Tag: Sahara

  • Sahara, PAU unite on human capital in power sector

    Sahara, PAU unite on human capital in power sector

    Sahara Power Group has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Pan-Atlantic University (PAU) to drive enhanced human capital in the power sector through transformative engineering education and fostering collaboration across industries. This is expected to shore up “empirical capacity and impact” required to make the power sector “innovative, adaptable and sustainable” across the value chain.

    Describing the partnership as a unique example of “town-gown relations”, the Managing Director, Sahara Power Group, Dr. Anthony Youdeowei, said “This is the beginning of a very fruitful engagement between Sahara and PAU. We look forward to commencing this promising collaboration, first with Egbin Power Plc, Sahara’s Power Generation Company and then cascading to our other entities, Ikeja Electric and First Independent Power Limited.

    We are confident that this partnership will chart the roadmap towards transforming Nigeria’s power sector.”

     According to the Head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering, PAU, Professor Christian Bolu, the partnership will help PAU students to achieve an “outside perspective” and understand the importance of sustainable business practices in solving the real-life challenges of the power sector. “This is definitely an opportunity for Pan-Atlantic University to not only benefit from the resources that the Sahara Power Group will provide in the collaborative partnership, but also, while it serves as a chance for us in the academia, with support from Sahara Power, to address challenges faced within the industry,” he said.

    Read Also: AFD, EU  back NAPTIN to boost capacities in  power sector 

     Speaking on the details of the agreement, Head, Talent Management, Sahara Power Group, Henry Ajibola, stated: “We are very confident that this collaboration between Sahara Power Group and Pan-Atlantic University is the step in the right direction. Having Sahara Power employees go to Pan-Atlantic University as adjunct lecturers means a transference of practical knowledge as well as experience.” He further emphasized that these efforts will subsequently create a symbiotic relationship where academia and industry collaborate seamlessly for mutual benefit, ultimately contributing to the advancement of engineering education and practice in Nigeria.

     Similarly, the Director, Alumni and Internship, Pan-Atlantic University, Nkiru Ukachukwu, said PAU was looking forward to the impact of the partnership on the expertise of PAU students, especially with regards to functional knowledge of how the sector operates and what is required to transform the power sector in Nigeria. “With this collaboration we can already project a pipeline of young engineers that are future ready and equipped with the know-how to tackle Nigeria’s peculiar power challenges,” she stated.

  • UNDP, Sahara Group promote sustainable energy, SDGs

    Sahara Group and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) are collaborating to promote reliable access to affordable and sustainable energy, and mainstream the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the private sector with a specific focus on SDG 7 (affordable energy).

    The partnership, according to Sahara Group’s spokesman, Bethel Obioma, was formalised in New York during the official signing of a Memorandum of Understanding by UNDP’s Regional Director for Africa, Ms. Ahunna Eziakonwa and the Sahara Group Executive Director Mr. Temitope Shonubi. In attendance were UNDP Administrator, Achim Steiner and Nigeria’s Permanent Representative  Ambassador Tijani Muhammad-Bandé.

    “650 million people in sub-Saharan Africa do not have access to electricity.  UNDP looks forward to partnering with Sahara Group to ensure that everyone in this region has access to affordable energy, a critical part of our work supporting countries to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.” said UNDP Administrator Achim Steiner.

    “At Sahara Group, we believe that access to energy is critical to accelerating sustainable development, especially in developing economies. As a leading energy provider in Africa, we are passionate about the partnership with the UNDP and are confident that it would inspire more interventions and ultimately facilitate access to reliable, clean and affordable energy for all Africans,” Shonubi explained.

    Africa’s energy demands are poised to rise with rapid urbanisation and economic growth.  The 2030 Agenda and the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), specifically SDG 7, call for universal access to affordable, reliable, and modern energy services, including clean fuels and technologies.

    As regards the agreement, UNDP and the Sahara Group will work to identify best avenues to build on their respective network and experience to create power solutions that will help drive sustainable development and provide support for SDG nationwide monitoring and reporting.

    The Sahara Group was appointed as one of the two African companies on the Private Sector Advisory Group set up by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals fund (UN-SDGF) in 2016. It has since played a significant role in driving that mandate by creating the Private Sector Advisory Group (PSAG), inaugurated by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. It comprises over thirty leading businesses and corporate foundations in Nigeria.

  • Sahara advocates girl-child awareness through film

    Sahara advocates girl-child awareness through film

    The need for stories of the girl child has been given a boost as Sahara Group presented Asharami Speaks gathered stakeholders in the movement for giving voice to the girl child in Lagos last Wednesday.

    The event which held at Four Points by Sheraton, Lagos had as topic for discussion, ‘Enhancing Girl Child Empowerment Through the Medium of Film.’ The partnership being implemented under Sahara Group’s Grooming Film Extrapreneurs initiative targets empowering 90 girls aged 13 and 19 in three African countries – Nigeria, Ghana and Cote D’Ivoire – in the art of film making.

    Among discussants at the session include young filmmaker and girl-child activist, Zuriel Oduwole, Toyosi Akerele-Ogunsiji, Social Entrepreneur, Dakore Akande, Screen Actress and Amnesty International Ambassador and Rita Dominic, Screen actor and producer. Others are Ramsey Nouah, Screen actor, producer and director, Bodunrin Sasore, film director and screenwriter, Stephanie Busari, a producer and journalist with CNN Africa and Jade Osiberu, film director and screenwriter

    Also present was Sahara Group’s Executive Director, Tonye Cole.

    The programme, which started on January 8 ended on Wednesday, January 17.

    Speaking on the event, Oduwole said she was hopeful of the project’s success.

    “I like the fact that Sahara Group sees some value in what I am doing with Girls’ Education across the world, and just like the African proverb, if you want to go fast, go alone, and if you want to go far, go together,” Oduwole said.

    “I think I have gone very fast in the last five years, since I started my project at age 10.

    Head, Corporate Communications, Sahara Group, Bethel Obioma, explained that the project is expected to drive the advocacy message for girls’ rights, highlight key issues affecting girls across the three African countries and equip the girls with the foundational skills required to become film makers.

    “Our hope is that the initiative would inspire and replicate Zuriel’s success amongst other girls her age in Africa,” he said.

    “Above all, Sahara Group is particularly passionate about the fact that the project would give traction to ongoing conversations and interventions geared towards the pursuit of Gender Equality and Quality Education, being Goals 4 and 5 of the Sustainable Development Goals.”

     

  • Let us stop our children perishing in Sahara and Mediterranean

    Let us stop our children perishing in Sahara and Mediterranean

    It has now become a regular occurrence for young Nigerians to be deported back home from different parts of Africa, Europe and the Americas. Some of them are part of the multitude being quartered on an island in Papua-New Guinea following refusal by Australia to allow their boats to land in their country. This uncontrolled migration of our people to near and distant countries has become an embarrassment for Nigeria and the African continent. Several Nigerians are in jail in China and many are facing capital penalties in some countries in South-east Asia and in South Asia where drug trafficking is punishable by death. I was surprised to read that Nigerians were also being deported from Iceland. What the hell is any Nigerian doing in frigid Iceland? Of course we know why this is happening. It is probably due to economic hardship at home and the breakdown of the extended family system which in the past provided a cushion against economic hardship. On top of this is the fact that our job opportunities are not expanding in tandem with the thousands if not millions streaming out of our secondary and tertiary institutions. Our educational institutions are not training people for self-employment but rather for the elusive white collar jobs in government bureaucracy and offices of commercial and financial institutions.

    Agriculture which would have provided a safety valve still employs antediluvian tools and implements our grandparents used to till the ground and expect young people to embrace the sector. These back breaking agricultural practices are no longer attractive to young people. Mechanization of agriculture seems to be one of the ways governments can help solve the problem of unemployment driving our young people to the perilous journeys across the Sahara desert and the Mediterranean Sea to Europe. While it is true that lack of opportunities at home is largely responsible for this dangerous migration and human wastage because it is well known that close to 50 percent of those who leave Nigeria reach their target countries safely, many die in the desert as a result of their unpreparedness for the harsh conditions in the desert. Others are killed by the various militant gangs roaming the open spaces not dominated by government presence. Many who reach the shores of the Mediterranean are thrown into the sea during the journey to Europe.

    What are the ages of these young people? We are told they are between 14 and 35. Some can neither read nor write. Some only have primary education while some are secondary school graduates who find it difficult to progress due to poor financial situation of their parents while others are graduates of our tertiary institutions like Advanced Teachers Colleges, polytechnics and universities. Quite a large proportion are underage teenage girls who are being trafficked into brothels in continental European countries. I personally saw young Nigerian girls lining the sides of intercity roads in one of my visits to Italy. In Paris and Rome, one is ashamed to see grown up men usually from francophone West Africa, southern Sudan and East Africa making nuisances of themselves hawking all kinds of stuff to tourists. This kind of sight is very degrading because it demeans the stature of the black man everywhere. One also finds this kind of people on the streets of New York selling all sorts of things that may be stolen goods. Nigerians have not gone this far. But I am told our people are already involved in the drug trade in places like Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. I do not know if any of our people have been killed in the President Rodrigo Duterte-led war against drug traffickers in the Philippines.

    Recently, the bodies of 25 young girls were discovered in the Mediterranean. Their ages range between 14 and 18. They were said to have come from Nigeria and Niger republic. But I suspect they were all Nigerians. The governor of Edo State also recently welcomed home about 100 deportees from Libya. Most of them were girls who I must say are lucky to be alive. In some cases, their parents sold their houses to give to these children for their transportation to Europe for work as domestics. This is what their recruiters told them. Some of these girls after having been duped were taken to shrines to take oaths of allegiances to their Nigerian patrons. If they succeed in smuggling them to Europe, they were beholden to work for them for years before they could become free to work for themselves. If caught they were forbidden to say a word to implicate their traffickers. This is some kind of modern slavery. What I find galling is that some parents either out of ignorance or poverty collude with those taking their children into slavery. Some of the girls also go into it with their eyes wide open knowing they are being recruited into European brothels. We knew this through the wonderful work Mrs Eki Igbinedion, the wife Lucky Igbinedion erstwhile governor of Edo State did when her husband was at the helm of affairs in the state. It is a shame that she was not encouraged to continue her work of enlightenment about this problem in the state as soon as her husband left power.

    The problem of teenage girls being recruited was and is still concentrated in a few states like Edo, Delta and Anambra states. No one is sure about why. But I suspect previous participants in this odious trade return home with money without telling the truth about what they went through to get the money and others then followed them. But why these states and other states in the south-east? My guess is that some kind of western education is much deeper here than other parts of Nigeria and because of the capitalist disposition of the people there, the desire for rapid upward mobility which only money can provide drive the people to want to have money by all means.

    Migration is a feature of human society. The so called push-pull factor drives people from one place to another. The problem nowadays unlike in the past is the rising tide of racism in the western world where people of different skin colour are not welcome. Even on the continent of Africa, we treat ourselves with hostility.  Ghana and Nigeria in the late seventies and eighties expelled nationals of each other back home as economic undesirables. Xenophobia against other Africans and particularly against Nigerians is the regular phenomenon in South Africa. With advancing technology and particularly robotics, there is a growing dearth of routine jobs for nationals of countries in the western world with the result of hostility to outsiders who come to compete with locals with the few jobs available. In short, there are no jobs except highly skilled jobs in technology, engineering, the biological and physical sciences and medicine and nursing. Service industries like banking, computer sciences and accounting still offer possibility of employment for highly qualified and knowledgeable Africans. The point I want to make is that long term prognosis of the horrible unemployment situation for our youth is not very good. This is not only sad but dangerous bearing in mind that perhaps 70 percent of our population is below 30 years of age.

    We have to make our environment investment friendly and embark on industrially adding value to our agricultural produce. We must also embark on mechanized agriculture to ensure food security and surplus for export. To avoid impending explosion, we as a people must prevail on our governments to face squarely this problem by investing our national resources properly not only to take care of the present population but those coming after us. The growing criminality in our countries is a pointer to what is to come if we don’t take care of our people and prepare for an uncertain future. The rampant cases of kidnapping, armed brigandage, armed robbery and violence everywhere as if we are already a failed state are manifestation of deep seated malaise in our country. The case of Nigeria is particularly concerning in the overdependence on hydrocarbons export which the advancing technology and the concern for the environment would soon make unprofitable. We must act quickly now that there is still some room to manoeuvre to declare a national emergency on youth unemployment and attendant violence. If we tarry, it may be too late a few years from now.

  • Tragedy in the Sahara and Mediterranean

    Countless Nigerians are dying almost daily in the Sahara Desert beyond Nigeria’s northern borders and in the Mediterranean Sea north of the desert. These are part of the large numbers of Nigerians who, in total desperation, are attempting these days to flee to Europe from the hopelessness of Nigeria. Many are those who have become tired of standing on line fruitlessly and endlessly for visas at foreign visa offices, or those who are downright unable to put together even the little money needed for application for any visas, or those who hear of some other persons who have made it to Europe through this enormously dangerous route and who believe that they too will be lucky, or those who are influenced by equally desperate and ignorant friends to jump at what they believe to be a viable option but is essentially a jump into the hands of death.

    The news of this disaster that is consuming countless citizens of our country never fails to come these days. Stories of groups of Nigerians and other Africans getting stranded in some small oases in the desert are common. So are stories of groups perishing on the desert sand, or in poor, out-of-the-way and isolated oasis. Quite commonly, guides who contract to take groups across the desert are not as informed about the desert conditions as they claim to be; and, in such cases, the groups are simply defrauded of the money they collect among them to pay the guides. It is not uncommon for parents at home in Nigeria to suddenly receive telephone calls from unknown persons from some strange place in the desert, with demands for more money for their son or daughter who is said to need more money to get on further beyond a point in the desert.

    Some months ago, members of a family in my large extended family suddenly called me in the night to tell me, in great agony, that their daughter was in the Sahara Desert somewhere, and that they had not known until a telephone call from the desert that she had left Lagos where she had been living. It was a sad and scary development. Through a long chain of connections, we managed to contact the office of a Nigerian agency that was handling such matters. By and by, we learnt of a Nigerian woman who is located in the said agency abroad, and who has been doing very excellent work in finding and extricating some of the Nigerians who get themselves enmeshed in this terrible, and potentially deadly, mess.

    But only a very few ever get so lucky as to be successfully traced, retrieved, and sent back home to Nigeria. As for the rest, a few do make it to Europe – there to find themselves in a life with countless, and mostly harrowing, possibilities; many never make it to Europe, but perish in the desert or in the sea.

    A few days ago, the Nigerian media reported on the same day two stories in this tragedy. One story was about some 140 Nigerians who were rescued in the deserts of Libya and brought back home to Nigeria. These 140 are part of the minority who, from time to time, get lucky. The other story on the same day was about 26 young Nigerian women whose dead bodies were delivered to Italian authorities by a boat that had crossed the Mediterranean Sea from the North African coast.

    The instances are not infrequent of large numbers of people dying on boats that do make it across the Mediterranean Sea. In such cases, no information is usually available about the circumstances leading to the mass deaths. There is no information available about the mass deaths of the 26 Nigerian women of a few days ago.

    Much larger numbers of people are known to be dying by drowning in the Mediterranean. The causes of the drowning are fairly easy to tell. The boats that carry the desperate immigrants across the sea are smugglers’ boats. Most of these boats are poor in condition, and also poor in the quality of their crews.  And, for the voyage across the sea, they are almost always grossly overloaded – because very many immigrants from Sub-Saharan Africa and even parts of the Middle East are desperate and rushing to reach Europe, while the smugglers are eager to collect as much in fares as possible. The boats therefore often run into trouble, or sometimes even break up or capsize, on the high sea, resulting in the drowning of many people.

    There have been reports of smugglers packing people in the holds meant for cargo, holds where no humans are supposed to be carried. And there have been reports of people suffocating and dying in such holds. Could it be that this is what happened to the 26 Nigerian women whose dead bodies arrived in Italy a few days ago on a Spanish war boat? Were the officials of the war boat engaging in some share of the human smuggling business, or had they merely offered the good service of collecting dead and living immigrants from distressed boats on the high sea and bringing them to the nearest port in Italy?

    It was reported that the boat brought the dead bodies of the Nigerian women in its refrigerated holds, and that there were as many as 375 smuggled immigrants abroad the boat. Italian officials are reported to have promised a thorough investigation of this horrid story, and there have been indications of suspicion that the women might have been sexually abused and then killed on the voyage across the Mediterranean Sea. However, as has commonly happened in the past, the world is likely to hear no more about this whole incident.

    The Nigerian media reported this past Tuesday that the federal government intends to evolve policy to curb illegal migration of Nigerians to other countries. Naturally, every patriotic Nigerian would welcome even this bare intention, in the hope that some welcome direction will soon emerge in this situation. The development involving continual deaths of large numbers of Nigerians in the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea has long deserved the most serious attention of our federal government. It dehumanizes countless Nigerians on a regular basis, and it casts deep aspersions on our country’s image – and even on our country’s presumption of itself as a viable country in the word.

    So, we look eagerly to see our federal government’s policy. We Nigerians must all hope that it will not take the form that our federal government’s policies have tended to take in recent years in response to serious social situations – the direction of resorting to authoritarianism, of calling out the military, and of supporting all these with grand statements of threats, of drawing red lines in the sand – and of ludicrously claiming that change had been thus achieved.

    No. Such directions will not work. What we have here is a very serious socio-economic and ethical malaise, with very deep roots not only in the poverty that our rulers have foisted upon us as a country, but also in the pattern of relationships that predominates over our country. The tap root of it is the poverty – deep and hopeless poverty. But the general atmosphere of mutual hostility and hatred among Nigerian peoples is a major strand of the roots. Large numbers of our youths cannot see how they belong in this country. Many psychologically regret being born in Nigeria, and are prepared to take even the most manifestly dangerous steps to get out. Many of these young people do hear the stories of the frequent death and ruin on the Saharan and Mediterranean path out of Nigeria, but that does not deter them from trying that route. A wise country would not threaten such people or set up measures for constraining or coercing them. Fundamental changes are needed to convince these people that their country and the rulers of their country love all its citizens and all its peoples, that the topmost government of their country is not there by conquest but by love, that such love holds out some hope of general change and improvement, and that, even though the poverty is yielding only slowly, Nigeria is nevertheless a home and a heritage worthy to hold on to. For Nigeria to have any chance of making it in the world, this kind of new direction must plainly begin to evolve.

  • NNPC, Sahara gas vessels leave South Korea

    The  liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) vessels, MT Africa Gas and MT Sahara Gas,   jointly acquired by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Sahara Group have left South Korea to begin  operations.

    The vessels will berth in Houston, United States, to convey their first consignment of gas expected to be delivered to the West African coast next month. The vessels’ operations are expected to actualise NNPC’s vision, which harps on boosting the availability of the commodity in Nigeria and the West African sub-region.

    According to Sahara Group spokesman, Bethel Obioma, the two vessels will address the lingering challenges of supply, affordability and fraudulent activities of individuals and organisations seeking to adulterate cooking gas due to scarce supply.

    MT Africa Gas has already taken the lead, commencing its maiden voyage by sailing towards the Caribbean/US Gulf Region. Sahara Gas is due to follow suit in the coming weeks. He said industry stakeholders have commended the Dr. Maikanti Baru led NNPC for taking bold steps at tackling the scarcity of cooking gas nationwide.

    The stakeholders lauded Baru’s giant interventions towards ensuring sustainability, safety and reliability for millions of consumers, who depend on the commodity for their daily energy needs.

    Considered as a cleaner, much safer and more affordable alternative to firewood and kerosene, the acceptability of LPG in the sub-region has been affected by some challenges over the years. These hiccups include low supply, poor logistics and lack of LPG vessels in the region.

    According to him, with the recent unveiling of two LPG vessels, being acquisitions of West Africa Gas Limited, a Joint Venture of NNPC and Sahara Group, there is a renewed optimism for what is popularly referred to as cooking gas in the country.

    The Joint Venture is run by two companies, NNPC LNG Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary of NNPC and Sahara Energy’s oil and gas trading arm of Ocean Bed Trading Limited.

    Working through the JV, NNPC’s LPG policy will, in addition to improving supply within West African states, check the menace of deforestation in the sub region. “It is expected that in the long run, the growing negative impact of climate change across the globe will be drastically reduced,” Obioma said.

    The NNPC’s chief had at the inauguration of the LPG vessels in South Korea, said it was “an outstanding achievement” for Nigeria, considering the fact “that the Joint Venture between NNPC and Sahara is already recording success stories within a short period having been established in 2013”

  • Sahara Group renovates Tanzanian library

    Energy firm, Sahara Group, has renovated the library at Pugu Secondary school in Tanzania; opening a new world of learning and development for over 900 students and 76 teachers of the prestigious institution.

    The school, which has a celebrated heritage of producing presidents and notable Tanzanians, hitherto experienced a lull in its reading culture due to the dilapidated library.

    The project was carried out by Sahara Group’s subsidiary, Sahara Tanzania in conjunction with Sahara Foundation, the Group’s Corporate Responsibility vehicle and READ International, a non-government organisation.

    Speaking at the inauguration of the library in Dar es Salam, Bethel Obioma, Head, Corporate Communications, Sahara Group, said the organisation was delighted to be given the opportunity to empower youths in Tanzania.

    “In addition to renovating the library, Sahara also donated new books which we believe will inspire the students to pursue their dreams and aspirations with renewed vigour. At Sahara, we are passionate about providing platforms that transform lives,” he said.

    Whist formally inaugurating the library, Tanzanian Acting Commissioner for Education, Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, Mr. Nicolas James Buretta, said he was confident it would “improve access and equity in education for the current and future students of Pugu Secondary School.”

    Pugu’s Headmaster, Juvenus Mutabuzi, said the library was a “new dawn experience” for the school, adding that it had paved the way for Pugu to reinforce its position as a leading institution of learning in Tanzania.

    “The excitement of the students says it all. We are proud of Sahara. The teaching staff and our students will definitely take advantage of the new library to enhance the school’s academic excellence,” he said.

    Also speaking at the event, President of the Students’ government, Elias Rwegerera said the new library would rekindle the students’ passion for reading and ultimately improve their academic performance.

    “On behalf the students, I would like to thank Sahara Foundation and READ International for renovating our library. We would like you and other oganisations to continue donating more books to enable us read more in order to become the leaders of tomorrow,” he said.

    Sahara Foundation’s Manager, Babatomiwa Adesida, said Sahara was also exploring the introduction of its extrapreneurship framework in Tanzania to provide a platform that finds, creates and connects young entrepreneurs in emerging markets.

     

  • Buhari: Nigeria committed to Western Sahara’s liberation

    Buhari: Nigeria committed to Western Sahara’s liberation

    President Muhammadu Buhari has reinstated the commitment of the Federal Government to the liberation of Western Sahara from Morocco.

    The President, who spoke through Ambassador Kabiru Akau, at the inauguration of the Nigeria Movement for the Liberation of Western Sahara , said it was inhuman for Morocco to continue to exploit a fellow African country.

    Buhari noted how Nigeria, during his tenure as military Head of State, sponsored the admission of Western Sahara into the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), now African Union (AU).

    The President regretted that years after the United Nations (UN) ordered a referendum for the Saharawi people to determine their future, Morocco frustrated moves on the referendum and continued to exploit the resources of the people.

    He said it was time for Africans and lovers of freedom to stand up and speak against the continued occupation of Western Sahara by Morocco.

    The President called for stiffer sanctions on Morocco, if they continued to deny the Saharawi self-independence.

    In a keynote address, ex-Nigeria Permanent Representative to the UN, Prof. Ibrahim Gambari, accused the world body of paying lip-service to the liberation of Western Sahara.

    He said the UN had not done much to ensure that its resolution on Western Sahara were carried out, adding that the world body was unable to get its Security Council to endorse its resolution on Western Sahara.

    Gambari said it was regrettable that 45 years after the UN agenda, Western Sahara’s decolonisation was still incomplete and the Saharawi were still denied their basic and legitimate right to decide their future.

    He said: “UN’s role in the Western Sahara has not produced results. This sad situation was reconfirmed a week ago during Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon’s visit to Rabouni after meeting the Polisario Front Secretary General, Mohammed Abdelaziz.

    “Ki-Moon admitted that the parties in the Western Saharan conflict have not made any real progress in the negotiation towards a just, lasting and mutually-acceptable political solution.

    “Indeed, 45 years after the UN agenda, it is regrettable that Western Sahara’s decolonisation is still incomplete and that the Saharawi are still denied their basic and legitimate rights to decide their future.”

    NLC President Ayuba Wabba said through collective efforts and action, organised labour and its civil society allies have played a key role in the independence of many nations.

    He said the struggle for the liberation of Western Sahara was in conformity with the belief that injury to one worker is injury to all.

    Convener of the Movement and ex-President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) Dr. Oladipo Fashina said it was regrettable that Morrocco, a former colonial territory of France and Spain, could turn around and colonise a sister country at a time colonialism were disappearing globally.

    ASUU President Dr. Nasir Isa Fagge announced that the union would sponsor three students from Western Sahara for their postgraduate studies in Nigerian universities.

  • Sahara joins UN, others to launch sustainability report

    Sahara joins UN, others to launch sustainability report

    Sahara Group, an energy and infrastructure  conglomerate last week in New York, United States, joined other stakeholders for the launch of the Sustainable Development Goals Fund (SDG-F) new report titled: “Business and the United Nations: Working together towards the Sustainable Development Goals: A framework for Action.”

    The UN estimates indicate that achieving the SDGs will require between $3.3trillion and $4.5 trillion a year.

    Its Co-Founder and Executive Director, Tonye Cole, SDG-F Director, Paloma Duran and other speakers gave insight into the report, which provides a roadmap on how the 2030 agenda for sustainable development can be effectively driven through collaboration between the private sector and other stakeholders.

  • Sahara urges investments in alternative energy

    Sahara urges investments in alternative energy

    The attainment of affordable energy through investments in alternative sources will enhance socio-economic growth in rural communities across the world by 2030,  Executive Director, Sahara Group Mr. Tonye Cole, has said at a meeting dedicated to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) at the just concluded 70th United Nations General Assembly in New York, United States.

    Cole who represented Sahara Group – a leading African Energy, Power and Infrastructure Conglomerate – on the Advisory Board of the Sustainable Development Goals Fund (SDG-F),  told delegates that governments in developing nations need to explore more partnership platforms with the private sector in the quest for alternative energy sources.

    The meeting, which focused on Sustainable Development Goal 7 (Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all) was attended by President of the World Bank, His Excellency (H.E.) Mr. Jim Yong Kim, Foreign Minister of Denmark, H.E Mr. Kristian Jensen, Prime Minister of Benin, H.E Mr. Lionel Zinsou, European Commissioner for International Cooperation and Development, H.E Mr. Neven Mimica and President of the African Development Bank, H.E Mr. Akinwumi Adesina, among others.

    “Substantial investments are required to achieve affordable and sustainable energy in developing nations. Wind and solar energy are possible options that can be harnessed in rural communities where consumption is relatively low. With the right strategy and unwavering commitment from all stakeholders, we will be setting solid foundations for deploying alternative energy sources to transform lives and small businesses for disadvantaged communities across the globe,” Cole said.

    Cole said governments and power companies need to collaborate on sensitising the populace on the value chain of the power sector to ensure support for policies as well as address incidences of energy losses and theft that disrupt energy availability in developing nations.

    Delegates at the meeting were unanimous in urging the development of location specific action plans as the world seeks to achieve SDG 7. World Bank President, Kim said following its collaboration with the UN on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the World Bank was excited about SDG 7 and further partnership with the private sector in a bid to ensure universal access to affordable, reliable and modern energy for all by 2030.

    Adesina urged African nations to take ownership of the process of taking affordable energy to rural communities, adding that his tenure at the ADB would focus on promoting sustainability and maximum impact for all interventions midwifed by the institution.

    Sahara Group has among other initiatives and collaborations, been promoting alternative energy sources through the “Sahara Light Up Nigeria Challenge,” a capacity building competition that seeks to produce inventions that support renewable, alternative and sustainable sources of power supply. The competition, which the company hosts through Sahara Foundation, inspires students of higher institutions of learning across Nigeria to explore opportunities for achieving sustainable power supply within their environment.  Sahara is exploring opportunities of replicating the project across other locations where it operates.

    In 2015, some students from the winning institution, Kaduna Polytechnic, invented a self-running hydro-power system that runs solely on the kinetic energy of water. The energy produced is stored in a 75-litre enclosed water tank that houses a pump and other materials required to drive generation of electricity. The technology is made from locally modified and recycled parts to ensure that it is environmentally friendly.