Tag: paper mills

  • Our paper mills

    It’s in the country’s interest to revive them

    One sector that best illustrates the wide hiatus between visionary plans and their actualisation in post-colonial Nigeria is the pulp and paper industry. Obviously in realisation of the critical role that the printing industry plays in economic development, the Nigeria Paper Mill, Jebba, was established in the 1960s and in the following decade, the Nigerian Newsprint Manufacturing Company (NNMC), Oku Iboku, and the Nigerian National Paper Manufacturing Company (NNPMC), Iwopin, were set up.

    While the Jebba paper mill was to produce corrugated cartons, sack craft, kraft paper, linear and chip board as well as fluting media, the NNMC was conceived to produce 100,000 tonnes of newsprint per annum. On its part, the NNPMC with a combined annual production capacity of 170,000 tonnes was designed to meet the country’s needs in writing and printing paper.

    Unfortunately, these lofty objectives remain unrealised over four decades after the establishment of these industries. Although the Jebba paper mill took off on a bright and hopeful note, providing jobs, directly and indirectly, for hundreds of Nigerians, it soon closed down due to lack of investment and chronic mismanagement. Ever since its privatisation in the late 1980s, the mill has operated in fits and starts but never regained its initial vigour.

    Perennially unable to source sufficient foreign exchange to import a crucial input, long fibre, and with domestic substitutes for the product like Kenaf left dormant and untapped, the NNMC was never able to operate at full capacity. The company’s challenges were compounded by the resistance of the printing industry to its products, which were considered inferior to foreign ones, thus forcing it to stop operations in 1993 until it was subsequently sold.

    In its case, the Iwopin Paper Mill has remained largely stalled despite several efforts to privatise and make it functional. The company has been plagued with diverse challenges, including raw materials availability, poor electricity supply and obsolete machinery, making it unviable for investors.

    Against this background, the call on the Federal Government by a group of critical stakeholders in the country’s printing industry (representing private and public sector professional printers as well as academics), to convene a summit of professional printers to chart a path towards revamping the moribund paper mills could not have been more timely. It is certainly inexcusable as the group lamented that the country is currently losing about $1 trillion annually through the importation of over one million metric tonnes of paper at a cost of $1,000 per tonne.

    The professional printers’ spokesman, Mr. Olugbemi Malomo, gave an insight into the severe damage suffered by the economy as a result of the unhealthy state of the printing industry utilising the education sector as an example. According to him, over 100 million books are required annually in the country for the 20 million students in schools who, going by the National Book Policy, need five books per pupil. Unfortunately, in the words of Malomo, “75 percent of these books are printed outside the country because the duty on importation of published books is zero percent while (that on) importation of paper, as raw materials into the country is up to 30 percent”.

    These are certainly critical issues that the proposed summit can deliberate upon and proffer solutions. This is one sector that the President Muhammadu Buhari administration cannot overlook in its drive towards enhanced self-reliance and less import dependency in Nigeria. In the same vein, we urge the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, to urgently look into allegations that the rather uninspiring Chartered Institute of Professional Printers of Nigeria (CIPPON) has been operating in violation of the law establishing it. Surely, a viable and proactive CIPPON is necessary to actualise the immense but untapped potentials of the printing industry in Nigeria.

  • ‘Revive paper mills to create jobs’

    The Chartered Institute of Professional Printers of Nigeria (CIPPON) has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to revive paper mills in order to create jobs

    Its President, Alhaji Muhammed Lawal, said in Lagos that local productions from pulp farm and paper mills would conserve foreign exchange, add value to naira and lessen economic hardship.

    Lending his voice to calls for a cabinet reshuffle, Lawal said: “The position of things and the conditions of living in Nigeria calls for a reshuffle of the cabinet, because most of the ministerial appointments are rewards to politicians for their contributions in winning the last general elections.”

    He implored President Muhammadu Buhari to consider the relevance of all regulatory bodies established by an Act of Parliament in reviving or contributing to the survival of dead industries in Nigeria.

    Lawal added that for effective re-construction and positive physical result, a new minister (through a regulatory body) must come from industry that employs both skilled and unskilled labour, so that it will not be difficult for professionals and industrialists to find solutions to unemployment through industrialisation.

    He said: “For good example, Minister of Health came from Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), Minister of Finance came from ICAN or ANA, while the Attorney-General of the Federation came from Nigeria Bar Association (NBA).’’

    Lawal further said there are personal assistants to Buhari on matters relating to those ministries. “All these rightful appointments are to pave way for good governance and same should be applicable when filling other ministerial posts,” he insisted.

  • Printers urge Buhari to probe paper mills’ privatisation

    The Chartered Institute of Professional Printers  of Nigeria (CIPPON) has urged  President Muhammadu Buhari to re-visit the privatisation of Iwopin Pulp and Papermill Industry in Ogun State and Nigerian  Newsprint  Paper  Manufacturing  Company, (NNPMC) in Oku-Iboku,  Akwa  Ibom  State.

    Also, the group appealed to printers to show understanding with the government over the price of printing papers, which it said was informed by the poor exchange rate of the naira.

    According to the union,NNPMC was acquired by Negris Group in 2008; former President Goodluck Jonathan sold   Iwopin to Beulah Technical Services Company (BETCO) in 2014.

    Speaking at the  presentation  of certificates to participants at a four-day executive print training workshop, the President of CIPPON,  Mr. Wahab Muhammed- LawaL, said  the recent visit of the association’s members to the privatised assets has revealed that the new owners have derailed from the purpose  for which  they  were established.

    He said: “The government should investigate the mode of operation and other agreements entered into during the purported privatisation of Iwopin Pulp and Papermill Industry, because this paper mill industry (Iwopin) had started producing papers before the so-called privatisation, but the institute’s recent visit to Iwopin called for urgent investigation. The institute should be carried along in the investigation.”

  • ‘Why govt must revisit pulp, paper mills sale’

    ‘Why govt must revisit pulp, paper mills sale’

    When the Federal Government listed some of its corporations that were not doing well and directed the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) to sell them to private investors, in the spirit of privatisation, many thought the scheme would help to resuscitate the firms. But the comatose state of the pulp and paper mills, sold in 1999, has reopened calls for a  revisit of the privatisation process. OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE reports on how the sector can be revived to create jobs and boost the economy.

    The Federal Government established three pulp and paper mills in the 1960s and 1970s. They are the Nigeria Paper Mill Limited (NPM) in Jebba, Kwara State, established to  produce kraft paper for the packaging industry; the  Nigerian Newsprint Manufacturing Company Ltd. (NNMC) in  Oku-Iboku, Akwa Ibom State, and the Nigeria National Paper Manufacturing Ltd. (NNPMC) in Ogun State, established to produce bond paper.

    Two of the mills – NPM, Jebba and NNMC, Oku Iboku – performed creditably in the 1980s.  operating at opitmum capacities. Thus, paper importation faded out during the period. For instance, NPM produced 40,480 tonnes of kraft paper in 1985 and 42,960 million tons in 1986.

    These represented 62.3 per cent and 66.17 per cent capacity utilisation respectively. The NNMC also performed optimally at that time.

    The volume of newsprint production at NNMC rose from 28,927 tonnes in 1989 to 37,581 tonnes in 1990. Due to the optimal capacity utilisation of the mill, importation of newsprint reduced to 17.5per cent in 1986; 12.5 per cent in 1987 and faded out in 1988.  Nevertheless, the third pulp and paper mill, NNPMC, was abandoned in 1983 when the mill was at about 85 per cent completion. Till the time it was shut down in 1998, the mill did not produce up to five per cent of its installed capacity.

    In 1999, the government sought to change the fortunes of the mills with their privitisation but it did not achieve  its goal. Though privatisation has several benefits, such as the reduction of bureaucracy, bad management, corruption, correct defective capital and increase in the quality of goods and services, has not benefitted the paper industry.

    In addition, the mills depended on imported long fibre pulp, pulping chemicals, management and technical expertise. At best, since the privatisation, Jebba Paper Mills, formerly the Nigeria Paper Mills, acquired in 2006 by MINL, a subsidiary of India’s Manaksia, has not improved its fortune as the owners are recycling paper rather than engaging in activities that would improve its fortunes to the extent of creating wealth and contributing to the economy.

    Also, the furtune of NNPMC in Ogun State (now Iwopin Pulp and Paper Company Limited), sold to an indigenous company – Noxieme Technologies Limited –  has not improved. Last year there were reports the company had found a new core investor – Beulah Technical Company Limited. Till date, there has been no tangible activity at the sprawling complex.

    The story of the NNMC Limited, Oku-Iboku, Akwa Ibom State, is not different. After it was sold to Negris Limited, it has been comatose. The nation is reported to be losing N180 billion from the non-performance of the three paper mills. Their non-performance also means that jobs that should have been created are lost to other countries.  This is also worsened by the fact that the Federal Government spends N50 billion on importation of paper annually.

    At a meeting targeted at reversing the fortunes of the paper and pulp industry, the Director-General, Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC), Mr.Ibrahim Hussain Doko Ibrahim, said the cost implication of non-performance of NPM in 2006, 2007 and 2008 annually was N7.8 billion, which reduced to N6.85 billion in 2009, resulting in four-year deficit turnover of N30.25 billion.

    “As we are all aware, the technology for pulp and paper production has advanced considerably since the paper mills in the country were established, efforts are being made to reduce environmental impact of pulp and paper production processes through the use of organosolv pulping method which was developed to avoid environmental problems related to sulphur emissions. Many mills globally are also introducing micro and nano materials, in view of their renewability, fibriller structure, multi-functional applications and the possibility of being self-assembled into well-defined architecture,” Ibrahim said.

    The RMRDC boss further said the cost implication of the comatose NNMC between 2006 and 2009 to the economy was N18.76 billion, adding that within the four years considered, the deficit turnover equalled N74.8 billion.

    “The total cost of non-performance of the three mills to the economy within the four-year period was estimated at N153.05 billion in 2009, and this has been calculated to be about N180 billion before the end of 2015,” he said.

    “Coupled with this, the delay in commencing production by the mills is hampering the acquisition of the needed transfer of skills and technology which are important objectives of privatisation in developing countries,” Ibrahim added.

    Today, the paper market is dominated by imports from India and other parts of Asia as stakeholders say the privatisation process of the mills was faulty.

    Former Senior Manager, Quality Control, NPM, Chief Samson Olalade Ogundele, who worked for over 20 years in the firm, called for the review or outright cancellation of the privatisation of the paper mills in the country. He regretted that new buyers of NPM are not sincere in revitalising the company but in stripping its asset.

    “How can a company valued at N30 billion in 1995 be sold for a mere N334 million in 2012 and even at that, the new buyers have not been able to produce papers from the abundance  of forestry solely dedicated to the mill but instead prefer to be recycling used papers.  As far as l know, all the facilities in Jebba are still there, especially, the three paper machines with the last two inaugurated by President Muhammadu Buhari who was then the Head of State.”

    Ogundele said: “The new buyers didn’t buy the paper mill to turn it around, especially as they complain of the distance between the forestry and the mill and the inconvenience to them. He asked if they didn’t know that they would have to transport the raw materials to the factory before they bought it in the first place.

    “The aim of the government of Nigeria government is to improve production and to employ Nigerians. B ut today Nigerians are casual staff in junior and senior staff positions. The new buyers want to strip the asset of the mill and possibly sell it as scrap. I suggest that government visit the privitisation process because it is a rip-off.”

    He regretted that the government and the new buyers of the paper mills have failed to meet the expectations of not only the staff who have not been paid their entitlements but also the public who pay more for imported paper materials.

    A professor in the Department of Agriculture and Forestry, University of Ibadan, Oluwadare Oluwafemi, identified the inability to source long fibre trees as one key reason for the non-performance of the mills.

    Oluwafemi lamented the abysmal fund devoted to research institutions, calling for the establishment of pulp and paper institute to save the country from the humongous losses.

    “It is unfortunate that 90 percent of papers used in Nigeria are imported,” Oluwafemi said, while presenting a paper entitled, ‘Long Fibre Pulp Production in Nigeria: Prospects and Challenges.’”

    The professor called for the reversal of the privatisation, saying the process was faulty. He equally urged the government to set up ‘indigenous long fibre pulpwood improvement programme’ and the establishment of small-scale pulp and paper mill, and formation of cooperatives in the sourcing of raw materials. He noted that a country such as India uses rice husk as base raw material to produce pulp creating over 300,000 jobs while the sector provides over 1,500,000 jobs in China.

    He listed other nations such as Pakistan with 65,000 jobs, Brazil, 70,000, Canada, 64,000, South Africa, 19,000, and Nigeria an abysmal 500 jobs which he said may be an exaggeration as the three mills are in a poor state.

    He advised that the sector is capable of creating thousands of jobs as in other countries.