Tag: products

  • Emir Sanusi backs SON’s war against substandard products

    Emir Sanusi backs SON’s war against substandard products

    The Standards Organisation of Nigeria’s battle against the influx and circulation of substandard products has received the backing of Emir of Kano Muhammadu Sanusi II.

    He expressed his support when he received the SON management in Kano, led by the State Coordinator Yahaya Bukar.

    The Emir described the SON responsibility as very tasking, particularly in relation to the fight against the influx, storage and distribution of substandard products.

    He assured the SON delegation of the full support of his council to assist the organisation to win the war.

    Bukar thanked the emir, the Emirate Council, the government and people of Kano State for their support to SON since its establishment in the state in 1988.

    The SON State Coordinator acknowledged the valuable contributions of the Royal Father to the realisation of the SON offshore conformity assessment programme, SONCAP aimed at checkmating the influx of substandard products into Nigeria, as the then Governor of Central Bank, under the Comprehensive Import Supervision Scheme (CISS).

    He reiterated the determination of SON to assist micro, small and medium enterprises in Kano State grow, through the diligent implementation of the Mandatory Conformity Assessment Programme (MANCAP) designed to promote the competitiveness of all made-in-Nigeria products.

    This, according to him, will also promote consumer safety while ensuring that they get value for their hard earned money expended on products.

    He highlighted the stakeholders’ sensitisation efforts being carried out in the state by SON in markets, colleges, mosques and churches in addition to daily inspection visits to factories.

    Bukar briefed the royal father on SON consumer complaints resolution and standards enforcement activities in the state, all aimed at ensuring consumer satisfaction and safety through substantial reduction in the volume of substandard products in circulation.

    The historic visit was rounded off with the presentation of SON stickers, car hangers and wall clocks to Emir  Sanusi II on behalf of the Director-General, Mr. Osita Aboloma.

  • ‘Govt to spend N3.4tr on petroleum products’ import’

    ‘Govt to spend N3.4tr on petroleum products’ import’

    • Requires $1.2b to fix refineries

    The Federal Government would spend N3.4trillion on the importation of petroleum products this year, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, has said.

    Kachikwu, who spoke yesterday in Abuja, denied reports ascribed to him that  government was concessioning its refineries.

    He said government has no plans to concession the refineries, but was only making arrangements for private financing of the their repairs, saying claims that Oando has won the contract for financing the repair of the refineries, is not true.

    He said Nigeria that currently consumes 35million litres daily, has domestic refining capacity of six million liters, which is about 25 per cent of the demand.

    He said: “The importation of products even between January and December of this year, amounts to 20million metric tonnes and amounting to N3.4 trillion. The logistic cost of that importation, shipping, clearing and all that is about N1.34trillion.”

    Kachikwu said owing to this domestic and demand situation, the government had to plan for the improvement of its domestic refining capacity, saying government raised a technical and steering committees on the financing of the refineries. He said the report will be presented to the National Assembly and Federal Executive Council upon conclusion.

    The minister said that from piping, about $1.1billion to $1.2billion (depending of the category), will be required to fix the refineries.

    His words: “Internally, we have been able to determine the amount we want to do this work, in terms of what work is required to be done. And the total cumulative amount, is the $1.1, $1.2b type category, depending on the refineries, with specific breakdown. That of course does not include the cost of piping.”

    On why government has decided to deal with Chioda, Sapiem and GGC, Kachikwu said that Chioda built Kaduna refinery, Sapiem built Warri refineries, while CGC built the PortHacourt refineries, stating that these companies, have the designs, engineering outlay and upgrade capability for the refineries.

    He said government opted for this arrangement because of rising cost, saying very few people will undertake the financing .  “So that is why we have created a business model that tie them to the Direct Sale, Direct Purchase (DSDP) Programme and that is still working and that is still work in progress.

    “When they finish this and are done with the analysis, I will expect that they will then invite everybody who is interested to the commercial terms, before we get to the Federal Executive Council, National Assembly and Mr. President. We haven’t reached there and so nobody can say contracts have been given.”

    Kachikwu advised the International Oil Companies to invest in building refineries in Nigeria in order to avoid the negative effects of dip in oil prices.

    More importantly, he said, “we need to address IOCs in terms of what they need to do to help local refining, because if you encourage all these refining capabilities whenever they run out of crude availability, we need to look at them, why are you taking out crude when you can get the same pricing equivalent in local refining.”

  • SON discovers warehouses for repackaging expired products

    SON discovers warehouses for repackaging expired products

    The Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has discovered  three multi-storey  structures in Alakija and Kirikiri areas in Lagos, where an importer repackaged expired products and those with short lifespans.

    Its Director of Monitoring & Compliance, Mr. Bede Obayi, an engineer, said the agency acted on an intelligence it received from sister regulatory agency and law enforcement agencies, including  well-meaning Nigerians.

    He alerted the public to the health implication of the huge volume of expired products circulating in the country.

    He lamented the length at which some businessmen would go to deceive the public by securing dubious warehouses and hideouts, where expired products are churned out for unsuspecting citizens.

    Obayi confirmed that most of the products being repackaged were popular brands imported into the country.

    “Perhaps they went overseas to buy these products that are close to their expiry dates and shipped them down here, because they have ready markets where people can buy.

    “More importantly, you are dealing with products that children use.

    “Look at baby diapers that expired in 2015. Imagine what a product that expired in 2015 will do to a baby, if used in 2017.

    “These buildings with the toilets, bathrooms and all available spaces filled with expired products. That tells you the enormity of the crime these people are committing, besides the fact that some of the buildings have poor ventilation.

    “Even if the products are not expired,  the conditions the importer  store the products  have the capacity to make them unwholesome.

    “Look at this wrapper for disinfectant. What they do is to pick the expired ones and use this wrapper with new expiry dates to wrap it. When you have the old products inside this wrap that carries 2018 as expiry date, you will not know you are buying cloned products. The products have lost their active ingredients and efficacy and are high security products because their best before dates has been tampered with.”

    Saying the agency raided one of the buildings in March, Obayi added that the same man owned the three buildings, which he didn’t declare to the agency.

    He said the agency’s offices nationwide are “on red alert and are after any of the products” to safeguard the lives of the public.

    Obayi lauded Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for rising to the occasion by sealing the building.

    Director of Investigation & Enforcement of National Agency for Food Administration Drug and Control (NAFDAC) Mr. Kingsley Ejiofor, who was part of the enforcement team, blamed the nation’ s porous borders for the high incidence of importation of fake and substandard products.

  • SON: Consider safety before buying products

    The Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has advised the public to always consider safety when buying any product.

    The Director General of SON, Mr. Osita Anthony Aboloma said this at a three-day workshop for engineers and scientists on Non-Destructive Testing.

    Represented by Mr. William Okpeh of the Nigerian Institute of Metrology, the SON boss urged the participants to make the most of the training in ensuring reliability with integrity not thrown out to the dustbin in manufacturing, fabrication and service inspection for products as much as control for manufacturing processes, lower production cost and maintenance of uniformity in quality levels is ensured.

    The lead resource person Prof. Terfa Gundu of the Mechanical Engineering Dept of University of Agriculture, Makurdi, stressed that the importance of Non Destructive Testing cannot be wished away as the training would help participants to have an overview of the concept of Non –Destructive testing, the nature of defect and flaws in materials and products and the importance and application of Non Destructive Testing.

    The development, he said will impact the society positively on safety, efficiency and the economy.

    Earlier, the Managing Director of SKB consult, Mr. Olusegun Onidare, reiterated that SKB consults, evolved the training program to equip SON staff for proficient perfomance in Non Destructive Testing methods, to get Nigeria as a people, out of the woods of a never- do-well state as far as safety and economic efficiency for Nigeria remains sacrosanct.

  • Customs destroys poultry products

    The Comptroller-General of Customs (CGC) Compliance Team in Oyo and Osun Command has seized 250 cartons of poultry products smuggled into the country.

    The products were at the weekend destroyed and buried at Moniya in Akinyele Local Government of Oyo State in the presence of security agents, officials of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and Ministry of Health.

    Representative of CGC Compliance Team, Mr. Chukunalo Okolo, who led the team, said the smugglers were intercepted on Ibadan-Ife Expressway.

    He said the items, worth millions of naira, were concealed in 500 cartons of fish.

  • CPC alerts consumers new unregistered products

    CPC alerts consumers new unregistered products

    The Consumer Protection Council (CPC) has warned consumers to be wary of some new and unregistered products being introduced into the markets, saying many of such products are injurious to health.

    CPC’s South-West Zonal Coordinator Garuba Ahmad gave the warning in Osogbo, the Osun State capital, during the week.

    Ahmad said many unscrupulous persons, who were desperate to make money, were flooding the markets with adulterated and injurious new products.

    He, however, said the CPC had the duty to carry out market surveillance, from time to time, to check the introduction of such fake products into markets.

    Ahmad said fake products such as food and beverages worth N56 million were seized in the zone in 2016.

    He said many sachet water factories were also sealed off in the zone for failing to meet the required standards.

    “We ensure quality of products in the markets and also prevent circulation of fake and injurious products,” Ahmad said.

    He appealed to consumers to always check for National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) approved number, address of manufacturers as well as manufacturing and expiry date of new products before buying them.

    Ahmad also said the council received 128 complaints from consumers of which 110 were resolved.

  • IPAN: quality products vital to growth

    For Nigeria to grow its economy, it should insist on quality products certified by accredited laboratories, the Institute of Public Analysts of Nigeria (IPAN) has said.

    Its Acting Registrar Duro Abdusalam stated this on Tuesday at the 25th Training Workshop of the institute in Lagos. It had as theme: The role of public analysts in a depressed recessed economy.

    He said the cost of circumventing lab analysis was heavy, warning that no government  would tolerate it. He said: ”Let’s embrace, vote for, spend on, invest in and rely on laboratory analysis. The cost of circumventing laboratory analysis is dear to pay – loss of revenue, bad image among comity of nations,further improvement and loss of jobs as well as denial of golden opportunities for growth and development of science, technology, etc.”

    He said the institute would continue to insist on its core mandate of proper analysis in every sector of the economy, especially in the food and health, to enable Nigerians enjoy its benefits.

    Specifically, it praised the Lagos State government for its strides in the water sector, adding that it should also extend same to food. He said: ”It is not only about water, even food – all of us here run the risk of slow death through poisoning from unwholesome food, water, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, chemically or biologically-based consumer products. The entire population of Nigeria can be saved by investing hugely in lab analysis and ensuring wholesomeness consumer products. The prevalence of strange diseases and resistance of some of these diseases to drugs are all consequences of neglect. They are preventable.”

    Adusalam, who pledged the institute’s support for the government, praised it for its collaboration with UNIDO on the execution of the key components of the national Quality Infrastructure Project. ”IPAN spreads its hand of fellowship and is ready and determined to assist the ministry achieve its laudable objectives,” he added.

    Hon Tunde Braimoh, who represented the Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker, praised the theme of the workshop, describing it as apt.

  • Ikpeazu hails group for kitting schoolkids with Aba products

    Ikpeazu hails group for kitting schoolkids with Aba products

    The campaign to market Aba and its products is catching on, and its chief promoter Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu is very pleased.

    Ikpeazu has praised a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) Hope Foundation International for donating school materials worth about N500,000 to the pupils of Umuoriehi/Amankwo Primary School in Umuahia South Council area.

    But it was not just the gesture nor what was donated, that pleased the state’s chief executive; the thrill was where the materials donated came from: Aba.

    The founder of the NGO, Madu Prince Gabriel handed out a set of school uniforms, one pair of sandals, one school bag, and a set of writing materials to each of over 100 pupils, expressing his happiness also that the products were all made in Aba.

    Speaking at the ceremony Ikpeazu expressed joy that the school materials which were locally made is in line with his objective of making Aba the industrial hub of made in Abia products in Nigeria and the world in general.

    Ikpeazu said that he is happy that his call on Abians in Diaspora to come home and invest in the state, having provided the enabling environment for investment to thrive in the state is yielding good results.

    The governor who was represented by the General Manager, Abia State Passenger Integrated Manifest/Safety Scheme, (ASPIMSS) Kingsley Megwara said that Gabriel, has done well by remembering his roots.

    He said that the NGO founder who is an international Nurse based in Baltimore, USA was not the only person that passed through the primary school, “But so far he is the only one that remembered to give back to the school system that produced them”.

    Ikpeazu challenged Hopee founder to reach out to other Abians like him in the US to come home to invest and not wait until they come home in caskets, “Gabriel had disclosed to the state government that he was challenged by lack of infrastructure in some schools”.

    The governor said, “I want to disclose that the founder of the NGO that donated these materials had told us that he has concluded plans to build a modern toilet and to sink a borehole in the school”.

    In his speech, the founder of Hopee Foundation International, Gabriel said that the foundation is in place because of his love for the less-privileged, especially the youths, widows, children and other similar people as directed by God.

    Gabriel said that he decided to give back to the primary school where he passed through from primary one through primary six, stating that the foundation hopes to extend the gesture to more schools.

    He identified infrastructures that are lacking in schools in the state, promising to come back to the schools across the state to do more projects that will affect the lives of the pupils.

    He explained that the foundation has projects in Philipines, India, Jamaica, United Arab Emirate, United States of America and in Nigeria to affect lives of people and called on all who has the ability to affect lives to do so early and should not wait to be millionaires before doing so.

    In her speech of gratitude, the headmistress of the school, Mrs. Christiana Chinasa Chika described as a gesture worthy of emulation for Gabriel to came back to his primary school so many years after to say thank you and called on others to emulate him.

  • Counterfeit products: Count us out, says China

    The Chinese Government has debunked claims by some Nigerian businessmen that it dumps fake and substandard goods in their market.

    Rather, the Asian citizens accused Nigerian business men of insisting that quality specification be reduced to reduce cost when they want to import products from them.

    The Organising Committee of China International Auto Products EXPO (CIAPE) Vice Chairman, Mrs. Zhang Yazhu, who stated this, urged the Federal Government to put policies in place to bar importers from asking for and importing low quality goods.

    He spoke in Lagos at the Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry (LCCI) and Nigeria- China Auto Parts Economic & Trade Seminar & Business Matchmaking Meeting.

    She expressed regrets over the dubiousness of a majority of importers who she accused of rubbishing the name of her country for business.

    She said when the goods were imported what the public would know is that they were worthless.

    According to Yazhu, Chinese businessmen love money just like their Nigerian counterparts and may be lured into making quick money due to the pressure of quick gain.

    She, however, said Chinese products were sold all over the world without complaints of sub- standardisation.

    She, therefore, urged policy makers to embark on advocacy that would encourage importers to act with good conscience as far as the lives of their citizenry were concerned.

    She said: “We have big and reliable manufacturers in China recognised by our home government, but if a Nigerian importer decides to buy from the streets, the Government of China will not be held responsible for buying poor quality goods.

    Yazhu said the essence of the expo was to showcase reliable manufacturers from China. “My argument and sincere advice is that Nigerians should stop asking our manufacturers for lower quality goods.

    “The Chinese auto parts market is growing in leaps and bounds and we have even gone past that to engage in energy cars. As a country with a huge population, we are happy doing business with Nigeria but their business men must play by the rules,” she said.

    Advisory Partner & Chief Economist, PriceWaterHouseCoopers (PWC), Dr. Andrew S. Nevin, said Nigeria could be a top car manufacturer if the right policy was in place. He regretted that over 86 per cent of cars sold last year in Nigeria were second hand.

    Nevin urged that the gap between cars made outside Nigeria and those  inside it be bridged, noting that it is the only way the economy would grow. He regretted that South Africa with smaller population has a thriving car industry unlike in Nigeria where used cars are the order of the day.

    On why the auto sector is not developed, Nevin attributed it to lack of an effective auto finance system. He regretted that 87 per cent of cars sold locally were sold in cash, while only a miserly 17 per cent of the cars are financed, especially for those who work in blue chip companies.

    While stressing that no economy could grow without basic structures in place, Nevin said: “There is the need to check the uncontrolled dumping of Tokunbo cars in the country in addition to the importers paying the right duties for imported cars.

    “The government should also work on the structuring of auto parts to ensure strategic distribution and marketing that will ensure that only genuine products are sold unlike the current situation where counterfeit products are passed as genuine parts.”

    Nevin said Nigeria could become a car hub where various brands of cars were manufactured in five years, if the right policies were in place and implemented.

    A Chevrolet brand importer, Mr. Gabrial Omowunmi, narrated his experience on his first visit to China. He said he was apprehensive as he thought every Chinese product was fake. He, however, said that to his dismay, his Chinese partners complained that it is only Nigerians and Angolans that insisted on their producing fake and substandard products.

    Omowunmi advised that stricter measures be put in place for imported products to ensure that quality goods are imported, especially now that there is recession.

    Earlier, LCCI President Mrs. Nike Akande said the auto and allied products sector was crucial to economic growth.

    She observed that over 90 per cent of the haulage of goods and the movement of persons were done through road transportation. She, therefore, canvassed the revitalisation of the railways.

  • Firm unveils pipe products

    Adeem Adex Nigeria Limited, in conjunction with her foreign partners, Dizayn Group has introduced new pipes, manufactured with the latest technology, into the Nigerian market.

    Speaking at the unveiling of the products, the Managing Director/CEO of Adeem Adex Ltd, Adediran Adekoya expressed great joy that different sectors in the Nigerian economy, especially construction, oil and gas,  telecoms would have a big cause to rejoice as the new products from globally-acclaimed Dizayn Group are miles ahead of every other brands in the country at present.

    Adekoya further explained that his partnership with Dizayn Group would not be limited to distributing quality products. “Our relationship with our Turkey based partners would be extended massively into project financing both in the public and private sectors. Indeed we will extend it to include local production beginning from the first quarter of 2019. These efforts will bring greater economic prosperity for Nigeria and create more jobs for youths in the country,” Adekoya explained.

    While commenting the quality of the products, Adekoya said: “Dizayn Group has been in existence for 30 years.  It is one of the biggest names in pipe manufacturing globally.  We felt only such a great name can help a company like ours, founded on the premise of  quality and innovation, to fulfill  our vision of being a one-stop shop for all quality pipes needed in Nigeria.”