Tag: GOVT

  • Fed Govt sanctions publishers for failing to deliver books

    Fed Govt sanctions publishers for failing to deliver books

    •Forms forum to boost girl-child education 

    The Federal Government has sanctioned publishers for failing to supply books to pupils for the 2012/2013 session.

    Minister of State for Education Ezenwo Nyesom Wike broke the news in Abuja yesterday at a meeting with the publishers.

    He said the publishing companies affected by the sanction are Evans Brothers, Universal Press Plc, Spectrum, Lantern, Macmillan, Learn Africa, and Africana First Publisher Plc.

    The publishers’ plea for clemency was rejected by the minsiter.

    A statement by the minister’s Special Assistant (Media), Simeon Nwakaudu, said the publisher failed to meet the six weeks time allotted in the contractual agreement between them and the Federal Government.

    He added that contractors did not believe that the Federal Government could impose any sanction on them; this would also serve as a lesson to others.

    Wike said letters had been written to revoke their contract “with a minimum clause”.

    “We have not cancelled their contracts, they would still supply the books to the schools. If you do not deliver on time, then that clause that says if you did not deliver on time, we will apply it. Because we have already written to Mr President to flag-off the distribution of the books on the November 30.

    “So if they cannot deliver the books, then we are handicapped. But let it be known that it is not on the part of government that these promises are not fulfilled,” he said.

    The minister said the sanction became necessary because the Federal Executive Council approved the contract on the premise that the contractors claimed to have the capacity to deliver within the specified time.

    The minister said: “The Federal Executive Council emphasised in its meeting that, if we cannot deliver these books to Nigerians at the appropriate time, then there is no need in awarding the contracts.

    “They all signed that they are going to deliver the books within six weeks, it is more than eight weeks and the books have not be delivered.

    “Why should the government suffer for the inability of these contractors?

    `If we have made promises to Nigerians, then it is within our responsibility to make sure that they can see it.”

    He said the action of the publishers has impacted negatively on the programme of the Federal Government to flag off the books distribution on Friday, November 30.

    He said: “We had to invoke the relevant clauses to apply sanctions on the publishers because the Federal Government and the ordinary Nigerians who are beneficiaries cannot be taken for granted.

    “Our reason for patronising indigenous publishers is to encourage employment. ”

    The minister said in future erring publishers would be blacklisted.

    Wike also met with contractors handling the construction of girl-child schools, almajiri special education projects and libraries for Unity Colleges.

    He commended the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) for stepping up monitoring of projects.

    In order to boost girl-child enrolment across the Ministry of Education and her development partners has commenced the constitution of Mothers’ Associations in school communities.

    Members of the Mothers Associations will comprise teachers (female), women leaders, female school based management committee members, religious female leaders, women groups, school head girls, female artisans, female professionals and interested volunteers.

    Declaring open the pre-meeting for the inauguration of Mothers Associations at Senatorial District Level in Mararaba, Nasarawa State at the weekend, Wike would act as agents of mobilisation and sensitisation to improve the enrolment of the girl-child in the country.

    Wike, who was represented at the meeting by the Director of Basic and Secondary Education of the Federal Ministry of Education, Chika Uwaezuoke, said the Millennium Development Goals Mothers’ Association Capacity Workshop for the seven states of the Northwestern Geo-political zone will open on Tuesday, November 27 in Sokoto. The Northeast and Northcentral versions of the training will hold in Lafia between December 3 and 6. The same workshop will hold in Ibadan between December 10 and 13.

     

  • ‘Govt, private sector need to do more for orphans’

    ‘Govt, private sector need to do more for orphans’

    The founder of the Children of Promises Ministries (CHIPROM), Ibadan, Oyo State, Mr. Dayo Idowu, has urged the federal, state and local governments to do more for orphanages and transition homes.

    Idowu, whose transition home was founded in 2005 to help orphans and vulnerable children in need, spoke with Newsextra in Chicago, United States.

    The Canada-based Nigerian said: “I believe the government can help the homes, whether orphanage or transition homes. We get assistance from volunteers who come from overseas to assist at the home. We give the children the best. They go to private schools and have a driver who takes them to and fro school. We were recently exempted from a grant because they said our children attend private schools. But my argument is this, if you take these kids out of the streets and you take them to public schools, where you are not sure of what they are teaching them, then you have not helped them. Some people say we are spoiling them. I have no apologies. The private sector also needs to do more. If all hands are on deck, it will be for the betterment of our society.”

    On why he started the home, he said: “It is a call. I always say this, bringing your hard-earned money to Nigeria and do this kind of work can never be for anything other than a call. It is a call and I fought it for a while. But a call is a call and we stood up to it. There is no leading really; it is just a call. I do come home once in a year and seeing kids on the streets, not going to school brought out passion in me too. So, everything sort of meshed up well for us to jumpstart caring for these children.”It is a transition home. It is not an orphanage and the difference is this: an orphanage is where children stay till they are like 18 years, but a transition home is you rescue them at the point of their need and when there is no hope and later you start looking for someone to adopt them or someone to foster them. This is the difference between and orphanage and a transition home. We do have capacity for a maximum of 25 children and we are at our maximum now.

    “Apart from money from my income, we also have a farm which we set up and the proceeds from the farm go into the home. We are working towards the home being able to sustain itself and at our board meeting in Canada yesterday, we agreed on this so that we can move to other places, such as Cameroun.”

    He described CHIPROM as a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) not only to change lives of the disadvantaged and less privileged children but also to be a positive influence in the lives of these children and in the community.

    “We raise and care for a child with the purpose of bringing them to the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. We have committed ourselves to the goal of instilling hope for a better future for the children in our communities across the nation. As a children service provider we take seriously our responsibility to ensure a stimulating and nurturing environment for these children. We want to positively revolutionalise the way people think about the plight of children in the 21st century.

    “There is no support from the government really, except occasional donation of foodstuffs and all that. We also get support from churches, companies, such as De-United Foods, makers of Indomie noodles and others,” he said.

  • Govt may adjust PIB to favour oil firms

    Govt may adjust PIB to favour oil firms

    Government is proposing watering down the changes to the operations of International Oil Companies (IOCs) operating offshore in the Petroleum Industries Bill (PIB).

    The PIB, touted as a panacea to the problems in oil sector development, is undergoing legislative work at the National Assembly.

    Petroleum Minister Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke hinted of the proposed changes in an interview with the Financial Times of London.

    News of the planned review of the fiscal regime for the OICs came as Total said it has sold a 20 per cent stake in a Nigerian offshore oil field to China’s Sinopec in a $2.5 billion (N387.5billion) deal, which will help the French oil group fund its ambitious exploration plans.

    But the new terms for the IOCs according to the FT, are part of a long-delayed PIB.

    Mrs Allison-Madueke said the new fiscal terms were “equitable”, and would only increase the government’s total take by 7- 8 per cent. But she added that there was “room for compromise” on a planned hike in royalties for production sharing contracts offshore, and that talks with multinational companies, such as Shell, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Total and Eni were continuing.

    “They still feel we are too far apart,” said Mrs Allison-Madueke, adding “We would like to feel that at the end of the day we have some fairly median point.

    “Uncertainty over the bill has caused stagnation in the oil industry, with little spending on exploration in recent years. Production is stuck at around 2.4million barrels a day, barely half what was targeted a decade ago.

    If passed, the legislation will see the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) stripped of regulatory powers and split into three companies, including a listed oil company run along commercial lines. The downstream oil sector, will be deregulated and liberalised.

    International oil companies have profited in the past from opaque rules and lax controls, and in many cases have failed to adhere to international standards on environment protection.

    Mrs Allison-Madueke said the proposed changes were still less onerous than in countries such as Angola and Indonesia.

    “We have a lot more competition in the sub-Saharan region than we had before, when we were pretty much the sole explorer and producing nation. For that fact alone, and also to keep the discourse going, we are still in discussion [with the oil companies].”

    Total according to Reuters, said yesterday it had signed a deal to sell the stake in the OML 138 block, which produces 130,000 barrels per day of oil equivalent and contains the Usan field, which started production in February.

    Sinopec, Asia’s largest refiner, has also snapped up energy assets in Britain and the United States recently to boost foreign earnings, as a slowdown in China hit profits.

    Other shareholders in the OML 138 oil block, located 100 kilometers off the coast of Nigeria, are Exxon and Chevron, with 30 per cent each, as well as Nexen, which owns 20 per cent.

    Total’s shares were up 2.5 per cent by 1500 GMT, outperforming a 2.1 per cent rise in the European oil and gas sector.

     

  • Govt to grant tax relief to manufacturers

    The Federal Government is considering granting tax relief to manufacturers, who are generating their own power for production and other uses.

    President of Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) Chief Kola Jamodu stated this after a meeting of the Economic Management Team (EMT) presided over by President Goodluck Jonathan at the State House.

    Jamodu, who addressed State House correspondents after the meeting, which lasted for about eight hours, said the decision was sequel to a presentation made by MAN to the Team.

    He said his Association acknowledged the improvement in power supply but underscored the need to encourage manufacturers “who have invested so much in power generation’’.

    “Truly, the power situation is improving and manufacturers are benefiting from it.

    “As for our members, who are still producing their own power, the Federal Government has agreed to give them tax relief to cushion the effects of the power situation, which is not perfect yet,” he said.

    Jamodu hailed Federal Government’s decision to engage his association in the effort to revive the country’s industries.

    He said the 15-page document submitted by MAN to government would go a long way in solving the problems industrialists were facing in the country.

    “A good number of our recommendations are being executed by the government and we are impressed with this. It gives us a lot of hope that the future is bright,” he said.

    The Minister of Trade and Investment, Dr Olusegun Aganga, said the meeting was about productivity, its barriers, what government needs to do and areas in which government is doing extremely well.”

    “It is an opportunity for us to hear from the industrialists what the issues are and for them to also understand what government is doing to address those issues,”

    Gov. Peter Obi of Anambra underscored the need for Nigerians to patronise Made-in-Nigeria products.

     

  • Ribadu task force report: ACN says Fed Govt acted in bad faith

    The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) has accused the Federal Government of acting in bad faith in the way and manner it has treated the report of the Petroleum Revenue Task Force.

    In a statement issued in Benin yesterday by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party also said the patently tactless action of a presidential aide, Dr. Doyin Okupe, in rubbishing the report and, by extension the members of the task force, will make credible Nigerians to be wary of serving in similar panels in future.

    “The fact that the Federal Government has not come out to refute Dr. Okupe’s crude comments on the report is an indication that the position he enunciated publicly on the report represents that of the government. The task force did not complete its assignment and accusing its chairman of disinformation and politicisation amounts to preparing the ground for the dumping of the report,” ACN said.

    The party said the treatment meted out to the task force by a self-acclaimed ‘’attack lion’’ of the presidency is the worst blow any government has dealt its own panel, “and confirms ACN’s earlier statement that the Federal Government deliberately set a booby trap for the task force by the suspicious timing of the appointments it gave to two of its members, Steven Oronsaye and Bernard Otti, in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).”

    It went on: “Unfortunately, despite its angry reaction to our earlier statement, the government is yet to convince us otherwise. If anything at all, it has gone ahead to make our statement look prescient.

    “We are not even talking of the merits or demerits of the task force’s report, but of the way the chairman and members of the task force (minus the two dissenting ones) have been savaged. This is a task force that has as members several Senior Advocates of Nigeria and a former chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, among others.

    “Even if the government feels the report is inconclusive, could it not have set up a panel to review the findings? Is it not also the prerogative of the government to even leave the report to gather dust, if it does not agree with the findings, instead of publicly ridiculing its own task force?

    “The unprecedented outpouring of public opprobrium on the task force by the same government that set it up makes a mockery of governance, and does no credit to the Jonathan administration, which is always quick to accuse the opposition of insulting its principal. A government earns respect by its actions. It is futile demanding it (respect).”

  • Boko Haram: Federal Govt has abandoned us —Borno State Govt

    Boko Haram: Federal Govt has abandoned us —Borno State Govt

    The Borno State government has accused the federal government of abandoning it in the face of the security challenges it is facing as a result of the activities of Boko Haram in the state.

    The Commissioner for Information, Mr Inuwa Bwala who disclosed this to The Nation in an interview in Abuja at the weekend said no federal political office holder had visited the state to either assess the situation or empathise with the state government and its people.

    According to him, “There has been no visit from the federal side to Borno State. The President and his Vice have refused to come, share in our plight, if at all. They have not given us moral boost or if at all to show that they care and that we are part and parcel of Nigeria. We had been left on our own. For some time, nobody has shown that they really care, nobody has visited to show solidarity with us.”

    Bwala, who disclosed that the highest federal government team to the states were made up of the National Security Adviser (NSA) and the Chief of Defence Staff, lamented that the federal government is not treating the state as part of the federation.

    “I am not just saying it. That is the fact. We have been left on our own. We have been left to our plight as if we are not part of Nigeria. That has been our grouse against the federal government,” he said.

    The Information Commissioner disclosed that members of the ruling party in the state have been the victims of attacks since the security challenges started. “I have said it time and time again that criminals and political assassins have penetrated Boko Haram. They started with their grievances but somehow along the line, they have been hijacked by opportunists. That is why the greatest number of people that have been killed today are from the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP). If not, I don’t see how people from the other political parties are roaming the streets but we in ANPP are being compelled to take cover.”

    Bwala said contrary to the impression being created that Borno State is not working, the state, he said, is moving on. “The markets are open, banks are open, work is going on, normal activities are going on, flights come into Maiduguri and leave fully booked everyday. It is just that some of the people spreading things about Borno do not know what is happening there. They don’t live there. They only peddle what they imagine is happening. Life is going on in Maiduguri. Government is working, people go to work. The situation in Maiduguri is not different from the situation in any other place where this crisis had happened and we are on top of it,” he said.

    To buttress his claim that the state is working, Bwala said, “You may have heard of the agriculture revolution which we started. We have vast underground water, we have vast arable land, we have a willing population. Because of this, the government said that agriculture, which is the mainstay of our economy, shall be the fulcrum of our agenda. That is why we are importing farm implements. As it is, we have imported over one thousand tractors which we have distributed across the state. We have brought in seedlings. Over 50 million varieties of crops. We are exploring the possibilities of modern poultry, modern cattle rearing, and other agricultural activities. Fish farming has been the tradition of our people along the Lake Chad shores, it is still going on. Government has mapped out strategies of encouraging them by giving out loans and buying what they have as surpluses to sell to Nigerians.”

    He advised both indigenes and settlers in the state that fled as a result of security challenges, to return as government is on top of the security situation.

    The Information commissioner disclosed that the leaders of thought, opinion leaders and Borno State government are working round the clock to engage the boys and shift their minds from crimes and criminal activities.

    Bwala said beyond the issue of religion, it has been discovered that some political elements are using Boko Haram to settle personal scores.

  • Boko Haram: Why govt should listen to Amnesty

    Boko Haram: Why govt should listen to Amnesty

    Last week, I promised the reader I will devote today’s column entirely to some of the reactions provoked by my piece of the week before on the controversial “personal” history of Biafra by Chinua Achebe which he titled There was a country.

    However, man, it is said, merely proposes but it’s only God who disposes. God, apparently, disposed through two terrible events of last two weeks that my promise would have to keep for another week. The first was the gruesome suicide bombing of St Rita’s Catholic Church, Unguwan Yero, Kaduna, on October 28 in which at least 30 worshippers lost their lives and hundreds more lost their limbs or were maimed.

    It was indeed a miracle that the casualties were not higher considering the number of worshippers who assembled that day and the suicide bomber’s (assuming he was alone in the vehicle) apparent desperation in ramming his way into the church yard through the perimeter fence that terrible Sunday morning.

    It was my typical Sunday morning; rising late and taking eternity to have my bath. I was sitting on the toilet seat a little after 9 am when I heard a huge rumbling sound like I’ve never heard before. At the same time, I felt the house shake as if the roof and the wall were going to cave in.

    Madam, who was in the bedroom, shouted “Baba, what is it?” Of course, I didn’t know what it was but somehow I restrained myself from rushing out, especially since the kaboom was not followed by any physical destruction. However, while still in the toilet I kept thinking what could have caused such a huge sound. In quick succession I dismissed the possibility of the rock breakers across the road from my house using dynamite and the other possibility that the transformer serving our neighbourhood had blown up.

    In the end, I concluded it must have been a bomb, even as I prayed to God fervently that it shouldn’t. My prayers were answered in the negative when shortly after my bath one of my kids came to tell us that the online media had been reporting that it was the suicide bombing of a church at Unguwan Yero.

    My heart sank just imagining what the casualty would be like; if my house which must be at least two kilometres away from the church as the crow flies, could be shaken to its foundation by the bomb I shuddered to think what could have been the fate of those in and around it.

    Terrible as the number of those killed and injured was, it was, indeed, a miracle that the mayhem was not far worse by the time the rubbles had settled.

    Predictably, the story grabbed the headlines of the media the following day. Equally predictably, virtually all fingers pointed at the usual suspect: Boko Haram.

    This time, however, the security forces acted with unusual dispatch to avert any retaliatory attacks. But even more importantly, in my view at least, the Christian leadership in Kaduna, especially those of the Catholic fold – that of the affected church even more so – acted with greatest restrain in calling on their, no doubt, angry flock not to seek revenge.

    As far as I know, Boko Haram has not claimed responsibility for the attack but it has remained the principal suspect.

    All this was Sunday October 28.

    Then last Friday came another shocker. I was about rounding up my lecture to my post graduate diploma students at the Samaru campus of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, when a call came through from a former very senior government official and a senior friend. During class I normally leave my phone on silent and pick up a call only when I think it might be important. This was one such call. So I excused myself and answered my phone.

    I had not spoken to the gentleman since dropping a document for him a few days before. So I thought he was calling to confirm receipt. He did confirm receipt but his next words shocked me to the marrow.

    “Sorry about Shuwa,” he said. “What has happened to him?”, I asked nonplussed. Didn’t I hear he had been killed that morning?, he asked.

    That ended my class that evening. Apparently, my students too had not heard. They were all shocked when I told them the news, half of which they must’ve guessed from the way my voice and countenance changed. Their shock was not surprising because more than half the class were old enough to have heard some of the probably apocryphal exploits of the (79 year old) general during our civil war of 1967 to 1970. To think that such a person who had survived a war and served his country well would be killed like a chicken by assassins who were probably young enough to be his grandchildren right in front of his house!

    If their shock at the manner of the man’s death did not surprise me, the way they all chorused that “dis one pass Boko Haram,” surprised, even shocked me, the more so because there were more Christians in the class than Muslims.

    My students are certainly not a representative sample of this country’s population. But it sounds sensible to me that if only one Christian would begin to wonder if there is not more to the bombings of churches and the killings of Christians – never mind the bombings of public buildings and the killing of security agents, serving or retired – than Boko Haram insurrections, one can be forgiven the thought that the official mantra about Boko Haram being behind each and every one of these bombings and killings needs a fundamental re-thinking.

    No doubt Boko Haram is real. And its methods are despicable and certainly counter-productive to its objective, to which it is entitled, of Islamising Nigeria. As it knows all too well the Qur’an makes it very clear that there is no force in religion.

    However, it has been said again and again that Boko Haram has since become a franchise used by criminals, and for all we know, rogue elements in government and the security services for their own ends. This is one good reason why government must rethink its scorched earth strategy to bring an end to the insecurity that has pervaded this country.

    The scorched earth policy has not worked and it will not work because it can only worsen the very vicious circle of violence which the extrajudicial killing of the Boko Haram leadership back in 2009 unleashed on the hapless citizens of our dear country.

    If only because government has control over the official instruments of violence, it has the greater responsibility for ending this vicious circle. It can start by listening to what Amnesty International said last week about how the public, especially in the theatre of the Boko Haram insurrection, has come to fear and loath our security forces more than the Boko Haram insurgents.

    Unless we have a strategy of more carrots and fewer sticks employed by government, the country could, God forbid, slide into an anarchy of bombings and counter-bombings and high profile killings along religious lines.

     

  • Court warns Fed Govt against Ndume’s trial

    Court warns Fed Govt against Ndume’s trial

    An Abuja Federal High Court, yesterday refused the admission of two prosecution witnesses brought by the State Security Service (SSS) to testify against Senator Ali Ndume.

    Ndume is accused of hoarding information on planned terror attacks and providing logistics to the convicted spokesman of the Boko Haram sect, Ali Sanda Umar Konduga (alias Usman AI- Zawahiri).

    He is also charged for allegedly giving telephone numbers of certain public officers to Boko Haram for the purpose of communicating terrorist messages.

    The alleged offences are contrary to and punishable under Sections 3(b), 4(1) (a) and 7(1) (b) of the Terrorism Prevention Act, 2011.

    At the resumed trial yesterday, Justice Gabriel Kolawole, refused to allow Aliyu Usman, an SSS operative following objection by Ndume’s counsel, Rickey Tarfa (SAN).

    The judge warned the Prosecution counsel, Thompson Olatigbe, against presenting unlisted witnesses, saying it was against the rules of the court.

    The judge, who said he does not want to give Ndume a technical victory, however decried the failure and inability of the Federal Government to prosecute the matter.

    He said: “From the beginning of this case, the court has being prompting the prosecutor. A criminal case requires diligent prosecution.

    “Justice is not only meant for the accuser, both the accused and the public require justice.”

     

  • Govt accused of stalling insurance penetration

    WORRIED by the inability of the government to honour its insurance laws, practitioners have called on the federal, state and local governments to insure their assets. This, they said, will go a long way in helping the sectors’ leadership to deepen the practice of insurance in the country.

    Captains of the industry, who spoke with The Nation, said there is need for the government at all levels to support the industry. They said though the Federal Government has shown some positive interests in the insurance business, appropriate premiums should be made available to pay for government’s covers.

    The President of the Nigerian Council of Registered Insurance Brokers (NCRIB), Mrs Laide Osijo, said the government should not undervalue its assets as has been the practice, adding that there is need for the government to further protect the industry by living up to its responsibility, as the largest insurance client.

    He said the undervaluation of government’s assets is capable of slowing the pace of development of insurance industry.

    Mrs. Osijo said situations where insurance assets are not properly evaluated, leading to inappropriate rates and premium, it could result in the diminution of the growth and depth of insurance penetration in the country.

    She said the government should make it a priority to attract foreign investment into the country in to grow insurance capacity, among other things, and ensure that violation of insurance laws are met with appropriate sanctions.

    Also, the President, Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria (CIIN), Dr Wole Adetimehin, called on governments to support the insurance industry by procuring policies to cover their risks.

    He noted that such patronage would help to promote service delivery and enhance international best practices.

    He said there are compelling reasons why the citizenry and governments should take insurance more seriously, adding that Nigerians are under threats from risks emanating from natural disasters, such as floods, rainstorms and security, which have taken their tolls on the citizenry.

    He argued that low insurance contributions to the economy stemmed from lack of necessary infrastructure, which prevent people from buying insurance.

    “With unemployment at an estimated 23.9 per cent in 2012, the insurance business in Nigeria is hardly able to improve on its contribution to the nation’s GDP above one per cent, unlike in South Africa where it is 15 per cent,” he said, adding that the reason for this is because people are apparently laden with costs which are channelled at the procurement of otherwise basic and fundamental needs, such as electricity, water and security.’’

    The President of the Risk Surveyors Association of Nigeria (RISAN), Jacob Adeosun, said if the government has taken the insurance its assets seriously, when crisis arise like the floods that have have ravaged most coastal communities, the insurance industry would have come to their rescue.

    He criticised the situation where the government takes money budgeted for other things to solve or replace state properties when they are damaged, saying the insurance industry would have done that had the government insured the assets and paid premium, accordingly.

  • ‘Fed Govt must come out with  sustainable energy blueprint’

    ‘Fed Govt must come out with sustainable energy blueprint’

    Power to run the engine of the national economy has been in deficit over the years due to neglect of the sector by successive administrations. Mr Hyacinth Udemba, an engineer and chief executive officer, Prostar Global Energy, a firm that specialises in renewable energy, says the Federal Government must come out with a blueprint that will spell out yearly addition of megawatts to the national grid. In this interview with LUCAS AJANAKU, he speaks on the constraints facing telecoms companies, the need for governments and banks to fund alternative power provision and other sundry issues. Excerpts:

     

    How would you assess the performance of the economy, especially when the Federal Government says the economy is growing and such growth is not creating jobs?

    Job creation may not be the only index for scoring a performing economy. I can rate the performance with reference to where the economy was before leadership changed hands from Umaru Musa Ya Adua to Goodluck Jonathan.

    At the moment, we seem to look at our currency exchange rate in relation to other major currencies. So far, it has been fairly stable. The exchange rate might be comparatively high, but that is a function of the level of our exports and narrow band economic activities in terms of variety of local manufacturing and export commodities. It may remain high as long as we have a mono export commodity which is oil. Job creation becomes a possibility when the enabling frameworks are put in place. The main factor to achieving the feat remains the availability of electricity. Aside this, we can actually give ourselves a pass mark if we look around and see the level of infrastructural changes. I guess our thinking of poor performance is in relation of manpower and resources available to us compared with some other nations. In a way, Nigeria is really a peculiar nation and more complex than we sometimes assume. I believe we are making progress.

    How can the economy be made to work?

    Believing in one nation is the key. The economy can be made to work as expected if we all do what we are supposed to do and the government is sincere with programmes and policies. We all should learn to sound less about political party or tribal affiliations. All manners of corruption are tied to the fact that we do not love the country, hence, tribal or party affairs take precedent in our hearts.

    At what level of megawatts of electricity would Nigeria be at peace?

    I will base my answer on the fact that we are clamouring for industrialisation as the needed antidote for quick growth. If this must come through, then we must make provision for its sustainability through availability of electricity. I will like to look at a situation where companies are hooking on to the national grid as power is gradually being made available. To this extent, considering the size of the country, Nigeria would need about 50,000Mw in the next 25 years. Of the 50,000Mw, 10,000Mw will be a reserve while 40,000Mw remains the daily output to the grid.

    In seeking alternative electricity supply to the national grid, at what point should government come in?

    The government has no reason not to advance technologically in the power sector like other developing countries which include Kenya, South Aftrica, India, Malaysia and Indonasia. The story is different these days as the cost of renewable energy materials and accessories are nose diving. Nigeria can actually pick up with other countries when the right policy is in place with incentives. What stops Nigeria from producing solar panels or wind turbine parts? One of the government agencies, the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure or NASENI, under the Ministry of Science and Technology, tried to lead the way in producing solar panels locally. What is the fate of the age ncy today? If the policy for the use of solar energy in Nigeria is promises incentives, foreigners will troop in to manufacture, solving the problem in the sector and creating jobs. The enabling environment for foreign manufacturers may include but not limited to loan facilities (access to credit), land acquisition, provision of security, and for the users of solar power, a grant of carbon credit.

    How is this going to happen?

    One of the ways to get the country running for the renewable energy sector is to put a policy in place. For instance, the government sets aside $900 million as laon for people going into battery and inverter production, solar panel assembly and also make a policy that every new estate built must incorporate renewable energy, or that every bank, estate must use solar energy for their perimeter lighting. Such a policy will spur people to purchase these materials massively. Those who want to come into the industry will have confidence that there is a policy in place. Before an installation of a 10Mw production capacity of solar panels, the manufacturers must have extrapolated the sale of at least 1Mw of solar panels per annum. This will assure the manufacturers that installation of a 10 MW photovoltaic plant will lead to recouping investment in about five years time. Without such policy, it will be difficult to get investors to the sector. No sane entrepreneur will go to the bank and obtain loan without assurance that there is a policy in place that will guarantee the market for the product. For instance, anybody can now come and invest in the oil and gas sector because the market is there. If an investor wishes to refine petroleum in the country, he can refine and sell. If he’s able to refine at competitive price, he will sell because the market is there for him.

    How?

    When Germany began her own 100,000 roofs on solar programme in 2004, banks were involved because people had to take loans secured by the government and insured by insurance companies. During summer, they sell the power to the government, during winter, they buy from the government, thus, they gradually offset their loan and at a constant interest rate which was cheap enough to attract investors. The government also put incentives in place to compensate them for saving the environment from global warming, hence, the carbon credit. So, there must be some incentives to attract investors. Until the right things are done, at the right time, we may not really get anywhere.

    You are calling for an all-encompassing power sector policy?

    Yes, a policy not only on the conventional means of generating power but that which will encapsulate renewable energy and spur people to invest in the sector. That is the way it is in Germany, Japan and even South Africa. These countries have policies in place that allow people to invest. The advantage of this is that you will be creating employment opportunities. One of the ways President Obama of the US is creating job is through the support he is giving to alternative energy, wind energy precisely. By the time you set up about four to five factories in the US, that will employ tens of thousands of people. The same thing can happen here. Let us begin with the battery and inverter production. Solar panel may not be a big employer of labour but it is part of it.

    Imagine the volume and value of contract jobs that are given out each year. Before the end of the year, the government would have given out about N20 billion worth of contracts on renewable energy. I am aware of the amount the Ministry of Environment, Health, Transport, Energy Commission, some state governments and the rest of them may be spending in the sector without really being serious about the correct function of the installed systems. Can’t we make a policy that this N20 billion that we are going to spend, part of it be directed to local production of some of the components? Why do we have to continue to import and install? The government should make a policy that will be private-sector-driven in power generation through both conventional and renewable sources.

    It might take several years to get the stable power the government is promising. Anything shorter than 30 to 40 years power plan will bring about power plants that will stop functioning after the exit of President Jonathan.

    Thirty and forty years plan?

    Yes, Nigeria at the moment is talking about six-10MW power generation if all the plans go well. How do we compare Nigeria with South Africa that currently generates about 47Mw? We may claim to be having fairly constant power supply now and not yet stable power supply. It is only when you have stable power supply that companies like the Nigerian Breweries and the likes will once more hook on to the national grid. Until then, what we have today may best be for domestic use. By the time the redundant loads gets in, we might be back to where were. Nigerians should not be fooled by the slogan of government that they will get stable power supply between now and next two years. It is not possible. It is just not possible.

    Nigerians should not expect stable power supply?

    Yes, we cannot afford it now. I may be seen as being pessimistic in this regard, it is the truth. Remember what happened under the late Bola Ige when he was appointed power minister. He openly told Nigerians that there will be stable power in Nigeria within six months. It’s the same advisers in the ministry that gave him the wrong signal. The late President Umaru Yar’ Adua came to power with his seven-point agenda, he made same promise of power stability. Once again, those who think that they are helping Jonathan achieve his transformation agenda are beginning to hurry the winners of power generation stations to get going in haste. Setting up and running a power generation station efficiently is not a tea party.

    You said Nigeria cannot afford stable power. What do you mean?

    We cannot afford it because there is no policy in place to drive that. The operators in the power sector keep telling Nigerians about 6000Mw generation. This is barely enough for domestic energy needs. They are not talking about suppressed demand, those that were switched off because they know the power is not there. When you bring the firms that should be running on the national grid together, you will discover that 6000MW is a dip compared to the demand that will surge. Nigeria does not generate what the New York Fire Department in the USA need for its operation. Imagine the sheer size and industrial level of the country compared with South Africa which has 47000 MW.

    Each time they mention 6000MW as the target, I feel ashamed because with those ridiculous megawatts, we are simply going nowhere. So, we just have to think of how many megawatts to add to the national grid yearly. Let the government have a policy that yearly about 1000MW will be added to the national grid. This should be followed to a logical conclusion.

    President Jonathan can do it. Add just 1,000Mw to the grid, you will see an improvement. Before the end of his tenure he would have achieved enough. Given that many power stations are under construction at the moment, it is an indication that such may be achieved, at least, to 70 per cent. India is doing just that. India is adding a minimum of 3,500MW yearly. Even if you have enough, you keep the excess as reserve in case there is failure. Despite the volume of power generation in India, the country still experienced failures that nearly crippled its economy a few months ago. This is one of the reasons the government should aim higher and become more focused and target-oriented in this sector.

    So, before this country can have stable power supply, it will be between the next 30 to 40 years. We can only prove that wrong if we begin to do something positive from today.

    And what do we do?

    Aside the policy that will add about 1000MW or whatever we think is within reach into the system, government must ensure that every measure that will make it run steadily is in place. We must also ensure that existing ones run at, at least, 75 per cent of installed capacities. If we are able to do so, then would have charted the path to end the nightmare. We must also make sure that 0.5 per cent of our energy needs is put off the national grid and switched into renewable energy every year. If we now quantify the power needs of the domestic sector, we will know the deficit. In India, today, many British and other foreign companies are setting up business because the country has steady policies. Its textile industry is working fine. Almost all the textile mills in the UK have their base in India.

    If telecoms operators run Base Transmission Stattions (BTS) on solar, would there be any respite to their challenges?

    To provide renewable energy to the cell sites, because of the capacity of the BTS, the solar panels required will occupy about 90 square metres which is not tenable given the problem of securing land. Anywhere they install BTS, they don’t have enough land and they pay heavily for the small plot.To be able to accommodate about 12,000 watts of power required by each BTS, solar panel of not less than 10,000 watts is required and it will occupy a surface area of not less than 50-60 square metres. You have to supply security for the solar panel too because they will be stolen. If Nigerians steal bridge rails, the rods, irons, pipes used to protect us from falling into the lagoon on Eko Bridge, and also steal our own street lights, how are you sure that the solar panels will not be stolen? So, another thing is the security implication. That is why they find it difficult to deploy renewable energy to power their BTS. The late General Abacha commissioned the use of solar cells to power the railway communication link systems, but within six months of installation, they were all vandalsied. Abacha was resuscitating rail transportation then and you cannot use the rail without communication links as they move from one station to the other. Now, to make sure that communication is enhanced, solar was used but they were vandalised.

    With the migration to cash-less economy which means that ATMs and other electronic channels of payment would require energy constantly, why are banks not exploring the solar power option?

    Every bank needs a large quantity of energy to run its operation and solar system may not be an option now because of the cost implication compared with the power demand. But ATMs can depend on solar or inverter backup depending on location or the branch of the bank. Deploying solar for full bank operations will require a large space for the panels. But what we are saying is that if banks have policies in place to support renewable energy as we have in other countries, it will be okay. But banks are not looking in that direction perhaps, they are not aware of the roles they can play in the sector.

     

    Operators are therefore left to do the little they can. So, at the moment, we are not encouraged in the sense that the incentives from government through the banks is not there. And also, any time the government wants to give major jobs out, they don’t give them to indigenous experts. It is either they are given to foreign installers, or companies or they are done the same way they do other projects in the country. I want to believe that all that is now changing by virtue of the new Procurement Act, I think they are beginning to give jobs to those who have the competence to do the jobs. But as government is beginning to pick interest in the sector, if things are done properly, I want to believe that in the next five years, we shall be somewhere in the area of energy in the country. It is only then that the rolls of the banking industry in the sector may be established.

     

    But Lagos State is using solar to light the streets and they are not subjected to vandalism. Why?

    In the area of using solar power to improve street lights, Lagos State is a just an isolated case because I also know that Peter Odili, former governor of Rivers State did the same in Port Harcourt and within few weeks, many of them installed along the airport road were vandalised. They are only safe if they are installed within the city. Like the one we have in Morrocco Road, Aggrey Road, First Avenue, they are not vandalised but the ones along airport road in Port Harcourt were all vandalised because they were in remote areas. In Lagos State, because they are located within the city, the chances of their being save is there. In Asaba, most of the installed solar street lights were completely vandalised. Same story abound in many other locations including Abuja FCT. You must also bear in mind that Lagos has improved on its security network since the inception of Raji Fashola’s government, so the possibility of safeguarding public infrastructure has improved there.

    Are you saying it is the security of the solar panels and other equipment that are keeping telecoms operators away from embracing renewable energy?

    There are two principal factors. The first is security while the second is non-avalability of land to accommodate the solar panels that will be able to power base stations.

    What peculiar challenges do you have as an operator in the renewable energy sector?

    The peculiar challenge we have is the initial cost of deployment and lack of banking sector support. Besides most contracts in the sector are not given to the experts for a reason I may ascribe to corrupt practices. I get ashamed as an expert each time I see failed solar street lights. Its not encouraging at all.

     

    People have talked about inconsistent government policy, especially as it concerns duty paid on some imported components of renewable energy. What is the situation?

    As an expert, I believe that the misunderstanding we have in tariffs with officials of Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) can be attributed to lack of knowledge on the part of the NCS officers. They are supposed to have gone for training to understand some of these things, about the interpretation of certain items especially in a new sector like renewable energy. Renewable energy is new worldwide, even standards are yet to be formed in all aspects of the components of the renewable energy sector, so, many of the components are yet to have standards so, they are not well known. In Nigeria, our Customs men fail in their duty for refusing to learn in some cases and insist on what they think is right even when is very clear that they are wrong in some of the clasifications, so when you stand to educate them, they just do what they like. Therefore we are discouraged from importing a lot of things because the duty will make the cost to be completely outrageous. Let me give you an example; if you import a solar freezer, which is just like ordinary freezer because they look alike, but what makes the difference is the compressor. The compressor for solar freezer uses battery, where conventional freezers uses power supplied from the national grid or generators. Because the cost of the solar compressor is extremely high, being a high-tech compressor, if I bring it into the country and pay the same duty as would be paid on conventional refrigerator, I cannot sell it. The retail price will be out of reach. Now see this logic and you can understand me better. If I import the solar freezer, with solar panel and battery, all packed together as one package, it will be seen as a solar freezer and I will pay zero duty, but not so when the solar freezer is imported alone when I will be made to pay 35% duty. But the fact is that one may not need to import the freezer and the batteries all the time. If you look at it, they cannot understand what is inside. That is why I said they still need training to understand some of these things and be able to make some logical decisions in that respect. So generally, the inability of the NCS to correctly interpret the tariff is still a problem but I believe that in the next three, four years, we would have overcome all these challenges.

    And also the inconstancy of the officials of the NCS is another problem. An officer may be there for one year within which period he must have learned certain things, but the following year, he is removed and posted to another location. Another person replaces him and you are back to square one. And here, we are not known to have continuity in everything we do. Despite all my views as stated so far let it be on record that I have faith in this country. I have travelled far and wide across the continents and after all This is where I belong and am proud to be part of it contributing my small quota in building the place I can call my Home, my Nation and my Pride.