Tag: fertiliser

  • Why we’re investing in fertiliser production, by agency

    Nigeria’s fertiliser production can rise above the current 2.22 million metric tons to 2.25 million metric tons before the end of the year. This is because of the massive investments by public and private sectors.

    While the Federal Government has given approval for six more fertiliser blending plants, under the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative (PFI), the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) said its investment in production of local fertiliser has raised  volume  to  2.22 million metric tonnes.

    NSIA Managing Director  Mr. Uche Orji said the agency’s investment was to make fertiliser affordable to farmers.

    NSIA has invested more than $286.4 million in the fertiliser blending project, in partnership with Fertiliser Producers and Suppliers Association of Nigeria (FEPSAN).

    Of the six fertiliser blending plants approved under the PFI, three have received approval and are receiving raw materials for the blending of the multi-nutrient NPK fertiliser.

    The others are awaiting final approval, having been allocated provisional approvals by the office of the National Security Adviser.

    When the new plants come on stream, i would bring the number of fertiliser blending plants in the country from five  in 2016 to 17.

    Speaking in Abuja, FEPSAN Executive Secretary Alhaji Rabiu Kwa said the three blending plants, which will also add  1.8 million metric tons to the industry,  would lift the country from an import-dependent nation to one that produces high quality fertiliser.

    Kwa reiterated FEPSAN commitment to working with the Federal Government to enhance agricultural productivity. He expressed optimism that PFI woud achieve food security.

    He hoped that with new blending plants, FEPSAN would likely double the volume of fertiliser produced, a development he expects will transform to savings for the government as well as provide export opportunities, especially to other West and East African countries.

    The plants that have been given final approval to join the 11 plants which include Waccot Fertiliser and Chemicals Ltd in Auchi, Edo State; Sora Ltd in Makurdi, Benue State, Citizen Fertiliser and Chemicals Limited in Kano State. Those given provisional approval are Green Technologies, Abak, Akwa Ibom State while two others which names were not provided are in Zamfara and Gombe states.

    Speaking on the sidelines of FEPSAN meeting, Managing Director, Bejafta Group Limited, operators of a blending plant in Jos, Plateau State, Mr. Jacob Gimba said the approval of new participants would help the industry grow further and place the country in pole position to support farmers to increase crop yield.

    Gimba, whose company partnered Plateau State government to revive its moribund fertiliser production company under the PFI programme, noted that the collaboration has immensely benefited the industry. “I must tell you that there has never been an initiative in the agricultural sector that has salvaged farmers like this PFI programme. It did not look like it was going to be such a huge success when we started, todaythe story is different and that is why we are seeing a lot more people and even state governments indicating interest to join the scheme,” he said.

    Also, the African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved $100 million loan for Indorama Eleme Fertiliser and Chemicals Limited to support fertiliser production.

    It would help the company’s plans to double its fertiliser production from 1.4 million tons of urea to 2.8 million tonnes per year.

    At about 20 kilogramme(kg) fertiliser usage per hectare, on the average, Nigeria lags behind countries, such as  South Africa and Egypt that use over 100kg/hectare.

  • Fertiliser production hits 2.22m metric tonnes

    The Federal Government’s investment in promoting local farming, particularly  making affordable fertiliser available to farmers, may have paid off as production of made-in-Nigeria fertiliser may have hit 2.22 million metric tonnes.

    Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) Managing Director, Mr. Uche Orji, who made this known in Abuja, said NSIA’s investment was aimed at making fertiliser affordable all year round to farmers.

    According to him, prior to December 2016, Nigeria’s stock of blended fertiliser was shipped into the country as fully finished products, even though urea and limestone, which constitute roughly two-third of the component of each bag were available locally.

    Orji said it was in recognition of this that President Muhammadu Buhari approved the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative (PFI) for the local production of blended NPK 20:20:10 fertiliser.

    According to him, the objective of the initiative was to deliver commercially significant quantities of affordable and consistently high-quality fertiliser at the right price and in time to Nigeria’s over 500,000 farmers across the country.

    He said the target retail price regime at that time was between 50 per cent and 65 per cent of the prevailing market price.

    Orji stated that after one year of running the programme, the NSIA noted that importation of finished fertiliser had reduced drastically.

    “For the 2017 wet season, it was estimated that about N60 billion from the 2017 budgetary provisions for fertiliser was saved, while another saving of $150 million was conserved from foreign exchange window.

    “To date, the programme has contributed to the resuscitation of 14 moribund blending plants, which represent 55 per cent of total installed capacity in Nigeria. Also, more than six million bags of 50kg NPK 20:10:10 fertiliser has been produced locally, which have been distributed to farmers,”  Orji said.

    The NSIA boss stated that the success of the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative was evident enough that Nigeria can sustainably produce fertilisers locally at a reasonable price without subsidy. He added that with the right model, any constraint can also be addressed.

    Orji said as a result of the government’s investment in fertiliser production, several thousand jobs had been created and the nation had saved a significant amount in foreign exchange and subsidy payments. He reiterated that the NSIA had about 2.2 billion dollars in assets as at Dec. 31, 2017.

    The Presidential Fertiliser Initiative was borne out of the desire to end fertiliser importation and the attendant impact on the country’s foreign exchange reserves.

    It was designed to stimulate significant economic activities across the agriculture value chain and catalyse growth by meeting the fertiliser demand of farmers during the wet farming season.

    Encouraged by the 2.22 million metric tonnes made-in-Nigeria fertiliser production capacity, the Federal Government said it planned to revive 12 moribund fertiliser blending plants to bring to 23 the total number of plants that will partake in this year’s PFI.

    Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, who spoke at a media briefing in Lagos,  the  said 11 moribund plants with a combined capacity of over two million metric tonnes (MT) had been revived.

    Fertiliser production in Nigeria, he said, has been a success story with the setting up of the PFI in December 2016 by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    His words: “The PFI has turned out to be a magic wand in fertiliser production. Recall that the agricultural sector and the country’s food production were negatively impacted in 2016, as farmers became exposed to high and rising prices for key agric inputs.

    “In 2017, PFI delivered 10 million 50kg bags (500,000MT) of NPK 20:10:10 fertiliser at a price of N5, 500 in time for the wet season. That’s down from the price of N9, 000 per 50kg bag in 2016 – a 40 per cent reduction.”

    The Minister added that for 2018, PFI targets the delivery of 20 million 50kg bags (1 million MT), which will double the 2017 figure. He recalled that before PFI, each imported fertiliser bag was subsidised to the tune of N6, 000 per bag.

    On some of the benefits of the PFI, the Minister said over six million bags of fertiliser had been sold to farmers at N5, 500 per bag.

    “There is now a higher patronage for the country’s rail network due to movement of raw materials and finished goods.

    “Also, the bag-making sector of the economy was boosted, with over 10 million packaging bags produced exclusively for PFI

    “Sixty thousand direct jobs and even higher number of indirect jobs have been created,” Mohammed said, reiterating the government’s commitment to fertiliser and agricultural revolution.

  • Fertiliser import boosts food production

    The increase in fertiliser importation between January and early this month led to a boost in local rice production, The Nation has learnt.

    The Federal Government was said to have imported one million tons of fertiliser (about 20 million 50 kilogramme (kg) bags of fertiliser) through the Lagos and Tincan Island ports between January and the first week of this month.

    Findings showed that both ports took delivery of 254,157 metric tons of the product valued at N27.95billion from eight vessels.

    Some farmers said the fertiliser imported from Morocco and Europe was sold to them at N5, 500 per bag.

    The last batch of 157, 000 tons scheduled for the last three months arrived the country and was cleared, while the last vessel, V. Sanderling berthed at ENL Terminal few days ago with 43, 180 tons.

    Since the beginning of the year, the country was said to have received at least 957,000 metric tons of the product from ENL Consortium Terminal at the Lagos Port and JosepDam Terminal in Tincan Island Port.

    The fertiliser was ferried to the seaports by Orient Tiger laden with 19, 892 tons; SFL Humber, 37,800 tons; Nord Mumba, 3,570 tons; Desert Calm, 46,200 tons; Team Tango, 13, 199 tons; Silver Lake, 25, 000tons; Skala Wolid,  31,246 tons;  Atlantic Tramp, 36,250 tons and Ionian Eagle, 41,000 tons.

    Also, between last May and June, some 343,657 metric tons of Muriate of Potash (MOP) arrived Lagos and Tincan Island ports, while 359,006 tons of Nitrogen Phosphorous and Potassium (NPK) were imported into the country between July and November.

    Last year, the Federal Government signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Morocco to import NPK and some companies in Europe MOP.

    Following the agreement, the government promised that one million tons of NPK and MOP fertiliser would be exported in five batches of 200,000 metric tons before the end of the year as part of efforts to find solution to food shortage and to further reduce the price of food in the country.

    In the MoU, government explained that it would control 40 per cent shares, while IML Limited, a consortium of private local investors, would hold the remaining 60 per cent equity stake.

    Following the massive importation of the products, the Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma, said recently that the Federal Government would further reduce the price of fertiliser to cut down the price of locally produced rice.

  • NSIA warns farmers against late purchase of fertiliser

    NSIA warns farmers against late purchase of fertiliser

    The Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority ( NSIA ), has advised farmers to buy fertiliser early for the 2018 farming season to ease the problems of logistics in the production and distribution of the commodity.

    Mr Uche Orji, the Managing Director of the NSIA made this call in an interview in Abuja.

    According to him, his agency, which manages the country’s Sovereign Wealth Fund, is collaborating with the Fertiliser Producers and Suppliers Association of Nigeria ( FEPSAN ) to make fertiliser distribution less cumbersome henceforth.

    “We are dealing with it in twofold; we want to start planning early and to start getting our products on time.

    “We encourage farmers to start buying their fertiliser early because the challenge we have is that most people end up buying fertiliser in June and July.

    “So there are bottleneck issues with production because the blending plants cannot double their capacity overnight.

    “We went through a phase where people were not buying fertiliser and suddenly, everybody wants to buy at the same time and to address this, farmers should buy early so that we can blend through the year, if possible,” Orji said.

    The NSIA chief said that efforts were being made to increase the number of blending plants to shorten the distance and the risk taken by drivers while transporting the product to a far distance.

    He said that 15 out of the 32 blending plants in the country had been revived under the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative (PFI) and that there would be more of this by March 2018.

    Orji said: “Another way we are addressing the challenges is to increase the number of the blending plants participating in the programme.

    “At the 2017 programme, the only blending plant to participate in the PFI in the North East is in Bauchi, so the work that is being done now with FEPSAN is to include some blending plants in Adamawa and some other parts of the North East.

    “This is where it pains because if you have to pick up products from Bauchi and transport it to parts of Borno, it is a long distance, and this adds to the cost of the products being supplied to some of these farmers.

    “We have heard reports of people having the prices above the threshold but the reality is that when you begin to travel far distances, the only way out is to ensure there are more and more blending plants.

    “FEPSAN is doing a fantastic job with the state governors, so you are going to see more blending plants added to the programme by next year”.

    Orji also pleaded with the state governors, who were yet to key into the PFI to do so in order to ease the challenges facing farmers in their states.

    He noted that the late purchase of the product, which characterised the 2017 work-plan, was unhealthy for the sustenance of the programme.

    NAN

  • Presidency: farmers to get four million bags of fertiliser before Dec

    •Fed Govt saves $150m from local production
    •’Ecological Fund will be timely released’

    The Presidential Fertiliser Initiative (PFI) will deliver four million bags of 50 kilogrammes (kg) Nitrogen, Phosphorous and Potassium (NPK) fertiliser to farmers at an affordable price before the end of the year.

    Senior Special Assistant to the President (Media & Publicity) Mallam Garba Shehu made this known on Hannu Ya Dawa, an audience participation programme on FRCN Kaduna.

    According to a statement by a Deputy Director (Information), State House, Attah Esah, the presidential aide added that 11 fertiliser blending plants will be increased to 18 by the end of the year.

    He said the new plants will in turn provide direct employment to no fewer than 50,000 Nigerians.

    Shehu said the projected delivery of the bags of fertilisers by December is in addition to the six million bags of 50kg fertilisers already sold to farmers since the initiative commenced early this year.

    He said: “The problem of the shortage of fertilisers and its attendant high cost plaguing the nation’s agricultural production, seemingly intractable for decades, have been resolved following the successful execution of the mandate of the PFI.

    “Since the implementation of the initiative, the six million 50kg bags of NPK fertilisers were purchased by state governments and agro-dealers across the country,” he said.

    The presidential spokesman noted that the production of locally-blended fertiliser had saved the Federal Government about $150 million this year, hitherto spent on foreign exchange; and N60 billion in budgetary provisions for fertiliser subsidy.

    He said the successful implementation of the PFI had made fertiliser available to Nigerian farmers at affordable prices and in time for the 2017 wet season farming.

    “Last year, Daily Trust newspaper reported that a bag of 50kg NPK fertiliser was sold at N10,900 in Benue State. Today, the same commodity is being sold at about N6,500 in different locations across the country, while the government-approved price is N5,500.

    Quoting the same newspaper report, Shehu noted that a bag of maize, which was sold at N21,000 last year, is being sold at an average of N10,000.

    “This is an indication that the initiative has enhanced food security as a result of the increase in food production. There is also a reduction in food-induced inflation while economic activities across the agriculture value chain are very impressive,” he said.

    Shehu added that Buhari’s administration will ensure the timely release of the Ecological Fund to states to address pressing ecological challenges in their localities.

    The Senior Special Assistant to the President pledged that the administration would continue to assist flood victims across the country.

    Shehu said: “The Buhari administration will under no circumstance abandon its humanitarian obligations to alleviate the distress of flood victims.

    “In spite of Nigeria’s technological limitations and the paucity of funds to handle or manage large scale and complex emergencies, the APC administration will leave no stone unturned in offering succour to victims of natural disasters across the country,” he said.

    On the Ecological Fund, Shehu said it is the right of citizens to demand the judicious use of the Fund, which is distributed among the three tiers of government from the Federation Account.

    “The largest chunk of the Fund goes to the states and local governments. Every month, States and Local governments receive 1.4 per cent from the Federation account as Ecological Fund, compared to the Federal government’s share of 1 per cent.

    “From the 1 per cent the FG gets, NEMA takes 20 per cent for its operation,” he said.

    The Presidential aide noted that lately, disaster management in the country is gradually being ceded to the Federal Government by other tiers of government.

    Shehu said the Presidential Committee on Flood Relief and Rehabilitation has also been mandated to step up the provision of relief infrastructure to those in need.

  • Hope alive as Edo fertiliser plant roars back to life

    Hope alive as Edo fertiliser plant roars back to life

    The revamp of Edo Fertiliser Plant and Chemical Company Limited in Edo State promises to unlock the state’s  agricultural potential and boost Nigeria’s economy. The revitalisation of the plant, which can produce 60,000 metric tonnes of fertiliser yearly, is expected to cut the importation of fertiliser and save huge foreign exchange. The project will also create 200,000 jobs and fast-track economic diversification. Assistant Editor OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE reports.

    The success of the project is, no doubt, an endorsement of the new and strategic thinking in favour of Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model of building and managing a business.

    Under a PPP arrangement between the Edo State Government and WACOT Limited, an agricultural processing and distribution firm, and the Federal Government, the Edo Fertiliser Plant and Chemical Company Limited, in Auchi, Edo State, roared into life after 14 years of inactivity.

    The fertiliser plant, which has the capacity to produce 60,000 metric tonnes of fertiliser yearly, was envisioned as a tool for unlocking the agricultural potential in Edo  by providing the people with low-cost inputs to grow sustainable agribusinesses and attain food sufficiency. It was also envisaged that the project would diversify the local economy and increase the state’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    The Nation also learnt that at its inception 14 years ago, under the then the government headed by Chief Lucky Igbinedion, Edo people had thought that the ambitious project would ameliorate the sufferings of millions of rural farmers in the state, who desperately needed the input to increase yields on their farmlands and improve their livelihood.

    But it was hope dashed. Much as the idea was laudable and promised huge relief in those days, the facility never produced a single grain of fertiliser. Even after a lavish  inauguration anchored by then President Olusegun Obasanjo, the project failed to live up to its billings.

    However, it took the intervention of the   Governor Godwin Obasekiled administration to change the narrative. The governor, who has never hidden his belief that agriculture holds immense promise in spurring socio-economic development in the state, and the nation at large, was eager to consolidate his job creation drive.

    Specifically, Obaseki promised to create 200,000 jobs, with the revamp of the fertiliser plant. Besides, the plant, he said, will serve not just farmers in Edo State, but also those in neighbouring states, making it a hub for the supply of agricultural inputs.

    He also said the facility would go a long way in providing fertiliser for farmers in neighbouring states, such as Kogi, Delta, Ondo, and Anambra, as it is the only blending plant in the region.

    These must have been why excitement greeted the recent inauguration of the 60, 000 metric tonnes fertiliser plant by Vice President Yemi Osibanjo, in the company of Ministers of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh; and Industry, Trade and Investment, Okechukwu Enelamah. Other dignitaries at the event were the State Deputy Governor, Rt. Hon. Comrade Philip Shaibu and the Otaru of Auchi, His Royal Highness, Alhaji Aliru Momoh.

    In his speech, Osinbajo said: “The President Muhammadu Buhari administration is committed to making it easy for investors to do business in the country. We want to achieve this through the promotion of transparency and efficiency. We want every state to be involved in this drive and create the enabling environment for business to thrive in their domain.”

    He commended Obaseki for creating the enabling business environment for the revitalisation of the fertiliser plant. He added that the revived facility was proof that the Edo State Government was in sync with the Federal Government’s initiative to diversify the economy away from oil to the agricultural sector.

    The Vice President stressed that fertiliser blending plants were being revitalised across the country as a result of the presidential initiative to diversify the economy from crude oil, boost farming activities as well as develop the agriculture value chain.

     

    Obaseki: Its reversal of missed opportunity

    In his inauguration speech, Obaseki said  the project had died pre-maturely because the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration squandered the opportunity for pecuniary gains.

    As he noted, “The facility was never operated for a day after it was fraudulently launched by the opposition party about 14 years ago. What the opposition could not do for nearly a decade, this government, with the support of the Edo people, has done, in only about nine months.”

    The governor said the government has lofty plans for the plant. According to him, the revitalisation of the facility was an effort to make the state self-sufficient in food production, noting that the ceremony was a milestone, as the facility was moribund for a long time, depriving the people of the benefits of having a fertiliser blending facility in the state.

    According to him, “The aim of revitalising this plant is to make the state self-sufficient in food production and enable farmers to get fertilizer at affordable prices. We in Edo State are determined to make food available in the country.”

    Obaseki commended the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative as well as the management of WACOT for partnering the government in revamping the plant. “This achievement is an open call to other investors to bring in new technology, create more jobs and expand our economic opportunities,” he added.

    The Presidential Fertiliser Initiative was designed to halt the importation of blended NPK fertiliser into Nigeria, by directly negotiating discounted contracts for procuring core raw materials, blending same locally and selling NPK fertiliser to farmers at a significantly lower price. For the Edo Fertiliser Plant, NPK fertiliser would be sold for half the market price.

    The governor, however, called on the Otaru of Auchi, the community where the plant is located, to ensure the protection of the facility against vandalism as it would provide several economic opportunities for the community and the state.

     

    Strengthening diversification drive

    The Edo Fertiliser plant is a bold step in the campaign to diversify the state’s earnings, and provide essential inputs for farmers in the state, many of whom have had to go through the drudgery of farming with little or no stimulus for improved yield or income.

    It is expected that inputs sourced from the facility would serve as a stimulus to revitalising the business of smallholders and medium scale farmers in the state.

    Some experts told The Nation that a key highpoint of the revamp was that it justified the argument for PPP. According to them, the private partners in the project, WACOT Limited, has shown that much can be achieved if dedicated public servants mount the saddle of state.

    Instructively, the turn-around of the facility happened nine months after a 14-year gap.

    Acknowledging this, the Group Managing Director of WACOT, Rahul Savara, praised Osinbajo for inaurating the plant and  Obaseki for fostering the partnership between the state and his company.

    He said the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative has made local production feasible and sustainable in the country, adding that the company’s employees would be made up of 95 per cent indigenous workers.

     

    One project, many jobs

    Already, about 500 persons have been engaged on the project, an indication that the ripple effects of the plant on farming communities would spell a turnaround for agriculture in the state.

    Osinbajo, during the inauguration, expressed delight at the 500 direct jobs created by the investment, stressing that much more employment opportunities would result from ancillary economic activities to be generated by the plant.

    The promise of increased agricultural activity and increased yield for farmers in the state and its neighbours would mean not only farmers have inputs at reduced costs, but also that the increased yield from the farms would attract younger people to consider agriculture as a viable form of self-employment.

  • Police nab three for ‘adulterating fertiliser’

    The police in Kano State have arrested three persons, including a woman, in Gwagwarwa, Kano, for allegedly adulterating Golden Penny fertiliser.

    Spokesman Magaji Majiya confirmed the arrest in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Kano at the weekend.

    He said the suspects were apprehended while repackaging the adulterated fertiliser in the bags of Golden Penny fertiliser last Wednesday.

    Majiya said the suspects were nabbed, following a tip-off.

    “The suspects include two men and a woman, but the woman, who was said to be the owner of the fertiliser, was granted bail due to ill health,” he said.

    Majiya said the case had been transferred from Gwagwarwa Police Station to the state Criminal Investigation Department (CID) for further investigation.

    He urged people to cooperate with security agencies by reporting illegal activities in their neighbourhoods to the police.

    “This is the second time in two weeks that fraudsters are arrested by the police through the assistance of the public,” the spokesman said.

    He said the suspects would be prosecuted as soon as investigations were concluded.

  • Adulterated fertiliser, input threaten food security

    Farmers are reporting damage caused by the use of adulterated and  fake fertiliser distributed by some dealers  during the  season’s planting exercise, it was learnt yesterday.

    This is coming on the heels of Federal Government’s inability to force down the prices of fertiliser since January which it pegged at N5, 500 per bag. The government slashed the price of Nitrogen, Phosphorus and Potassium (NPK) fertiliser to N5,000 per bag to encourage farmers to boost agricultural production in the country. Despite this, a 50kg bag of NPK fertiliser is currently being sold at N9,500 in the open market, while Urea is sold at N8,000. NPK fertiliser reached an all-time high of between N9, 000 to N10, 000 last year.

    Reports from Cross River, Kaduna and Anambra states say farmers have recorded failed crops attributed to adulterated fertiliser. The farmers expressed fears that the country may face fertiliser crisis which will directly affect the farming community and indirectly hit the masses. Speaking in Lagos, the Director-General, Feed Nigeria Summit Secretariat, Mr Richard Mark Mbaram expressed concern over the proliferation of adulterated fertilizers and pesticides, saying that the government should immediately investigate the illegal practice in the industry.

    He said that such practices in the fertilizer and pesticide industry puts in peril the government’s food self-sufficiency targets. According to him, because the fertiliser and pesticides that farmers are using are adulterated, the government may not achieve the desired [self-sufficiency] target, not only in corn, but across all agricultural commodities that depend on these products.

    For corn sector alone, he   said that production may drop, while unregulated components mixed with the fertilizers can cause long-term effects to the quality of soil.According to him, fertilizer is vitamins for soil and consists of three main types, nitrogen, potash and phosphate. He urged the government to revive the  Growth Enhancement  Support(GES) to cushion losses caused by use of sub-standard fertiliser. Chairman, All Farmers Association of Nigeria(AFAN),Otunba Femi Oke  called on the government to monitor the industry and ensure that measures are taken  against unscrupulous traders.

    According to him, it was the government‘s mandate, working with  manufacturers   to assure adequate supplies of fertilizer and pesticide at reasonable costs, as well as rationalize fertilizer manufacturing and marketing, and protect consumers from the risks inherent in pesticide use. Recently in Anambra State, the    Ministry of Agriculture, Mechanization, Processing and Export  had  raised alarm over the circulation of uncertified agricultural inputs, mostly fertilisers, allegedly brought into the state by unscrupulous individuals. It listed the fake agricultural inputs to include substandard fertilizers, rice seedlings and insecticides. A statement from the ministry warned farmers, registered cooperative societies and others associated with the agricultural value chain against the purchase and usage of such fake inputs.

     

  • Bayelsa hails Fed Govt for siting new fertiliser, petrochemical plant in Brass

    Bayelsa hails Fed Govt for siting new fertiliser, petrochemical plant in Brass

    The Bayelsa Government has commended the Federal Government for citing a multi-billion dollar private sector-driven fertiliser and petrochemical plant in Brass.

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson spoke when he led the Amanyanabo of Twon Brass, Commodore Alfred Diete-Spiff (rtd), and a team of private investors on a thank you visit to the Acting President Yemi Osinbajo.

    Dickson said: ” We are also here to discuss other issues concerning the take-off of the project.”

    The Brass is a Local Government Area in Bayelsa State, with headquarters in the town of Twon-Brass on Brass Island along the coast. It has a coastline of approximately 90 km on the Bight of Bonny.

    Dickson told state House Correspondents on Tuesday that the project would create enormous jobs and transform the economy of the state and the country at large.

    The governor assured investors of adequate security.

    “We came to discuss issues on the Brass Fertilizer Project billed to take off in Bayelsa. That is a big ticket investment running into billions of dollars.

    “The government team is here, the traditional ruler is here because the project is taking place in his domain.

    “We are here to assure the Federal Government and investors that Bayelsa as they all know is one of the safest states in the Federal Republic of Nigeria. We have worked hard in the last five years I have been governor to bring that about.”

    The governor also commended the Federal Government for its new approach in pursuing integrated development in the country based on partnership and collaboration evidenced by the fertilizer plant.

    Dickson noted that the Acting President’s dialogue on behalf of President Muhammadu Buhari with  Niger Delta stakeholders, saying that a new understanding was emerging for the stability, security and development of the region.

    “It is when we bring big ticket investments, create jobs and we affect the economy and create other legitimate options through which young people can survive that some of the crises that we see here will be addressed.

    “This is a good way to begin to address that and that is why I am here to assure the Federal Government and investors for the steps so far taken.”

    The governor also commended the Federal Government for directing oil producing companies that did not have offices in Bayelsa to open offices in the state.

    He recalled that the story of oil exploration began in Bayelsa but lamented that it was shocking that no oil company had an office in the state.

    Dickson expressed concern that the state had been denied the economic benefits of oil production.

    “There are no jobs, no employment, they don’t even pay much tax, and a number of them don’t even pay tax at all.

    “The Federal Government has said that they should go back. So, we expect to work with the Federal Government and engage with all the oil producing companies to see how they can begin to have respectable presence.”

    Dickson also commended the Federal Government for its decision to establish modular refineries in the Niger Delta region.

    Dickson said it was yielding a lot of revenue for the country as one of the most profitable partnerships the Federal Government had gone into.

    “You have other big ones like the Gbarain/Obie gas plant project in Bayelsa owned by Shell, there are other ones.

    “But this one is a fertiliser petrochemical company, And they will do a lot of skills development and skills transfer, a lot of jobs will be created and there will be a boom in the local economy, state economy and ultimately affect the national economy positively.”

    He said the Bayelsa government would engage the oil companies to ensure that they did their businesses without inhibitions.

  • Nigeria’s, Morocco’s ‘Wonder of Africa’ pacts on gas, fertiliser

    Nigeria’s, Morocco’s ‘Wonder of Africa’ pacts on gas, fertiliser

    Moroccan National Board of Hydrocarbons and Mines Director-General Mrs Amina Benkhadra (right) and Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Director-General Maikanti Kacalla Baru last Monday signed documents of cooperation agreement of the Nigerian-Moroccan gas pipeline project that will connect the two nations as well as some other African countries to Europe at the King Palace in Rabat. ASSOCIATE EDITOR OLUKOREDE YISHAU examines the importance of these deals

    Rabat, the heart of Morocco, was upbeat last Monday. Reason: the palace of King Mohammed VI was hosting a delegation from Nigeria, which was led by Minister of Foreign Affairs Geoffrey Onyeama.

    Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Audu Ogbe, his counterpart in the Ministry of Mines and Steel Development, Dr. Kayode Fayemi, Jigawa State Governor Presidential Committee on Fertiliser Chairman Abubakar Badaru, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Director-General Maikanti Kacalla Baru and Fertiliser Producers and Suppliers Association of Nigeria (FESPAN) President Thomas Etuh were also at the palace to witness history: the signing of two bilateral agreements.

    One of the Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) signed is on the Joint Initiative on the Morocco –Nigeria Gas Regional Pipeline. This deal christened “The Wonder of Africa” will have direct impact on 300 million people.

    The MoU signed by the NNPC and the Office National des Hydrocarbures et des Mines (ONHYM), covers a feasibility study and a Front-End Engineering and Design (FEED) study on a gas pipeline from Nigeria to Morocco and ultimately Europe.

    The MoU shows that both countries have equal stakes in management and financing of the studies, which are expected to be completed in two years.

    The second agreement is on the second phase of the Fertiliser Initiative started after last December official visit of the King of Morocco to President Muhammadu Buhari in Abuja. The first phase has seen the supply of a cargo of phosphate from Morocco to Nigeria. Through this, 11 blending plants have been resuscitated and about 1.3 million tonnes of fertiliser have been produced. 50,000 direct jobs and 150,000 indirect jobs have been created and fertiliser’s price has crashed to N5,500.

    The new fertiliser deal will see to the maximisation of local fertiliser production through the creation of platform for basic chemical products and reinforcement of distribution channels.

    Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita said President Buhari and King Mohammed VI have a shared vision for a sustainable, active and solidarity-based joint development for Africa.

    Onyeama thanked King Mohammed VI for his partnership with Nigeria and his belief in President Buhari.

    The minister said: “During His Royal Majesty’s State visit to Nigeria on December 3, 2016, our two countries entered into commitment to work in mutually beneficial ways to strengthen our bilateral co-operation in various areas, including agriculture, infrastructure and gas development. Who would have imagined that eight weeks after that commitment was signed, phosphates produced here in Morocco was already being blended into fertlisers for agriculture 2000 miles away in Nigeria under the programme known as the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative. The programme has revived several moribund fertiliser blending plants in Nigeria. It has so far created thousands of direct and indirect jobs, ensure that our farmers have access to good quality fertiliser at an affordable price and all these before the planting season. The remarkable success of this programme thus far can only be attributed to the strength of the personal relationship as well as the commitment, vision and leadership shown by both your royal majesty, King Mohammed 6 and Hs Excellency President Buhari.

    “These achievements are also testaments to the commitment of our chief executives and institutions that have worked tirelessly to implement what the two heads of states have directed. Without the focus and the drive of the government of the Kingdom of Morocco, the federal and state governments of Nigeria, OCP, the Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)   and the Fertilisers Producers and Suppliers Associations of Nigeria, this idea could have remained just that, a good idea.”

    Onyeama went on: “This strong bilateral relationship is not limited to the fertiliser industry alone, the vision your royal majesty shared with His Excellency President Buhari to enhance our natural resources for economic growth has crystalised into extensive discussions on the decision taken in Abuja to start the proposed regional gas pipeline to connect Nigeria’s gas resources, those of other West African countries and Morocco. This initiative would also promote regional economic integration as well as accelerate electrification and industrialisation in mining, petrochemical, light manufacturing, agro-processing and fertiliser sectors.”

    Bourita traced the deals to six months ago when King Mohammed VI was on official visit to Abuja.

    “Six months ago, your majesty and your brother, His Excellency Muhammadu Buhari, President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, announced the initiative of the gas pipeline, which connects Morocco to Nigeria and beyond to Europe. Today, a significant step of this initiative is reached, the signing of the cooperation agreement on the technical and financial feasibility study of this very important project,” he said.

    He added: “The Morocco/Nigeria gas pipeline project has a major historical significance that underpins the royal vision of an African continent that is master its own destiny. This project is a convergence of the vision of your majesty and President Buhari for the development of the continent, a vision founded on afro-optimism.”

    On the gas project’s feasibility, he said: “This project is feasible in many ways. First, the project arises from strong will. It is designed by Africans and for Africans aiming for a sustainable development and truthful and solidarity-based south-south co-operation as well as enhance regional co-operation.  Second, the vision has the capability, the high expertise and know how, relevant qualifications, adequate engineering and the right men and women to meet the challenge. The vision also has a number of previous success stories. Nigeria has a strong economy with the highest African GDP and enjoys the confidence of investors. Morocco, under your majesty’s leadership, has implemented world-class challenging projects. The project is also viable because it meets concrete needs relying on the potential of African gas resources on the one hand and the crucial role that energy can play to foster African development on the other hand. West Africa has a significant energy potential with 31 per cent of global reserves of natural gas resources. However, 200 million people don’t have access to electricity in West Africa, nearly two-third of the population. Only 45 per cent of energy needs are met. There are huge disparity in terms of energy among West African countries and for industries energy in West Africa is still very costly.”

    Bourita said the project would help integrate countries which the pipelines would pass through and create jobs and opportunities for their people.

    The Moroccan foreign minister said: “The viability of the project relies also on its integration effect. Gas pipeline will be an opportunity for all the countries that it will pass through, from the gas’s origin to the final destination and even for the midstream countries. ECOWAS producers as well as consumers can plug into the project to supply or be supplied. The project will have a real impact on the population of West African countries by directly benefitting 300 million people. It will enable West African countries to access a more reliable source of energy, which is considered among the cleanest and least expensive for power generation. Several sectors will derive considerable benefits from the pipeline in terms of employment as well as industrial development. The sectors concerned include agriculture, power generation, health, tourism and others. This Atlantic pipeline offers unprecedented opportunity for the region, for the transfer of technology, industrial and energy platforms that will accompany this project will enable the population of the region and more particularly the youths to benefit from its economic impact in terms of employment and investment. The Atlantic pipeline will have also stabilising effect. History has demonstrated that regional integration is synonymous with peace.

    “In the long run, the project will create an economically viable West African space connected to Europe. This project will simply change the face of West Africa. The project is also profitable. All these preliminary elements show the prospects for a profitable project, especially with its positioning as the gateway to Europe.”

    Speaking on the fertiliser pact,  Etuh emphasised the importance of food in development and enumerated the challenges faced in the first phase of the initiative and what are being done to tackle them.

    His words: “It was not an accident that you and your senior brother, President Muhammadu Buhari, decided to start this initiative with fertiliser. Why? Today we are talking about gas pipeline from Nigeria to Morocco to terminate in Europe. Can you do that project on empty stomach? No. And that is why the two brothers, His Majesty the King of Morocco and President Muhammadu Buhari, decided to start with an input so that we can feed ourselves, we can have the energy to think to do this ambitious project that we have started. In Nigeria, we have a potential one 8 million tonnes of fertiliser and we just started with a million tonnes this year and we are going to double it next year. We have a development programme to take this initiative to 6 million tonnes by 2020.

    “When we started there was a lot of logistics challenge which we never envisaged. Today it has been called the Wonder of Africa. The fertiliser is affordable and it is delivered to the farmer. How do we make it more affordable to the farmer? Today we have reached an agreement with OCP on how to solve the logistics problem. Both countries will be investing in the logistics. Storage facilities in those plants were also challenging. We have designed clusters. We are going to create inland logistics storage in the port and in the factory zone. This storage facility is not only for distributing fertiliser and for distributing the raw materials, but  it is also going to be a one-stop shop where the farmer can also bring its produce and sell.  We are guaranteeing the farmers cost plus profit.”

    Instructively, on March 14, when Etuh paid the chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fertiliser Initiative a courtesy visit during the Presidential Fertiliser Initiative tour in Dutse, Abubakar said both deals were independent of each other.

    He said: “The Sahara gas pipeline is a project we are planning to transport gas from here down to Morocco, then passing through so many countries and opening up use of gas in those countries across sub-Sahara. The supply of phosphate for fertiliser blending is a different agreement and the trans-Sahara pipeline is another project. We will do whatever agreement expected of us according to the Nigerian law? and the government of Morocco will do theirs. The countries that our pipelines will pass across, we will also use our gas and agree with us according to their rule.”

    The initiatives are no doubt laudable. But, being long term deals, it is hoped that the enthusiasm, with which the drivers have started, will be sustained till the end.