Tag: mining

  • World Bank, NEXIM Bank collaborate on mining sector development

    World Bank, NEXIM Bank collaborate on mining sector development

    The World Bank has pledged to support Nigerian Export-Import Bank (NEXIM Bank) to develop Nigeria mining sector.

    Speaking when a team from the World Bank led by its Senior Mining Specialist, Energy & Extractives Unit, Dr. Francisco Igualada, visited the Managing Director, NEXIM Bank, Mr. Roberts Ungwaga Orya in Abuja, the World Bank chief wondered why Nigeria, with all her huge resources and potentials has continued to earn less than Ghana, Mali and Burkina Faso from mining activities. He blamed the country’s focus on oil and gas for this, arguing that the mining sector is an enabler for manufacturing, services and other sectors. This, he said is in addition to the huge opportunities of job creation, revenue earnings and the development of other support services in the value chain that would have boosted the economy especially with the decline in global oil prices.

    Dr. Igualada said there is need for a structured consolidation of efforts towards developing the sector. This should focus on building the right capacity both at human and institutional levels; as well as establishing and enforcing the requisite legal and policy frameworks. To him, this is the difference between Nigeria and South Africa.

    He said the World Bank has a Public Private Partnership (PPP) arrangement which it could recommend for the development of the solid minerals sector in Nigeria. He stressed the need to revamp efforts and link interventions to develop the sector through arrangements such as the Solid Minerals Fund in addition to renewed involvement by the government. He stated that he will seek the commitment of his office on the development of the mining sector and collaboration with NEXIM Bank, especially in regard to workshop participation and capacity training.

    Welcoming his guests that included Mr. Linus Adie of Mining Investments Consults, Mr. Orya, said NEXIM Bank was set up to assist the government in diversifying the Nigerian economy away from the oil through the provision of export credit facility, risk bearing facilities, trade and market information and export advisory services to export-oriented investors in the manufacturing, agro-processing, solid minerals and services (MASS) sectors.  “The clear intention of the World Bank to collaborate with the NEXIM Bank towards a structured intervention in the Nigeria’s solid minerals sector is quite expedient. Moreso, with the commitment and firm resolve of President Muhammad Buhari to diversify the economy, revitalise the mining sector towards boosting job creation and enhancing foreign exchange earnings,” Mr. Orya said.

    He said Nigeria is endowed with huge solid mineral deposits, with about 34 products identified in commercial quantities in different parts of the country, adding however, that the failure to put in place a structure that will make the benefits of the exploitation available to all has been the bane of the country. The low activity in the solid mineral sector is not yielding the desired financial revenues as there are scanty records of payment of taxes and royalty to the government, he said, lamenting that Nigeria is losing lots of resources from untapped mineral deposit as well as from the little that is being mined mostly by illegal miners who smuggle the products out of the country.

  • Lagos restates commitment to mining standards

    •Govt warns illegal sand miners

    The Lagos State Government has restated its commitment to  international standards in sand mining in the state.

    The Director, Human Resources and Administration, Mr. Fashola Adeyemi Taofik, said this during an assessment of some sand mining sites inAjah/Lekki.

    He said the Ministry will ensure that miners operate according to regulations to boost sustainable development in the state.

    In a statement, the Public Relations Officer of the Ministry, Olaoye Olusegun, Taofik noted that to obtain the mining standard, the Ministry monitors sand miners and ensure that rules are followed.

    He said: “In furtherance of the Ministry’s mandate to ensuring a sustainable mining operation, constant monitoring and  clinical review of mining methods and its impacts, taking stock of degraded area as well as putting in place a restoration plan is being done by the Ministry.

    “The objectives of the mining site monitoring and evaluation was also to locate and delineate the extent of land degradation at mining sites, initiate and develop land use programme for the identified area, for example, fish farming, agricultural cultivation, coconut plantation, and landscaping. It is also meant to identify the derivable impact of the exercise on affected communities as well as develop mining methods and proper documentation that will ensure sustainable development.”

    He said henceforth the state government would not take it lightly with those involved in illegal sand mining as they constitute the majority of those who degrade the environment.

  • Lagos restates commitment to mining standards

    •Warns illegal sand miners

    The Lagos State Government has restated commitment to ensuring that miners comply with internationally acceptable standards in the sand mining industry in the state.

    The Director, Human Resources and Administration, Mr. Fashola Adeyemi Taofik, said this during an on-the-spot- assessment of some sand mining sites in the Ajah/Lekki axis of the state.

    He said the Ministry is poised to ensure that miners operate according to  regulations to ensure sustainable development in the state.

    In a statement, the Public Relations Officer of the Ministry, Olaoye Olusegun, Taofik noted that to obtain the mining standard, the Ministry has to continually monitor the activities of sand miners and ensure that rules are followed strictly.

    He said: “In furtherance of the Ministry’s mandate to ensuring a sustainable mining operation, constant monitoring and  clinical review of mining methods and its impacts, taking stock of degraded area as well as putting in place a restoration plan is being done by the Ministry.

    “The objectives of the mining site monitoring and evaluation was also to locate and delineate the extent of land degradation at mining sites, initiate and develop land use programme for the identified area, for example, fish farming, agricultural cultivation, coconut plantation, and landscaping. It is also meant to identify the derivable impact of the exercise on affected communities as well as develop mining methods and proper documentation that will ensure sustainable development.”

  • Nigeria hosts Africa mining conference

    In the bid to diversify the Nigerian economy from its dependence on oil and gas, Solid Mines Limited, in conjunction with its strategic global partners, is set to hold the 2015 edition of the Africa Mining Conference.

    Its Chief Executive Officer, Frank Ekperigin,said the conference will dissect issues with particular reference to artisanal mining, the environmental Impact of illegal mining as well as specific target will be addressed on African mining industry with the aim to improve the recognition of information technology and mobile technology as key tools among the sector players and of the critical role surveillance will play in mapping and preserving the economic and social integrity of the industry.

    According to him, the incidence of lead poisoning in Zamfara State and most recently in Niger State among other unfortunate occurrences has necessitated the action to convene and document a further sustainable and implementable framework for the mining industry going forward in this new administration.

    He said the mining sector currently accounts for 0.3 per cent of Nigeria’s GDP, generating about $1.5 billion annually. ”This is negligible in comparison to other African countries as South Africa, Democratic Republic of Congo and Botswana, whose sectors record 18 per cent, 25 per cent and 40 per cent of the country’s GDP equating to $63 billion, $7.6 billion and $5.9 billion respectively,” he said.

     

     

    Ekperigin  added that the conference, with the theme ”Harnessing the Continent’s Solid Minerals for Economic Buoyancy through Sustainable Public-Private Sector Synergy”, will among other things demonstrate the organization’s capacity for projecting economic innovation and make a measurable investment in shaping the industry.

    The conference, he said, has the endorsement of the Joint Commission Trade and Investment division of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, will also show its organisation’s commitment to spearheading a resurgent awakening of Africa’s manufacturing capacity which will fundamentally power the continent’s vision to achieve a robust and sustainable industrialisation pathway.

    “This will engender Africa’s much needed global competitiveness from the Agricultural to the Aerospace sector and in all other viable industries in between,” he said.

    He added that the topics to be treated in the three-day conference are Cyber security concerns, bridging the gap between IT and process control systems, big data for mining solutions, Integration/standardization of process control data,as well as cloud services for mining.

    He said the conference, which will run from the 24 to 26 of this month at the Transcorp Hilton, Abuja, will bring together some of the industry’s leading key stakeholders and decision makers from across the African continent, to discuss the latest challenges facing the industry and discover what opportunities lie ahead for the industry.

    “Delegates, panelists and speakers expected at the event include National President Miners Association of Nigeria, Alhaji Sani Shehu; MD Ciuci Consulting Nigeria, Chukwuka Monye; Chairman/CEO Eta-Zuma West Africa Limited, Dr. Innocent Ezuma; General Manager, IT Africa, Middle East and Australia, Vale, Sergio Salim; Vice-President Information Technology, AngloGold Ashanti, Pieter du Toit Oosthuizen and General Manager, Information Technology, Wesizwe Platinum, Kobus Pienaaramong others,” he said.

     

     

     

  • Manufacturing, mining drag U.S. industrial production

    UNITED States industrial production unexpectedly fell in May, likely as a strong dollar and energy spending cuts continued to weigh on manufacturing and mining output, bucking signs of an acceleration in the broader economy.

    Industrial output fell 0.2 percent after a revised 0.5 percent drop in April, the Federal Reserve said.

    The production side of the economy continues to struggle against the lingering effects of dollar strength and deep spending cuts in the energy sector in response to a sharp decline in crude oil prices.

    Economists polled by Reuters had forecast industrial production rising 0.2 percent last month after a previously reported 0.3 percent fall in April.

    Last month, manufacturing output slipped 0.2 percent after gaining 0.1 percent in April. Manufacturing continues to be hamstrung by a strong dollar, which has eroded profits of multinational corporations.

    Mining production declined 0.3 percent as oil and gas well drilling fell 7.9 percent. Unseasonably warm weather in May lifted demand for air conditioning. Utilities production increased 0.2 percent after dropping 3.7 percent in April.

    Industrial capacity use fell to 78.1 percent last month from 78.3 percent in April. Officials at the Fed tend to look at capacity use as a signal of how much “slack” remains in the economy and how much room there is for growth to accelerate before it becomes inflationary.

  • Plateau’s abandoned mining ponds

    Plateau’s abandoned mining ponds

    Prior to the discovery of oil in commercial quantity at Oloibiri in present-day Bayelsa State in the 1950s, the country’s economy was sustained by agriculture and solid mineral resources, such as coal, ore, tin and columbite, among others. Most of the solid mineral deposits were in commercial quantity and were explored by the colonial masters.

    Plateau State, for instance, is among the states where tin and columbite were discovered in large quantities and were being mined before the discovery of oil.

    Sadly, the colonial masters used the proceeds from their mining to develop cities in their country while the areas where the resources were explored were left undeveloped.

    Plateau State is one of those areas that were left desolate while Manchester and Liverpool in the United Kingdom were developed with the proceeds from tin and columbite mined on the Plateau.

    The impacts of mining on the Plateau are still felt as investigation has shown that there are more than 3,000 mining ponds in the state. The ponds are mostly in Jos South, Barkin Ladi, Bassa, Jos East, Riyom, Bokos and Mangu local government areas. They account for over 65 per cent of the landscape of Plateau North and Plateau Central Senatorial zones and have devastated at least 12 of the 17 local government areas of the state.

    The minerals constituted the main foreign exchange earner for the Federal Government.

    However, with the discovery of oil in commercial quantity, the government concentrated on crude oil exploration in total negligence of solid minerals. However, the Federal Government which issued mining licences to foreign firms only collected royalties from them but failed to implement the land reclamation agreement.

    It is estimated that during the period of exploration, six million tons of earth were dug yearly to get tin, columbite and others. Some residents of the areas told our correspondent that they are scared of the ponds, especially women and children. Many domestic animals have fallen into them on several occasions.

    Rev. Musa Chollom, who lives in Barkin Ladi, said: “Plateau State boasts large deposits of tin and columbite. The colonial government exploited the mineral resources to develop their own countries in Europe. I understand that it was tin from Jos that was used to develop the cities of Manchester and Liverpool. These European countries remain some of the well developed today. But Plateau State that owns the solid minerals remains the poorest state in Nigeria at the moment.”

    Contributing, 78-year-old Abok Gyang, a teacher in Bukuru, Jos South Local Government Area, described the mining operation in the area by the colonial masters as day light robbery.

    He said: “The story of mining exploration in Plateau State is that of a day light robbery by the colonial masters in collaboration with the then Nigerian government. The gains of the exploration went to the colonial masters and the Federal Government. There was nothing for Plateau State.

    “Rather than counting the gains, it is only counting the numbers of abandoned mining ponds. The explorers left without reclaiming even one of the over 3, 000 mining ponds.”

    Recounting his experiences, Michael Pam Bot, a resident of Kwang, Rayfield, Jos, said: “We wake up every morning to behold the frightening ponds. Apart from that, some of our children have fallen into them. Children just grow up to see the ponds; they never knew how deep the ponds are. Most of them are more than 100 meters deep. A number of children has drowned in the ponds as a result of careless play around them. Those in government that benefitted from the ponds are enjoying themselves but members of the host communities now live with the nightmare around us.”

    Efforts by the affected communities to draw the attention of the government to their plight were futile as they were treated with lack of interest or brutal repression, especially during military regimes.

    It was provided in Section 20 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, that the nation should “protect and improve the environment and safeguard the water, air and land, forest and wildlife of Nigeria.”

    Plateau State Commissioner for Environment Mr. Sylvanus Dongtoe told our correspondent that “the Federal Government’s response to our ecological disaster so far has been the little ecological fund released to the state to manage its environment. That fund is hardly enough to reclaim even one mining pond. The Federal Government needs to assist us in this regard because the state government lacks the resources to reclaim all the ponds.”

    Continuing, he said: “The state government is not leaving everything for the Federal Government in its efforts to reclaim the devastated land. The government has tried enough to see how it can make use of some of the ponds.

    “For instance, it has developed some of the ponds as sources of water for the citizens. We have converted one pond into earth dam in Angwa Doki, Bukuru. Another one was converted to earth dam in Du Village. The earth dams will enhance water supply and distribution to the residents.

    “Some of them have been converted into fish ponds. Others are being used to run irrigation projects. One of the major mining ponds in Rayfield is now a major tourist’s attraction. It was converted to a beautiful lake known as Rayfield Resort.

    “The worst situation we are trying to cope with is the effects of the mining exploration on the health of citizens. The explorers not only left the land devastated, they also left heavy deposits of mining wastes behind. It is called mine tailings.

    “Medical experts had informed government that people who lived near mining sites are exposed to radio-active substances which could cause cancer.

    Investigation revealed that people build houses close to the ponds, despite the hazard associated with them. This is because there is hardly enough land left for construction of residential houses and for farming.

    Illiya Jerome of the National Centre for Remote Sensing, Jos had said: “Decades of mining exploration resulted in the removal of considerable amount of soil and generated radioactive waste known as tailings. Since no reclamation of the ponds was done by the mining companies, the radioactive materials dispersed in the process have contaminated the soil in its vicinity.

    “Residents of the areas are exposed to direct regular access to these sites. In addition, tailing debris was used as building materials, contaminated soil are used by locals for agriculture mainly in crop production and sand contaminated with mine tailings is used in roasting groundnuts for human consumption.

    “The mining wastes which were indiscriminately disposed all over the communities are the second major causes of cancer of the lungs apart from cigarettes. The radioactive substances have been found to cause cancer in mankind and animals.”

    Apart from the harmful effects of the mining wastes to mankind, the residents are also at the risk of a radioactive gas called Randon.

    Experts maintain that “Randon is a radioactive gas that emanates from uranium-bearing soil and porous rocks. Randon migrates out of soil and rocks into the surrounding air, resulting in the accumulation in poorly ventilated or closed areas. It has detrimental health effect because it is likely to cause cancer in both cigarettes smokers and non-cigarettes smokers, even as it is the primary cause of cancer in human.

    “Randon is a substance located beneath the earth and mining plays a crucial role in the exposure of randon to the surface of the earth.

    “There are high level radiation exposures from the mine tailings of Jos area, especially those who live close to indiscriminately dumped tailing will be exposed to higher dose of the harmful substances.”

    The circumstances in which the state finds itself is such that due to limited land to serve the agricultural needs of the people, majority of its poor population have no option than to embark on small-scale manual mining of the mineral, even long after the major mining companies had left. The health hazard of such manual practice is monumental. Experts had expressed fears that the lead poison in Zamfara State which led to the death of about 400 children in 2010 may occur in Plateau State if care is not taken.

  • Mining spurs Sierra Leone’s economic growth

    Mining spurs Sierra Leone’s economic growth

    The rapid expansion of Sierra Leone’s nascent iron ore mining industry fuelled economic growth of 20 per cent last year, according to IMF data, but prices also surged in the impoverished West African nation.

    Interest in its largely untapped mineral resources has sparked a flood of investment in Sierra Leone a decade after the end of a devastating 1991-2002 civil war. Its economic growth rate is ranked among the highest in the world.

    British miners African Minerals, which operates the Tonkolili project, and London Mining, owner of the Marampa mine, both began shipping iron ore in 2011.

    “Economic activity continues to expand robustly, mainly on account of a sharp increase in mining activity,” MalanguKabedi-Mbuyi, who headed a recent International Monetary Fund mission to the country, said in a statement.

    Sierra Leone remains one of the world’s poorest and least developed countries, and there is widespread frustration that despite the mining boom, more than half of the population of six million lives on less than $1.25 (U.S.) per day.

    Economic growth excluding iron ore mining activity was 5.5 per cent last year, while inflation eased from 12.5 per cent in 2012 to 8.5 per cent at the end of 2013, the statement said.

    Gross international reserves reached 3-1/2 months of import cover, supported by increased export receipts from iron ore, while the fiscal deficit narrowed to 1.9 per cent of non-iron ore GDP, from 5.6 per cent in 2012.

    The dominance of its mining sector has also raised concerns that natural resource exploitation will stifle other exports and fail to encourage broad-based economic development.

    “We are aware of it and the government is also aware of it,” Francis Kumah, the IMF’s resident representative in Sierra Leone, told Reuters on Thursday, adding that the country needed more policies to diversify its economy.

    “There is the awareness to do so now and that is a good thing,” he said, citing efforts by the agriculture and marine ministries to expand the revenue base.

  • Ebonyi community tense over mining

    •Minister, DSS, CP petitioned

    Mining lead has brought more than joy to the community. Blood and tears have also come with it.

    There is appreciable tension in Umuobii Ekka community in Ebonyi State following the stoppage of work at a lead mining site in the village by some angry youths protesting discrimination, neglect and violation of their rights.

    Some stakeholders allegedly sent thugs to disperse the youths to enable the miners resume their business but the community would rather the youths’ demands were addressed.

    The community petitioned the Minister for Mining and Steel Development through the mining officer in Abakaliki, and the traditional ruler of Ekka community calling for a review of agreement entered into before the mining started.

    Umuobii Ekka Development Union in a petition to the Minister, the police and the State Security Service (SSS) signed by the chairman of the community, Nwaka Felix and the youth president, Nworie Sunday, said only their intervention could save the situation.

    They appealed to the minister in a petition entitled “Report of violation and discrimination of our rights,” lamenting that they have been assaulted, humiliated and dehumanised even in their own land since mining of lead for commercial use started there.

    The petition reads: ‘We, the people of Umuobii wish to express our grief and neglect based on how we are being treated since the issue of mining project came up. We have been humiliated, assaulted and dehumanised. The kind of discrimination bestowed on us has intoxication and difficulties which is the arrangement and plans of the stake holder and our traditional rule in particular.

    “Therefore, the initial arrangement before commencement of the work was violated and abandoned which brought about this information. There was no proper negotiation between the host village and the community at large, we have never being given official consultation or called for dialogue. Besides, the strategic way they put the project made it to have the tendency of individual interest, which the village disagreed with, for its incompatibility, inducement, and of undue influence which might lead to oppositions.

    “And the people of Umuobii have such perception and decided to disagree with such inhuman arrangement as it lacked mutual co-existence, no compromise, no consensus and iota of relationship of trust between the host village and stake-holders.

    Umuobii people lamented that they were not carried along and were disengaged by the stakeholders during the negotiation of agreement between the mining team and the community when they supposed to be carried along.

    “However, the people of Umuobii were disengaged during the preparation of agreement that will drive the mining project. God is not foolish when he planted such mineral there, we need strategies that are essential to positive approach, and we need to be carried along. We need opportunities for transformation and development. We believe that these means are to develop procedure for identifying conflict that are yet to come and put a stop to it.

    Meanwhile, it is the duty of the host village to choose somebody that has no questionable character and as well allowed to hear their view in the new agreement that are yet to come because the last one lacked good representation of the host village.

    “So the village Umuobii has suffered neglect: since creation of the earth by the community leaders, there has never being any dividend we have ever receive our share ,we have never received any portion of the community communal land, no allocation of government appointment that has ever reached our us. And we always agitate for it, and we have being struggling to be part of, and our agitation is to be allowed to be part of the decision and as to receive our percentage.

    “In addition, the only preventive approach to combat this potential conflict is divine intervention, resolution and proper mediation at this pre-conflict stage as planned by the stake holders  and not by deploying thugs in the arena of the mining. And right now we the Umuobii do not believe in crisis which shows that we are peacemakers. We are crying because our rights have been breached, we have been embarrassed, during the bargaining process, and we have being consciously oppressed. And this is the fact that sufficient ground for us to put our bargaining power was not given to us…

    “We believe the principle of equality before the law. We believe in the principle of social value, substantive and distributive justice which states that one should be allowed to earn his due.

    The community appealed to Senator Paulinus Igwe, Senate Committee Chairman on Police representing their senatorial zone and Hon Ede representing Isienu-Ezza federal constituency to call the people trying to undermine the villagers to order. They said only Senator Igwe built a hospital in Ndiagu which is the only government presence there.

    The community in another letter to the traditional ruler of Ekka community, Igwe Fidelis Ekechi Chukwu further said that the people of Umuobii have agreed and stated that this sharing formula should be observed and the host village of the mining land has to be treated as required if this mining project should succeed.

    The community said it is unthinkable for anyone to deny them the benefits of a mining field in their backyard. They insist that Umuobii village must be given 50 per cent as hosts of the mining field.

    The Umuobii village also demanded that their residents should get 60 per cent of any scholarship coming to the area.

  • DSS arrests two Chinese for alleged illegal mining

    Two Chinese and a suspected Nigerian collaborator have been arrested by the operatives of the Department of State Security Services (DSS) for alleged illegal mining of gem stones at Kotugba, Paikoro Local Government Area of Niger State.

    Parading the suspects yesterday in Minna, the state capital, the State Director of DSS, Dr. Larry Obiagwu, gave the names of the Chinese suspects as Lu Xiaoyong and Huaiming Gene and their Nigerian “collaborator” as Mohammed Bello.

    Also arrested but granted bail were 10 local diggers allegedly employed and paid N3 million by the foreigners for the excavation of precious stones.

    Obiagwu said the activities of the suspects violated the Minerals and Mining Act of 2007, which prohibits exploration or exploitation of minerals without authorisation by the statutory bodies.

    The DSS director explained that the Chinese and their suspected collaborator have no permit or licence to back their mining activities.

    Obiagwu said when his men apprehended the illegal miners, they already had a 10-tonne truck, with registration number (Kaduna) XD928KA, to pack the excavated gem stones for exportation to China.

    But the suspects claimed that they were engaged in legitimate business, adding that they are operating in buying of precious stones with a duly incorporated company.

     

  • Govt to revamp industries

    Manufacturing industries in the critical sectors of the economy such as mining, petrochemical, infrastructure and agro-business have been urged to improve on the current standard in order to create jobs and expand the economy. The advice was given by President Goodluck Jonathan at the Gala/Awards Night of Vitaform Nigeria PLC, to mark the 50th anniversary of the company at Muson Centre in Lagos.He was represented by the Minister of Trade and Investment,Mr Olusegun Aganga.

    The President said the general decline in the manufacturing sector will be addressed by his administration but with emphasis on exportation of raw materials and other value added products where Nigeria seems to have comparative and competitive advantage which will, in turn, boost export trade.

    He added that other areas of manufacturing such as food processing, sugar processing, textile production, cement production will not be left out, stressing that the country will boost its non-oil exports to keep the economy expanding.

    “We are doing our best at ensuring success and this has led to a report from the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) that some manufacturing industries have been getting 15 hours of uninterrupted power supply. We are trying our best but we still need your support”.

    Speaking on Vitafoam’s achievement and good business, he said Vitafoam Nigeria PLC won so many awards from the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) ever since it got listed in 1978.

    “The company pay its dividends every year without delay and even embraces the standards of the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON). Vitafoam has shown integrity and excellence and played the role of good governance in the country,” he said.

    He congratulated the management and staff of Vitafoam Nigeria PLC for being outstanding for 50 years.

    The Chairman, Board of Directors, Vitafoam Nigeria Plc, Chief Sam Bolarinde, said that the company has been able to survive in Nigeria in the midst of many unfortunate incidences and it does call for celebration.

    “If we still hold our heads high till this time, I think we deserve celebration.”

    He promised that Vitafoam will be in Nigeria in the next 50 years and will continue to deliver the best services and quality products.

    In his address, the Managing Director, Vitafoam Nigeria PLC, Mr. Joel Ajiga, said that the Gala/Awards Night was to round up the golden jubilee celebration as different activities had been done to mark the celebration.

    He stressed that the company has visited ten charity homes in Lagos, had a novelty match, a lecture and a book presentation entitled: Vitaform, a journey in resilience.

    While showing appreciation, he said “we honour our distinguished distributors at all levels and we thank everyone for the participation and unflinching support over the years.”

    Speaking on the company’s future plans, he said the company will join solid conglomerate not only based in Nigeria but with other international ties.

    The Gala/Awards Night also featured presentation of awards to distributors who seemed to have improved outstandingly from the last review with four different categories considered, which are Platinum, Gold, Silver and Bronze.

    The winner of the Platinum category, Alh. Idiaka went home with Volkswagen truck, the Gold category was given a Pick-Up Van, the Silver category got Tri-doors Fringe while the Bronze category had Generating set.

    Also honoured were the former Managing Director, Dr. Dele Makanjuola and the Chairman, Chief Sam Bolarinde for their outstanding and lifetime leadership and service.