Tag: collaboration

  • AfDB strengthens regional collaboration on research

    AfDB strengthens regional collaboration on research

    Strengthening regional collaboration on Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) education and research networks was the subject of a panel discussion held at the Third Africa STI forum held in Cairo, the African Development Bank has said.

    Scientific Research and Technology are expected to play a huge role in development and industrialization in the coming years, the bank said. They are strategic to Africa’s industrialization and can enable the continent to leapfrog to the fourth industrial revolution.

    Africa has several distinguished research centers and regional specialized facilities funded by a number of countries. These are centers of excellence designed to provide scientific and innovative solutions to development challenges in Africa.

    However, scientific research requires adequate financial resources and infrastructure to ensure effective results. Head of New Technologies and Innovation at the UN Economic Commission for Africa, Kasirim Nwuke, believes that in order for countries to achieve integration, they need to start by assessing the competitiveness condition in member states and address policy issues.

    Director General, West and Central Africa Research and Education Network, Boubakar Barry,  says that it fundamental for research centers in the continent to stay connected among themselves and continue to have access to research results achieved in different regions. In modern times, ICT facilitates the achievement of this goal.

    Executive Director, African Academy for Science, Nelson Torto said that the Academy plays an advocacy role in the continent, in addition to honoring scientific achievement. It was founded by a group of the highly distinguished scientists in Africa and funded by a number of countries as well as grants from different global bodies. The Academy has 400 Fellows, one- third of them females.

    The World Bank is supporting these efforts through a center of excellence established within the frame of a regional initiative. “The center aims at meeting labor market demands, and providing scientific solutions for development challenges” says Javier Botero Alvarez, Lead Education Specialist, Education Global Practice, World Bank.

    This goal will be achieved through strengthening the capacity of universities in a number of countries competitively selected. The center is covering ten priority sectors and includes sixteen countries. The initiative is expected to have a positive impact on industry, improve the skills STEM asset and strengthen national TVET system.

  • CAPDAN seeks collaboration on technicians

    The Computer And Allied Products Dealers Association of Nigeria (CAPDAN) has called on the Minister of Communications, Alhaji Adebayo Shittu, to facilitate the training of technicians abroad.

    CAPDAN’s President, Mr Ojikutu Adeniyi made the call during the working and courtesy visit of the Minister to CAPDAN’s office and the Computer Village business community.

    Adeniyi said that the training would make the technicians in Computer Village attain international standard in the execution of their works.

    He appealed to the ministry to collaborate with CAPDAN to build incubation centres for more training of the technicians.

    According to him, the ministry needs to include in its programme recognition for the informal sector like the Computer Village.

    “We need to drive content in the ICT sector so as to develop more Made in Nigeria products.

    “The ministry should help us facilitate provision of free broadband in Computer Village, through Nigeria Satellite which is under the ministry.

    “We are also requesting for fund for ICT research, to develop Nigeria-based software,” he said.

    Adeniyi said the Computer Village was a large gathering of hardworking, young and old Nigerians who were driven by passion for trade and technology development.

    He said that Computer Village had successfully grown the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) sector in Nigeria for the past 20 years.

    According to him, the hub has the large number of graduate and it contributes immensely to job creation, technical skills acquisition and entrepreneurship development in Nigeria.

    “Computer Village has over N1.5 billion turn over everyday online and offline and 3,500 small businesses with brick and mortal.

    “Our hub is referred to as the hardware capital of Africa, based on the qualities of hardware solutions we provide,” he said.

    Responding, Shittu said that the ministry was aware of the valuable contributions the hub was making toward creating awareness in ICT and Telecommunications to Nigerians.

    He said the ministry would do all within its power to ensure local production of computer and telecommunications devices, so that Nigeria would not continue to remain a dumping ground.

    According to him, incubation centres are being established annually in many zones and states of the country.

  • Power can’t be fixed without mining sector collaboration, says Fashola

    Power can’t be fixed without mining sector collaboration, says Fashola

    Power sector problems cannot be fixed without the collaborative efforts of the mining sector, the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Mr. Babatunde Fashola, has said.

    He stated this during the just-concluded 2nd Annual Nigeria Mining Week in Abuja. Fashola agreed that there was very little the power sector could achieve without mining. He said: “As the power sector rolls out transmission stations and installs transformers, all these are operational inputs of the mining industry.”

    ‘’If the Works ministry is constructing a road, clearly it is a joint effort of the mining sector. It is impossible to have coal power without coal mining,’’ he maintained.

    Fashola said it was a welcome development to pursue cleaner energy which is the best to happen to human civilisation today. According to him, we move from firewood to coal, to petroleum, to gas and now we are going to much more renewable energy.

    He noted that the pursuit of cleaner energy now has been heightened because of the need to reduce carbon emissions and the desire for more- efficient energy for improved wealth and industrialisation.

    He stated that the country’s energy mix compelled the power ministry to build energy security ‘’so that we are less dependent on any particular source of energy. Because we have the ability to produce energy from coal, as we do from solar, gas, from hydro, we are pursuing and supporting a private sector investment initiative, which has gained some momentum. They are now close to being licensed, close to s.”

    He said it was not unusual to hear that Power, Works and Housing got the lion share in the 2016 budget followed by transportation to build the rail, but argued that the money was not solely utilised by the power, works and housing.

    According to him, the money actually went to the miners because the works ministry ‘’cannot build any of the roads without granite, sand, laterite, cement, limestone, or without bitumen. These take the money.

    “The problem simply is that we cannot budget the money for solid minerals, so we budget it for power, works and housing, and Transportation, with a very clear mandate go and give it to the miners,” he maintained.

    Fashola, who revealed he was on a mission to tell the miners that the Federal Government had raised N100 billion for road construction, insisted the money would not stay long with the power, works and housing ministry. It would soon be passed on to the true owners, including those who own the quarry and the mining sites, he stated, and urged them to be ready for work because money was coming their way.

    He said  for almost a decade, the country had spent just about 15 per cent of what it earned on infrastructure, adding that a government that spends less on construction cannot create opportunities.

    Identifying reasons why the country was able to swim out of the recession, Fashola said the present administration had in the 2016 budget doubled this number, adding that at the end of the budget year which ended in May, 2017, the government had spent N1.2 trillion, the first time that amount of money was spent for a long time only on capital budget.

    “The numbers published by the Nigeria Bureau of Statistics (NBS) had clearly showed where the money ended up. The solid minerals had had nine consecutive negative quarter growth since 2014 but by the end of quarter two of  2017, it has come out of negative growth for the first time,” he said.

    In quarter one of 2017, limestone, granite, and sand constituted 90 per cent of the mining activities that took place in the mining industry. The other minerals accounted for 10 per cent, he said, adding that construction industry, which had been in negative growth, started picking up as a result of the implementation of that budget.

    He also noted there was growth in the basic metals, iron and steel industry during the period, urging the people to visit the mining sites and see for themselves what is happening there. According to him, the government has started preparing to collect data with the disbursement of the sum of money and to undertake a very granular observation of the impact of the fund in their sector over the period the money would be disbursed.

    “We already have the infrastructure master plan, so we are not reinventing the will, we know where the infrastructure needs life and we know where the goods and services needed to be moved to. We already have these all mapped out and so slowly but surely as Nigeria earns more money, as we can borrow more, with the clear plan to provide the transportation, good network and structure that allows you to do your business in a very effective, efficient and competitive way,” he said.

    He reassured commitment by the present government to reorganise, reinvigorate and reposition the mining industry in Nigeria, adding that illegal mining has been reduced by government policies and actions.

    “It is an ongoing engagement, the collaboration between stakeholders and states, Federal and local governments are being worked upon through the establishment of national council,” he said.

    He praised the ministry of solid minerals, saying it had done a very good job in so short a time in getting the conversation going.

    Fashola said restructuring was happening in the way the ministry is, engaging with the local communities and state governments in spite of a very clear exclusive powers that they have in the constitution.

  • Govt, BCPG seek collaboration on building collapse

    The Commissioner for Physical Planning and Urban Development, Mr. Abiola Anifowoshe, has said rofessionals’ contributions and ideas from residents will be further explored to stem the rising incidence of building collapse in Lagos State.

    He spoke at this year’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Building Collapse Prevention Guild (BCPG), which held in Lagos.

    Anifowoshe explained that the state, under Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, placed high premium on regulatory authorities’ collaboration with other stakeholders. This, he said, is why the administration welcomes suggestions, brilliant ideas, technical and professional advice towards curbing the menace. With this, according to him, the hydra-headed problem of building collapse in the state will be checked.

    Anifowoshe further said the state was ready to provide necessary assistance  in tandem with constructive engagement and high point of planning inclusion as contained in the state’s urban governance.

    Also at the event, Director-General, Lagos State Safety Commission, Mr. Hakeem Dickson, contended that the spate of building collapse suggested that some professionals could have been cutting corners, by either using substandard materials, or not complying with set standards. He said the governor was worried about the spate of collapse, especially those involving buildings under construction.

    According to the host and BCPG President, Mr. Kunle Awobodu, one of the major problems of building collapse is the total disregard and wilful violation of the law. Awobodu, who is worried by the development, explained that in an organised society where the laws of the land are strictly adhered to, building collapse is an aberration.

    “A person, who cheats on the recommended setbacks is aware that he has created problems of insufficient ventilation, lighting, parking space, privacy and protection from fire incident in the adjoining or neighbouring buildings. The two-storey building that collapsed at No. 68, Herbert Macaulay Way, Ebute Meta in Lagos on August 31, 2017 affected the four-storey building on No. 66 simply because No. 66 reduced the setback specified by the building regulation,” he explained.

    The BCPG President regretted that while building law provides for minimal airspace of three metres between a building and its fence at the sides and the rear, including six metres in front, sadly, according to him, most developments are at conflict with this specification. “This type of situation,” he said, “is an indication that the developer of such buildings, including the supervisors, must have disobeyed many other specifications in the building construction process.”

    He continued:“Such a person, who could have taken the risk of leaving a permanent evidence of disregard for setback regulations, will not hesitate to disobey other specifications such as concrete mix ratio and steel reinforcement, bar spacing that will remain hidden after construction. Obvious compromise on setbacks in many locations in our society heightens our suspicion and our fears that quality of several buildings has all along been compromised.”

  • Abia at 26: Ikpeazu seeks collaboration to develop state

    Abia at 26: Ikpeazu seeks collaboration to develop state

    Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu has called for the collaboration of the residents to develop the state.

    This is even as he has promised to continue to pursue the dreams of the state’s founding fathers.

    In a message marking the 26th anniversary of the creation of the state by the General Ibrahim Babangida military government on August 27, 1991, Ikpeazu noted that the state was continuously moving on the path of growth, development and fulfilment of the aspirations of its founding fathers.

    The governor noted that the development of a state demands collective efforts of the government and the governed.

    He said: “Every truly great state and country got there not because its people were pessimistic and negative about the future of the state but because there was a sense of pride and ownership – a belief in a shared destiny with the state and a resolution by the people to do all they can every new day to make the state great.”

    According to him, the decision of the current administration to run an open government was a deliberate step to continually keep the people abreast of developments on the “commonwealth and shared aspirations”.

    Ikpeazu noted that despite the challenges his administration had been facing since it assumed office in 2015, it had not faltered, despaired nor sought for excuses.

    The governor said the administration had, instead, confronted the challenges before it with clear evidence for all to see.

    He said: “From road construction across the state to sustained educational excellence, qualitative healthcare to an innovative agricultural revolution, social mobilisation to the gainful engagement of our youths, our administration has set new standards in the delivery of the dividends of democracy.

    “Today, our state is the toast of the Federal Government and diverse development partners because we looked inwards and championed the innate qualities of our people – hard work, resilience, entrepreneurship – and told our story.

    “The country is listening to us and great opportunities are unfolding. I call on our youths to eschew all acts of division and disunity and embrace peace and hard work for our salvation lies in our own hands. May God continue to bless the works of our hands.

    “As we go on, we will yet do more. We do not see challenges; we only see possibilities. I assure you that the possibilities and opportunities to make our state great are endless. We have set our hands on the plough and we shall succeed.”

  • Sahara Group advocates regional collaboration on power

    Africa should explore  policies and investment opportunities in the power sector to boost sustainable supply, affordability and off-grid rural power solutions, the Executive Director of Sahara Group, Tonye Cole, has said.

    He spoke at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Durban, South Africa. He said the involvement of the private sector in the continent’s power space had laid the foundation for significant improvement, which must now be enhanced by collaboration and support from governments.

    “We still have a lot of work to do in terms of harmonising regulations across borders, so that the regulations we have in Nigeria for example must be the same or close to that which will be in Benin, Togo and Ghana so that the West African Power Pool, for example, can work. When you add this to a regulatory approach where the government actually provides support for investors and operators through market reflective policies, we will be looking at fast paced growth in the power sector,” he said.

    Cole noted that effective collaboration would unite regulators and operators in the generation, transmission and distribution value chains of the sector to harmonise issues around Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs), securitisations and tariff.

    “We must work towards creating a power sector that encourages cross-border collaboration to boost offshore investments, efficient pricing and policy reviews that will diversify prospects for off-grid power projects and rural electrification,” he added.

    He urged governments on the continent to provide incentives in for investors in the rural areas to accelerate inclusive growth and economic prosperity across Africa.

    “Power is critical to the ongoing economic development in Africa and for us at Sahara Group, we are continually reaching out to other stakeholders to ensure the quest of bringing energy to homes and businesses in Africa is sustained and ultimately, achieved.”

  • Osinbajo seeks international collaboration for return of stolen assets

    Osinbajo seeks international collaboration for return of stolen assets

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday in Abuja canvassed robust international collaboration for the return of Nigeria’s stolen assets abroad.

    Osinbajo made the plea while opening a two-day National Dialogue on Corruption, organised by the Office of the Vice President and the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC).

    According to him, the effort at fighting corruption in the country was being delayed by the long and complicated response of the international community.

    `The last point I want to make is with respect to international cooperation.

    “I think that one of the critical issues that we have discovered in our fight against corruption is that we need much more robust international cooperation, especially with respect to return of assets.

    “We find that the process of returning assets, aside from the judicial process, is so difficult and so complicated that it could just take you literally years to get assets returned.

    “And I think that it is important for countries of the world where stolen assets are located to really work with us in ensuring that these assets are returned speedily.

    “I know that the United Kingdom is working with us in particular on this issue of beneficiary register.

    “That will be extremely useful for us because we will now be able to discover who is behind some of the names of companies and other shelves that are used to hide stolen assets.’’

    Osinbajo observed that the International Criminal Court was one of the great deterrents for countries with bad leaders as the court was ready to hold people to account.

    He said the international community should work with Nigeria in like manner to end corruption that had been the bane of its development.

    Osinbajo said corrupt practices would be punished wherever they are found, adding that stolen property and assets should be returned speedily.

    The Acting President said that corruption thrives where it is allowed to thrive and affects the social, religious and economic lives of the people.

    Osinbajo said the fight against corruption was also made difficult when the people saw that there were no consequences and hence joined in the ugly trend.

    He suggested that agencies of government should identify models of fighting corruption that had worked in the past and apply them in other anti-corruption programmes or endeavours.
    He called for the partnership of the executive, legislature, judiciary and civil society organizations to end the vice, noting that “our nation cannot survive the level of corruption in the society’’.

    He advised Nigerians to avoid “finger-pointing’’ which he identified as unnecessary.

  • ‘Collaboration’ll end gender-based abuse’

    ‘Collaboration’ll end gender-based abuse’

    Nigeria must do more in its response to gender-based violence, say participants at a workshop on the elimination of the menace organised by the United States (US) Consulate in Lagos in collaboration with ACT Generation, a civil society group. WALE AJETUNMOBI reports.

    It is a worrisome issue for which the world has been looking for solution for years. Gender-based violence is as old as time itself, but its targets are the soft and vulnerable women and children. A World Health Organisation (WHO) report says: “One woman in three has faced gender-based violence, including sexual and physical violence”.
    Gender-based violence, according to WHO Director-General Margret Chan, is a global health problem of epidemic proportion.
    Little wonder then that the United States (US) Consulate in Lagos in collaboration with a civil rights group, ACT Generation, chose to mark the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence Campaign, with a workshop that drew attention to violence against womenfolk.
    In response to the violence against women and other sexes, the Centre for Women’s Global Leadership, in 1991, launched a global campaign tagged: 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence Campaign. Besides drawing attention to women’s plight, the yearly effort also galvanises action to end gender-based violence around the world.
    To mark the 25th anniversary of the global campaign, organisers of the workshop at the US Consulate in Lagos introduced of poetry performance into the crusade. The Nation Evelyn Osagie’s poetry added voice to the crusade.

    Bottlenecks in fighting women’s causes
    The speakers highlighted why gender-based violence persists in Nigeria. They cited lack of education and inadequate funding of programmes for women’s self-development as some factors responsible for the seeming unending gender violence. Although some key goals in the 17-point agenda of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) initiated by the United Nations (UN) are geared towards improving the condition of the girl-child and empowering women, US Consul-General John Bray believes those goals would be hard to achieve if education of the girl child and economic independence of women are not well funded.
    Since Nigeria adopted the Convention on the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women in 1985, Bray said, there had been continued efforts by the government to eliminate domestic violence. He, however, noted that there may not be significant changes in the lives of women if extant laws against gender-based violence are not strengthened.
    He said: “Violence against women and girls is an issue of international human rights and national security. The consequences of widespread violence extends beyond the immediate injury or economic loss. The social and psychological damage of gender-based violence affects survivors, their children, families, and entire communities.
    “At the US Department of State, we created an office, Global Women’s Issues, to oversee issues related to the development and protection of women and children. Through this office, we have implemented programmes throughout the world to strengthen and support the rights of women. Under the guidance of then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, we made women’s issues part of our foreign policy. As a result of this effort, women’s issues are now routinely included in social and economic development projects and programmes.”
    Bray said the Consulate collaborated with US Agency for International Development (USAID) to partner local NGOs and the government to raise awareness on gender-based and human rights issues, with the mind of ensuring all girls receive education.
    “As we say in the US, talk is cheap. Our efforts serve to bolster what the Nigerian government and people are doing. It is our hope that, by talking about these gender-based issues and having the media focusing on them, we will spur far-reaching actions to stop and prevent gender-based violence,” he said.

    Breaking the silence
    It is believed that gender-based violence thrives because most victims do not report. Statistics shows that serial abusers are emboldened by the silence of their victims, which creates room for more abuses.
    How can victims break their silence? According to ACT Generation Executive Director, Mrs Laila St. Matthew-Daniel, who spoke on Education and the girl-child: Dimension of peace, women need to be equipped with knowledge on behaviours that constitute the violation of their rights. This, she said, must be done through sustained awareness and activities that would increase women’s visibility and networking opportunities to connect civil society organisations working to eradicate the menace.
    She said education would give victims access to services that would help them overcome the trauma. She called for review and implementation of legal frameworks that protect girls and women against domestic violence. “Every day, women are subjected to serious physical and psychological abuse and exploitation, human trafficking and harmful traditional practices,” she said.

    Protect the victim, deter the abuser
    Since abusers employ violence to assert power and control over their victims, Mrs Matthew Daniels and other speakers at the event believe prosecution of abusers would deter other would-be abusers from inflicting violence on women and girls. They advised that victims should be provided with refuge and social services to rebuild their lives after being violated.
    “ACTS Generation has been lending its voice to create a society where women are free from violence by engaging them in activities that increase the visibility, skills, support and networking opportunities,” she said.
    According to Dr. Princess Olufemi-Kayode, a Criminal Justice Psychologist, making gender violence a “heinous crime” would deter abusers from inflicting physical and psychological injuries on women. She said the law must punish the abusers and protect victims from future abuses.
    Olufemi-Kayode called for synergy among organisations to address challenges facing girls and women, saying: “There won’t be any meaningful reduction in the rate of gender violence if women do not come together to confront their collective challenges.”
    She said members of a society where rights of women are abused would not be insulated from the resultant effect of the crimes. She called for affordable legal service to enable the victims seek redress and deter their abusers. If victims are educated to know their rights and services they would employ to see redress, Olufemi-Kayode said abusers would think twice before inflicting violence on their victims.
    They called for aggressive advocacy against child marriage and domestic violence. She said it was time for government to stop being reactionary to the problem, but to be proactive in nipping it at the board.
    She said: “Education for women and the girl-child is very important. We must be aggressive in our advocacy for qualitative girl-child education, because therein lies the future. We need to work towards SDGs agenda 4, 5 and 17.
    “As more women are educated, the health of the nation improves. With improved education of the girl-child, there will be also a rise of women in the labour force. Women education helps in the maintenance of peace at home, in the community and nation.”

    Poetry as a tool for
    advocacy
    According Bene Uche of the US Consulate, arts mirrors life, hence, the poetry performance was meant to show invivid terms the social ills. While the speakers highlighted why gender-based violence persisted in Nigeria, Osagie’s poem called for proactive action against the menace.
    It was as if she had a wind of the papers of all the facilitators. Osagie’s five-minute poetry performance entitled: Women Arise, was a summary of all their concerns. From empowerment, to collaboration, Osagie, who is also The Nation’s correspondent, took the audience into how where art (poetry) can become a veritable tool in advocating for human rights causes. The performance featured a one-minute skit, involving a couple, showed a gripping and heart-rending example of plights of women in the hands of abusive husbands. The audience saw the woman go from victim to advocate as she mimed Osagie’s words to the letter.
    At the end, Osagie forced the audience to take a vow to stand against gender-based violence, urging: “Women Arise/Gather like Clouds/Become a Broom/Stand tall like Iroko/Shine like the Moon/We are stronger than the colour we show.”

  • AFRIFF: Hausa filmmakers call for Nollywood collaboration

    AFRIFF: Hausa filmmakers call for Nollywood collaboration

    In a bid to explore the production methodologies, distribution systems and major factors that influence filmmaking in Northern Nigeria, AFRIFF 2016 included a session with Kannywood stakeholders to enlighten the public on the inner workings and challenges of the indigenous industry based in the North.

    The name Kannywood is a term derived from the fact that majority of the movies done in Northern Nigeria are produced in Kano State, while the Hausa being spoken is majorly that of the Kano people. The movies have elements of the Indian story-telling style and started with books and dramas.

    The AFRIFF session had popular Kannywood actors and filmmakers such as Ali Nuhu and Hajia Aisha Haliu as panelists. They spoke extensively about their industry, the challenges, possible ways of tackling the challenges and what roles Nollywood had to play in this transformation.

    The session was moderated by a leading Northern filmmaker, Mr.Sani Muazu.

    According to Ali Nuhu who explained how Kannywood works; “The infusion of dance and music into Kannywood movies is as a result of the Hausa people’s identification of them as part of ways of portraying culture and values and to appeal to this audience, it is important to do what they want. Every Northern filmmaker is cautious of what they put on screen or what they express due to religious and cultural beliefs of the people.”

    “We have an audience but the distribution aspect provides a limitation in terms of returns because if you release a movie in cinemas it might not do well in DVD sales and vice-versa because DVD distribution seems to be our strong point. The collaborative efforts of Kannywood and Nollywood have been quite encouraging so far but we still need more.” He said.

    Aisha Haliu discussed the importance of first identifying the target market before making movies in Kannywood because Nigerians have an affinity for home and tend to always come back home no matter where they go.

    “Due to budget constraints, Kannywood cannot make the sort of internationally accepted movies that would cut across because for now the market is still local. Even the marketers are beginning to dictate what should be shown and how it should be shown in order to achieve the most financial gains off of these movies. Piracy is a major limitation, though the message is getting out but we are not really getting the expected returns.”

  • ‘Pipeline security needs collaboration, technology’

    ‘Pipeline security needs collaboration, technology’

    The Group Managing Director of Oilserv Limited and Frazimex Limited, a pipeline and facilities repairs firm, Emeka Okwuosa, met with Nigerian reporters at the just-concluded offshore technology conference in Houston, Texas, United States. He spoke on how to prevent pipeline vandalism, survive in a low oil price regime and why product pipes in Nigeria lack integrity, among other issues. EMEKA UGWUANYI was there.

    The East-West pipeline is expected to be the solution to domestic gas challenges. Your company is one of those that won the pipeline contract. What is the status of the contract given the dwindling crude price and the government’s financial challenges?

    The East-West pipeline project also called OB3 pipeline is ongoing and we are looking at the project’s completion in 2017. The scheduled completion date is July 2017. The project has faced quite a few challenges like you will expect of any project. Projects come with plans, based on scope and as you progress with the project, you may have changes in scope depending on what you intend to achieve. We also have challenges that come with community management and security issues. We also have several other challenges, but at the end of all, we are always having reduced and recalibration of the schedule. Currently, we are looking at July 2017. In terms of how it is being affected by the current situation in oil and gas industry, it may not really affect it. This is a gas pipeline, and I know there is a plan by the government to make gas distribution come in top gear.Therefore, this means that the project has been programmed overtime and the funding is also being kept by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Federal Government. So, clearly the funding is on stream and I believe by next year, we should have that pipeline fully functional to be able to increase the capacity of gas supply for domestic uses.

    What is the volume or capacity of the pipeline?

    At peak supply, we are looking at a maximum of two billion standard cubic feet of gas per day (bscf/d). Whether that capacity will be achieved or not depends on whether there will be enough gas to feed it.

    With renewed attack and vandalism of pipelines, and your 2017 completion target, what measures have you put in place to secure the new pipeline?

    Pipelines are built based on what is called ‘engineering codes,’ and these codes determine the way you scope the project, and the way you  scope the specifications of the project, and once that is done by the clients, our job is to build to those specifications. There are many ways to secure a pipeline, but the most important way to secure a pipeline is the engagement of stakeholders including the government, the community and all manner of people that have direct impact on the pipeline. There are various forms of technology like the defined optic system, but that’s not being installed in the pipeline because it wasn’t part of the original scope. But what we have to know is that anybody that is tampering with a gas pipeline is a clear saboteur because you don’t tamper with gas pipeline to steal the gas. So, the incidence of gas pipeline vandalism is typical because it is an act of sabotage.

    How do you think the government can permanently address pipeline vandalism?

    Government has to set up a system to guide  the pipeline because it is a national asset. It is a very strategic national asset because anywhere in the world, you guide your pipelines by using technology, engaging the communities around there, or putting up a proper security including military security, but you have to guide your pipelines.

    In other words, you support government’s idea to set up a separate security that will guide the pipelines and the use of drones?

    I won’t say I support it because I don’t have the details, but what I’m saying in general is that you need to do a combination of general methods and technology. You can’t restrict it to just putting police around it, because if you have a 500-km pipeline, are you going to  get soldiers or police around it? This is not feasible. It requires, again, the people around it because they are the first and primary line of defence for the pipeline. Somebody has to know that something is going to happen and report it somewhere. Drone is also part of the solution. But it has to be an integrated solution. If you put drones, they can work but what it means is that when you have detected any attempt by the drones to vandalise pipeline, you have to quickly intervene. So, you need to have an integrated system because drone cannot intervene for you.

    What do you now consider as the best method to stop pipeline vandalism?

    It depends on the pipeline, the area and the community the pipeline passes through. It depends on many things, but like I said it is a combination of all sorts of security measures and it is only when you take a specific pipeline that you can address such issues clearly and be able to put a formula for it. It is not easy to say this is the way forward. It is a combination of being able to work together with the communities, and the individuals around the areas of that pipeline. Being able also to build the pipeline following codes in a way that it will be more difficult for anybody to get in there, which means you bury the pipelines deep which is what we do.

    The other one is being able to deploy technology, which is either you put a detection system along the line or you put drones to monitor. Finally, you have to put an intervention system. An intervention system means when you have detected vandalism, what are you going to do? You need human beings to go there and take action, which means it has to be purposeful, it has to be well organised and finally you must have a legal system ready so that when you catch somebody, you prosecute that person. If after arrests  nothing happens, that encourages negative actions, but going forward. It is quite a complex scenario but it can be solved.

    In this petroleum industry downturn, how do you cope with exploration and production activities?

    Exploration and production are part of the whole package. We started with construction, expanded it into full Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC). Oilserve is the first indigenous company to go into full EPC. With that, we consolidated our activities and we have been able to build capacity. We moved on into gas development, exploration and production. The whole idea is to have a balanced portfolio and be able to de-risk the business. Now oil price is low, but people will have to understand that oil price has never remained low or high. It is a cycle that has been going on for decades and for those, who deeply understand the oil industry, you have to be able to read the cycle and know when to gauge. Oil price is low, but the reality is that this is the best time to invest because you can price low. The main challenge is that you may not find the money to invest. We have gone into exploration and production to be able to gauge. Right now, exploration is more difficult because it is difficult to go out and drill and spend money on exploration with low oil price. You can still do it if you can get the services with reduced income, which is what is going on today. You can get into production asset where you optimise production, reduce your costs and be able to produce at a rate below $30 per barrel, and manage until the price goes up.

    The profit end of the sector seems to have shifted to downstream, do you intend to invest in refining of white products?

    I mentioned that we have moved into other business areas in order to de-risk our business. Do not forget that Oilserve started activities in 1995, so we have come a long way. This year will make it 21 years and you can understand that we have matured. Five years is enough for you not only to strategise, but try the strategy and be able to fine-tune it. We have done this and where we are today is that we have actually integrated and adapted to the situation. As we speak, we are undergoing a massive strategy session to reposition ourselves to be able to work and determine, which area to pay more attention to in medium term.  We also have long term strategy  there. But in long term, you have to twist from time to time to meet up with the short term and medium term results. It is a matter of planning, understanding the industry and not being a company that comes into the industry and do just trading.

    So, if you look at refining and refinery that is a different business. We do not intend to get into that. The only way we can get into the refining and refinery business would be to basically do modular refinery in other to utilise the production we may have going forward, if we do not want to evacuate the crude, but rather turn it into products and be able to use the products within the country. All these things are not required within the present predicament. But right now, we have not decided to go into refining. We must create the right value with the right strategy to go into it.

    Most operators you serve are being owed by the NNPC, how are you coping with the situation and what strategy should the industry adopt to get out of this situation?

    Everybody is affected definitely. We have an industry-wide downturn. There is low activity, low price regime, so it is affecting everybody. It is also creating a challenge for the government to be able to cope with the issues of funding, knowing that oil in particular is the major ingredient of our economy. Oil still constitutes more than 60 per cent of our foreign exchange earnings as a country. You can realise that lots of things we use in Nigeria are purchased from overseas.

    So, to fund these, you need to ensure you get enough money from the sale of crude to meet them. If you opt out from the side you know, you create a gap there, and it becomes more difficult for the government to fund its Joint Venture commitments. Don’t forget that some of these commitments are dated five to eight years ago. It is actually a problem.

    But I strongly believe the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu. He has stated severally that government is working on resolving these commitments. They are looking at alternative means of funding. They are also looking at being able to draw some funds from the Middle East, China and from other sources. The government is in a better position to decide that but I believe they know what the problem is and that they are dealing with it. But as far as it affects members of Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN) members and Oilserve, it is a serious problem. We all know that it is not going to be there forever because if you look at the price regime of crude oil, it appears like it has bottomed, you have upside going forward. It requires planning and decisions to get it to the $100 per barrel cap. What is important is that the oil producers that need our services are still in business. So far as they are in business, they will need our services. It is just a matter of time.

    What is the objective of your activities outside Nigeria?

    The objective is again what I called de-risking. You have to balance your portfolio, both in terms of different services and areas of operations as well as geographical spread.

    Many of your colleagues have expressed frustrations with respect to accessing Nigerian Content Fund (NCF), what really is the situation of the fund?

    The NCF is a major issue because some of us in PETAN, who fought so hard with other stakeholders to be able to set up the NCDMB based on local content act, feel some of the aims are not being achieved as of now. It may be too early to judge, but we need to make sure that some of the policy directions are looked into and correct them. We are slowly building up the fund, which of course is being taken from us. When I say us, I’m looking at service providers, and the producers. The purpose of that fund is very clear. It is for capacity building. But how the fund is being deployed today is not clear to any of us. We need to come together and look at the fund and make sure it is being deployed properly in order to build capacity. Capacity is not for one person, it is for the nation.

    What are the indigenous players doing to correct the anomaly?

    It is still at the early stage because, don’t forget, this law has been in place for just six years, so in terms of practice, we are still coming to deal with it and we are taking up as an organisation to address it with the NCDMB. And where that does not yield the result, we will take it up. As NCDMB reports to somebody and there is a system, we have to make sure that clearly, NCDMB manages the situation in a way that will address the original reason for which it was set up.

    But have some members of PETAN accessed this fund?

    Yes, but it is like you have $1million fund and somebody accesses one cent, that’s not access as far as I’m concerned. Not more than one or two companies have accessed the fund at a very low level, extreme low level, and that kind of fund doesn’t do a project for companies like Oilserve, so we can’t even go for it because it doesn’t make any sense to us.

    Some of the pipelines have been laid for decades now, what is your assessment of their integrity?

    It depends on the pipelines. Don’t forget when we talk of pipelines, we have crude oil pipeline, products pipeline, gas pipelines. These are owned by different entities. For crude oil pipeline, mostly owned by the international oil companies (IOCs) and the indigenous producers, the codes are very clear. We know the codes, we know the standards and they are obliged to keep to the rules. So they do the maintenance to assure integrity. Besides, you have to build it according to the codes. You also have to do the routine maintenance to keep the pipeline going and make sure you have the corrosion protection system working very well to slow down or stop corrosion from happening. That way, pipeline can last for several years. The crude oil producers more or less keep to these codes. You get to gas pipelines, they are owned by different entities. Gas pipelines are mostly owned by Nigerian Gas Company (NGC) and other entities. They are also well maintained.