three classes on both Emirates flights every day.

    “We take this opportunity to thank Emirates for their continued support and for believing in the tourism industry of Seychelles,”said Alain St. Ange, Minister of Tourism and Culture of the Seychelles.

  • How to boost indigenous capacity

    How to boost indigenous capacity

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • UNESCO builds leadership capacity in  women

    UNESCO builds leadership capacity in women

    Worried by the low response of Nigerians to issues of governance and leadership ahead of the 2015 general elections, the United Nations Education Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) has engaged women on a series of trainings to increase women participation in leadership and governance.

    The training entitled “Gender Transformative Training Workshop (TOT) had been held in Lagos and Gombe before coming to Rivers State. It was organised with the support of four other international bodies.

    The organisers said it was aimed at helping women unleash their potentials in the development quest of the nation.

    Prof. Funmi Soetan of the Department of Economics, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife,  a  Gender and Development Specialist,  said the workshop was necessitated by the fact that: “We’ve noticed that although women constitute roughly 60 per cent of Nigeria population, when it comes to their participation in leadership and decision making, they are less than 10 per cent. What this means is that we are neglected, wasting, overlooking roughly half of our human resources, their contributions and potential.  They cannot contribute their potential to development.”

    She went on: “This is a great loss to our nation, and we want to rectify it.  It is for this reason that the UKaid, Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA),  European Union (EU), and United Nation Development Programme (UNDP), are supporting United Nations Education Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO),  to organise the workshop.

    For Prof. Rosemary Oko of the Department of Agric-Economics, Delta State University, contrary to the assumption in many Christian quarters that politics is not for serious Christians, she encouraged Christians to embrace politics.

    She said: “One of the issues that have been identified as hindrance to women participation in politics and other leadership position is the mind-set that politics is not for certain group of people, women, Christians, among others.

    “For the Christians, men and women, I don’t believe that God is against politics but sin.”

    Dr. Eteng Etobe, a lecturer in the Department of Sociology of the University of Calabar, called on women to take the lead.

    “Our women in Nigeria have been relegated to the background to the extent that their potential/ contributions to societal development have been shielded off.

    “I am advocating for a chance for women in core leadership positions in the country. The ideas some men hold about women being too tough, stringent in their decisions among others are the stereotype we are strongly campaigning against.

    “I call on women to rise up against this injustice on them by coming out enmass and embrace politics and leadership and give massive support to their colleagues when they come out in the next year’s general elections.”

  • Seplat restates commitment to capacity building

    SEPLAT Petroleum Development Company Plc has reiterated its commitment to building strong human capacity in their area of operation.

    The Managing Director, Austin Avuru, gave this hint at a public forum in Sapele, Delta state recently.

    The event was the grand finale quiz competition for secondary schools in Delta and Edo states.

    Justifying the need for the competition, Avuru, who was represented by Dr (Mrs) Chioma Nwachuku, General Manager, External Affairs and Communications, said it was borne out of the need to build the skills set of members of its host communities.

    “Our company’s commitment to intellectual capacity building remains strong and unshakable. This is our third edition  spanning for three years of organising the Pearls Quiz Competition and we are constantly impressed by the performance of  the students especially the female students who are disadvantaged on account of their gender. We are convinced that the future of these children is bright indeed,” he stressed.

    This year competition was keenly contested by over 1500 schools with Hebrew International Secondary School coming tops.

  • SME’s laud capacity, funding support by BoI

    Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) have attributed their growth to the assistance of  the Bank of Industry (BOI) through capacity building and long-term  loan.

    Speaking while receiving an award  of integrity, Executive Chairman, Innoson Group, Chief lnnocent Chukwuma, recalled how the bank gave him a boost, which grew his tottering business from employing 25 workers to 7,200 employees.

    He confirmed enjoying the bank’s facilities for three different times for the production of household plastics ranging from plates, chairs, tables and tanks to pipes and plumbing parts. The facilities, he said, have placed the company as the biggest manufacturer of plastics in the country.

    He said: “In 2010, the company accessed a fourth facility for its diversification into automobile assembling plant with the plastic arm producing almost all plastic components of vehicles. To date, the company has enjoyed four facilities from BOI, and has been able to maintain good debt service record on all the facilities, making us to employ over 700 direct staff  and 2,000 indirect workers.”

    The lnnoson boss said though he initially asked for a facility of N100 million and was denied, he was, however, given N80 million in machinery and equipment.

    The assistance, he said, has given his business the boost needed to grow  to  being a leader in the local manufacturing of vehicles.

    To the Managing Director of Nigeria Aluminium Limited, Mr. Iyiola Ishola, the long standing relationship his firm has with BOI since 2005, paid off with the growth in earnings per share of the company ‘s customers.

    Chairman, Rumbu Sacks Nigeria Limited, Mr. Ibrahim Salisu Buhari commended the single digit interest rate given to manufacturers, noting that it is not only convenient, but easy to repay. He said the company grew from the scratch 15 years ago to become the biggest producer of woven sacks and mats.

    Salisu Buhari said: “BOI improved our operations to the extent that we have been able to achieve an evolution of our production process from manual to advanced automation. Similarly, our company has been able to increase its workers from 231 in 2001 to 1,163 to date in direct and indirect employees.”

    Earlier, BOI Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Rasheed Olaoluwa, said the bank has established a hall of fame for 10  companies, who repaid their loans on schedule. The 10 companies, he said, demonstrated a high level of integrity in their dealings with the bank and fully repaid loans granted them by the bank as and when due.

    “These companies obtained long-term credit facilities from BOI at least twice and they fully repaid the loans as and when due. They have proven that integrity is not a function of size or of the business environment. They have shown considerable honour and character that we commend and applaud,” Olaoluwa said.

    The BOI boss added that the bank is poised to support genuine businesses to succeed through business support, capacity building and funding.

    On bad loans, he said the bank usually adopts prudent steps as soon as loans show signs of non performance.

  • Emirates upgrades Abuja capacity

    Barely two months after launching its operations to Abuja, Emirates has announced it will upgrade the route’s operating aircraft to a Boeing 777-200ER, starting from October 1st 2014.

    Emirates launched a daily service to Abuja, its second Nigerian gateway and 22nd passenger destination in Africa, on August 1st, utilising the Airbus A340-300.

    The new aircraft will continue to operate daily to Nigeria’s capital and offer 274 seats in the three cabins; 12 luxurious lie-flat seats in First Class, 42 deeply reclining seats in Business Class and a generous space for 220 passengers in Economy Class.

    “The upgrade of our Abuja service to a Boeing 777 demonstrates our commitment to the Nigerian market and another step to ensure we offer world class products to our customers in Nigeria.

    “Since its launch on August 1st 2014, Emirates boosted international tourism and trade in Abuja from a raft of destinations in the Far East, West Asia, Middle East, Europe and North America,” said Adil Al Ghaith, Emirates Senior Vice President, Commercial Operations, Northern and Western Africa.

  • FIRS boss to officers: Improve your capacity

    The Acting Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Alhaji Kabir Mashi, has urged leaders of state tax boards to develop their capacity.

    Marshi told the states tax board leaders to dream, articulate visions, objectives and develop strategies to actualise them.

    He spoke in Abuja yesterday at a two- day Leadership Enhancement Programme organised by the Joint Tax Board (JTB) in collaboration with ReStral Consulting.

    Mashi, who doubles as the Chairman of the JTB, told the Chairmen of the Inland Revenue boards of the 36 states and Federal Capital Territory (FCT) that as leaders, they owe themselves, their organisations and Nigeria the duty to developed themselves.

    He said capacity building is the most important challenge facing leaders in modern societies today. “As Chief Accounting Officers of our respective tax authorities, the need for continuous capacity building programmes cannot be over emphasised. You are all aware that we are constantly faced with the challenge of how to effectively and adequately manage both human and material resources at our disposal for optimum revenue collection,” he added.

    He said the programme was organised to build the capacity of the tax chiefs Who must strive for perfection, saying, “we equally need avenues like this to share and compare notes of the goods and not too pleasant situations around us.”

    Marshi noted that leadership capacity building “remains a major tool in helping chief executives develop essential skills necessary for achieving organisational goals and objectives.