Tag: substandard

  • SON raids market for substandard tyres

    SON raids market for substandard tyres

    The Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) yesterday raided various shops/ warehouses selling substandard tyres at Obalende market in Lagos.

    The raid which was carried out by the Lagos office was to drive home its commitment to zero tolerance for substandard goods in the country.

    The State Coordinator, Ugbaja Joseph, said the unscrupulous activities plaguing the nation have refused to stop.

    He added that SON would continue in the fight till importers and manufacturers desist from the act.

    During the raid witnessed by the media and carried out by both the SON officials and riot policemen, various substandard tyres and expired ones were seized.

    About seven warehouses/ shops were sealed during the raid which lasted for three hours.

    Ugbaja said these goods continue to find their way into the country through the ports destroying lives, property in addition to hindering economic development.

    He said the agency would engage in constant raids of outlets of tyre dealers across the country.

  • Weeding out illegal, substandard laboratories

    Weeding out illegal, substandard laboratories

    It is no more business as usual for substandard  and illegal medical laboratories,including those in hospitals and clinics as the Medical Laboratory Science Council of Nigeria, National Task Force on laboratory/IVDs is on their trail.They are being weeded out .

    The task force has sealed off 28 facilities in Lagos for failing to meet minimum standards, or for operating without council’s approval or both. Also, four persons were arrested for quackery and impersonation.

    Reliving his experience, Deputy Director, External Quality Assuarance and Safety, Godwin Ikpetaye said ‘’one of the critical experiences we encountered was a case of a sonographer who also runs a laboratory alongside his sonograph practice at the Ojo area of Lagos.

    “The man actually employed a medical scientist but incidentally, the employee was not an experienced one, by the standard of the Medical Laboratory Science Council of Nigeria. The type of laboratory scientist that this young man was able to employ belongs to the level of certain laboratory scientists that should be undergoing mentorship. It was obvious that he doesn’t have experience, and being made to do more than he is trained to do. Going to copies of results in the outlet, we observed that the laboratory issues out certain results that are only compatible with people who are in the mortuary, nobody alive can have such a result. For instance, the laboratory gave out a result for electrolyte urea and creatinea, which is used to assess the kidney function and probably electrolyte balancing in the body. If the kidney is bad, the person will need a kidney replacement or perhaps dies if he doesn’t get replacement.  If the electrolyte balance is not maintained and the organs that are supposed to maintain it are not able to, that will lead to organ failure and the person will obviously die. We sort to find out why this was so, and found out that the person is not experienced, his area of specialty is hematology and he is just from school and is not supposed to be doing what he is doing because he has not been mentored enough. Unfortunately, the result had been taken to a medical doctor, we only met a copy of what he has issued out and so that gave us an impression of how much damage he must have caused. We had no choice but to seal the lab and arrest them and took them to the police. They have made statements to the police and we intend to prosecute them for criminal activities. The lab is around Ojo area in the state.”

    Ikpetaye said there are several others who engage in unprofessional acts but the public should always look out for the Neon signs and the certificate issued by the council, conspicuously displayed in any registered laboratory, “where you see a lab, because of lack of quality control, lack of external quality assurance, they issue results that are damp.For instanc, there was a particular lab that we looked at and for only this year, year  January and February not talking about last year, he has had up to 100 patients coming in for malaria parasite test and all the results were positive.  And we know that is not possible, you can’t have all your patients coming in for malaria parasite screening, testing positive, the problem we feel then  is that either the person is inexperienced,or doesn’t know what he is doing or is forging them or the reagents he is using are bad or for whatever reason, we couldn’t come in terms with what he was doing. When you don’t have quality control to control your processes, you don’t have external quality assurance to compare your results with standard processes, the tendency is to issue out such results that are not reliable.”

    He said worse is the plethora of results for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and sexually transmitted infections (STIs), “This is a challenge of incompetence, most of the people who issue these results are not competent, they may have been trained, but not up to the level they are operating in. For first of all, you are trained in the class room then trained in the laboratory on different aspects of diagnosis. Not all of us got all the knowledge we have in the classroom  , we grow and get skill based on acquired knowledge. Patients also feel that if they don’t get a positive result the laboratory scientists have not done anything, that is, they have not carried out any diagnosis so they go ahead to forge results and give fake results. That is why we advise the public to go to only approved laboratories that are considered competent and can issue reliable results.”

    The Chairman of the Task Force/IVDs Inspection, Dr Lawrena Okoro, said within the first week of their assignment, in Lagos, 116 facilities were visited while others that have minor flaws have been warned to put corrective action in place without delay. It would be recalled also that the Task Force carried out a similar exercise last year, combing the nooks and crannies of Abuja, during which 15 facilities were sealed off.

    Dr Okoro said, “We are already combing the nooks and crannies of this mega city, flushing out quacks that have no business being in any medical laboratory; we shall rid facilities and markets of fake or substandard reagents, kits, chemicals, equipment and consumables. In doing so, we have sometimes encountered encumbrances along the way, including the nefarious operators that bolt away on sighting members of the task force, and those who remove their signs and pretend they never really existed. Some of the facilities were also found to be operating without regard for the approved guidelines.”

  • Fear as substandard steel products flood market

    Fear as substandard steel products flood market

    Reinforcement bars are critical to maintaining the integrity of concrete used in construction. According to experts, a compromise can lead to building collapse. Yet, some manufacturers have flooded the market with substandard iron and steel, putting lives and property at risk. The manufacturers are also defrauding the government in underpayment of taxes and levies. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    Manufacturers of substandard iron and steel products are on the prowl. This has raised fears of possible collapse of more buildings across the country.

    The Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) raised the alarm that substandard had iron and steel products have flooded the market. The agency said it took painstaking monitoring and enforcement by its task force to discover that most manufacturers of the products are now cutting corners on the required standards.

    SON, through its immediate past Director-General, Dr. Joseph Odumodu, said steel products that were supposed to measure 16 millimetres (mm) in diameter were discovered to measure only 14mm. This, according to him, falls short of acceptable standards by 2mm with a significant impact on the overall strength. Those that were supposed to measure 12mm measured only 10mm in diameter, while those that should be 10mm were only eight mm.

    The diameter of the steel products, which standards have been compromised by local steel manufacturers, is not the only infraction that pushed SON into the panic mode. The agency also observed serious violations in the length of various units of steel products.

    “The length of a unit of steel bar is supposed to be around 12mm, but after our enforcement exercise, we discovered that each unit of product in the market had lengths that were short by as much as 2mm,” Odumodu said.

    The obviously worried former DG broke the news  at a press conference  in Lagos. He said apart from violation of standards in terms of physical properties like diameter and length, the manufacturers also failed to meet acceptable standards in the area of chemical properties such as carbon and manganese content. With regard to the products’ carbon content, which is an impurity, per unit product, the SON chief stated that most products in the market at the moment had in excess of 0.37 per cent. This, he said, violates the stipulated standards for iron and steel products coded as NIS 117 of 2004 and BS 4449 of 2005.

     

    Manufacturers short-change government

    Going by disclosures by the Standards monitoring/regulatory agency, the activities of the manufacturers of substandard iron and steel products have also left Federal and state governments holding the short end of the stick. The Nation learnt that the manufacturers totalling about 20 companies in the country are also defrauding and short-changing Federal and State Governments in terms of payment of adequate taxes and levies.

    Hear Odumodu: “The kind of feedback we got from our survey showed that most of them never had invoices. We have a situation where people pay N200 million for a consignment without an invoice. They just say pay into a certain account; there is no invoice; there is no Value Added Tax (VAT). It became also obvious that they are also short-changing the Federal Government of Nigeria because if there are no documents to show the cost of the product as against other applicable taxes, it means that the Federal Government is being short-changed.”

    For him, it was perhaps, the height of unpatriotic attitude. He recalled, for instance, that the action of the manufacturers came at a time the agency was working on getting government to introduce a backward integration policy in the sector similar to the one that turns the fortunes of the cement sector around, leading to almost 90 per cent of Nigeria’s cement requirements being met by local manufacturers.

    His words: “Our plan was how we could work with them to ensure that government comes up with a policy to support made- in-Nigeria steel products. The next phase for us was how to lobby so that government could bring up a policy like we had for cement and others, because at that point we already had almost 90 per cent of the Nigeria’s cement requirements being met by local manufacturers and that was actually where we were.”

    He, however, expressed regrets that towards the end of last year, SON’s monitoring started showing that there were challenges. “Apparently some of these challenges were based on the survival instincts on the part of the manufacturers, because we started observing that a number of issues were cropping up that showed that they were beginning to put in the market substandard steel products,” he alleged.

    It is easy to see why SON is agonising over the development. Sometime in 2012, the agency celebrated the sanitisation of the re-enforcement bar market. SON insisted at that time that manufacturers should ensure that they had relevant equipment for chemical and other kinds of tests including having unique identification marks for all their products in the market.

    According to the DG, the only challenge the agency had at that point was for the imported re-enforcement bars, which of course, it finally also brought on the same fold. “We also set up a task force to monitor them on monthly basis and things were looking up,” he added, pointing out that the first major alarm that things have started falling apart was around September 2015.

     

    More building collapse looms

    The preponderance of substandard steel products in the market has fuelled fears that more buildings may collapse across the country. “Most of the re-enforcement bars in the market today are substandard, and that is why we felt that it was important we alert Nigerians especially people within the building industry, construction, structural engineers and all those kind of people who are involved in this business,” Odumodu said.

    It was not a false alarm. The former SON chief recalled, for instance, in June 2014, a 5-storey building that was meant to be a school for children came down in Onitsha, the commercial city of Anambra State, southeast Nigeria because of the use of substandard building materials.

    The building, which was completed, collapsed before it was commissioned. It was meant to house about 400 children. Although no life was lost, he said “we would have actually had an accident that would have killed more children than a Boeing 747 coming down. So, that gives you an idea of how bad or how fatal the situation can become.”

    The Nation learnt that part of the problem in ensuring standards in the steel industry stems from inability to create batching within the industry. Odumodu explained further: “If manufacturers made a product in the morning and another one in the evening, they cannot differentiate between the first one and the second one, because every code on the product is the same. That is unlike the food and pharmaceutical sector, for instance, where every batch is coded differently.”

    This means that the regulatory agency relies on the batch manufacturing records within the factories. It also means that members of SON taskforce will have to go back to these factories to find out how many batches they have made, where they were sold to, and then see whether will be able to trace further.

    However, this process, which is no doubt cumbersome, according to Odumodu, “draws issues about products manufacturing and recall procedure because in a lot of countries there are clearly defined recall procedures.” Besides, the agency’s has less than 1, 400 people, which make monitoring and enforcement in the industry difficult.We are not closing down any company

     

    Remedial efforts in top gear

     Despite the lack of products manufacturing and recall procedure in the country and the challenge of limited staff, SON says it is determined to clean the Aegean stable. Consequently, it has taken a number of steps to avert the impending danger posed by substandard steel product.

    “We have decided on a number of actions to immediately reverse the situation. Effective from February 9, 2016, no sale of reinforcement bars can happen in Nigeria without verification scaling, which means that if a batch is normally supposed to weigh 40 tonnes, it must be weighed before it leaves the premises of the seller. If it is not weighed, those people who are dealers will become responsible for whatever violations that may have occurred,” Odumodu announced.

    He added that SON staff will continue to measure the calibration status of the weighing equipment that are used in the factories and any company that is found with the intention of cheating the consumer will be sealed for a minimum of 90 days no matter what the reasons are. He said once the scale does not comply with the calibration status as required by law, the culprit will be punished.

    With regard to carbon content, which actually affects the tensile strength, the DG said SON is now insisting that all furnaces that are not electric arc must be replaced within the next six months, because what manufacturers are currently using does not have the capacity to remove impurities. “So they must elevate their technology to the use of electric arc furnace or any other technology that is better,” he said.

    According to industry experts, most of the irons currently selling in Nigeria come from scraps and scraps are known to have a way of being contaminated. If a manufacturer is using equipment that does not have the capacity to remove contaminants then sooner or later there will be errors, which could be fatal.

    This is why SON is insisting that the electric arc furnace or any better technology must be effectively employed within the next six months. “If manufacturers require some assistance in ensuring that they are able to bring those equipments fast enough, we would assist”, SON volunteered.

    Also, all iron and steel products must now carry clearly stated identity marks. This was sequel to the agency’s discovery that some products in the market either did not have identity marks or some of the marks were blurred, which makes if difficult to say a particular product is from A, B, C manufacturer.

    “If your own mould, for any reason, has a challenge, stop manufacturing and correct it. We are also insisting that within six months, you must also state the diameter explicitly on the ribs of the irons besides carrying out chemical analysis on all batches and these records should be available for inspection of our compliance officers,” Odumodu said.

    Stating that the message is for manufacturers, dealers, and retailers who constitute the three major levels within the steel industry value chain, he warned that  anybody or company that fails to comply risked closure and prosecution.

  • SON confiscates substandard products worth N4b, says Odumodu

    SON confiscates substandard products worth N4b, says Odumodu

    The Director-General of Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), Dr Joseph Odumodu, has said the agency has seized substandard products worth four billion naira since the beginning of the year.

    Odumodu said the prevalence of sub-standard goods had reduced from 85 to 40 per cent with the launch of the National Coalition on the Zero Tolerance Campaign.

    He said when he assumed office, he was confronted with an organisation lacking in capacity and a market that was saturated with fake and sub-standard goods.

    He commissioned a baseline study, which showed that the prevalence of sub-standard goods was as high as 85 per cent while the level of awareness about their hazards was almost zero per cent.

    Through a six-point agenda, including consumer protection and engagement, improving the competitiveness of local products, aggressive conformity assessment, global relevance and capacity building, improvements have been made.

    Following the amendment of the SON Act, the agency now has powers to arrest, prosecute and jail purveyors of fake and sub-standard products.

    SON, in a statement by its Director/Head of laboratory Services, Mr. Louis Njoku, said the six-point agenda was  designed to help industries build their quality assurance infrastructure while complying with SON’s zero tolerance against fake and sub-standard goods.

    “These and other measures stabilised the market and reduced the prevalence of sub-standard goods from an initial level of 85 to less than 40 per cent in less than three years, and raised the level of consumer awareness from almost 0 to as high as 65 per cent.

    “Now, the agency’s ‘operation flush’ promises to reduce the level of sub-standard products to one per cent by the end of 2015,” the statement said.

    Under Odumodu, SON has granted country-wide ISO certifications, the ISO 9000, to several firms and public institutions and has enumerated many more standards in the market, especially for local produce.

    SON is spearheading the formulation of a National Quality Policy and is also fast-tracking the establishment of National Quality Infrastructure.

    “In line with this objective, SON midwifed the inauguration of a committee on establishing a National Accreditation Body. This was done in May 2013 in Lagos. The agency secured international accreditation of its food technology test laboratories in Nigeria. The set objective of all these efforts is for Nigerian-made products to meet global competitiveness,” the agency said.

    It added that an aggressive enforcement regime has  curtailed the negative activities of importers and manufacturers of fake and sub-standard goods.

    The statement added: “SON offers free certification for SMEs in the country in order to prepare them for export and put an end to Nigerian goods being rejected in the international market.

    “Now, Nigeria’s local products would henceforth enjoy high patronage at the global market, following the recent accreditation by International Laboratory Accreditation Co-operation (ILAC)’s unprecedented testing and certification of SON food laboratories.”

    It said a new ultra-modern, world class laboratory facility is nearing completion in Ogba; Lagos, which was inaugurated on October 3.

    It also embarked on standardisation of cement as a means to stop building collapse. “The inclusion of labeling, date of manufacture, expiration and other measures will enable SON’s officials towards effective monitoring, enforcement and flushing out of all quacks in the sector.

    [ad id=”403656″]“However, one of the multi-national cement companies operating in Nigeria obtained a Court order restraining SON from enforcing the new cement grade standards.

    “Standardisation exercises in the cable sector have promoted at least N20 billion worth of investment in cable manufacturing in the country.”

    SON said it also pioneered a National Quality Policy aimed at establishing the appropriate framework for the development and publication of national standards and to reposition the country among the top 20 industrialised nations of the world.

    SON has also integrated its e-Certificates with Nigeria Integrated Customs Information System (NICIS) for processing Form ‘M’ and Pre-Arrival Assessment Report (PAAR). The essence, it said, is to facilitate trade by eliminating direct contact or visits to SON office for certification processing.

    It constructed the National Metrology Institute (NMI) in Enugu. “The NMI is one of the missing quality control links required to house the national primary standards for Nigeria and regulate the operations of enterprises and corporations so that measurement systems used for commerce in Nigeria are not subject to abuses and exploitation.

    “After several laboratory analyses, the agency’s enforcement unit has made a public evacuation and destruction of several products ranging from tyres, electrical equipment, diapers, phones, shaving sticks, cables and bulbs, among others.

    “Following SON’s Operation flush drive to ensure substandard, fake, adulterated and counterfeit products are completely flushed out of the nation’s economy and markets across the country, the impact of SON’s activities under the leadership and watch of Dr. Odumodu is positively felt in the nation,” the statement added.

  • NUPENG, SON to flush out substandard products

    NUPENG, SON to flush out substandard products

    Fake lubricant and base oil producers have been put put on notice –  the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON)  plans to join forces with National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) Engine Lubricant Dealers Branch, to stop their trade.

    The two bodies have set up a working committee made up of 10 members (five each) to set out modalities  for a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that would set  the framework for  a planned task force that will drive the change within the next 90 days.

    Speaking at the event, which held at SON’s Lekki Office, Lagos the Director-General, Dr Joseph Odumodu said the move is a welcomed as it would enable a cleaner oil and gas sector, adding that there was need to sanitise the sector in the overall interest of Nigeria.

    Odumodu said  it was on the government interest in seeing that the oil and gas lubricant sub-sector is run in accordance with the laws of the land, hinting that collaboration with NUPENG is what SON needs to bring sanity and due process in that industry.

    “I want to assure you that SON will collaborate with you in this battle. Some people bring in base oil and try to  adulterate it. Nigeria cannot be a safe haven for such unscrupulous importers or blenders. We will flush them out with joint collaboration and ensure that genuine business flourish in the sector.

    He assured that  base oil,  which does not meet the quality that  suit our modern day automobiles/machinery in terms of the SAE ranges and API classifications, would be removed from the market.

    According to him,  it is important to  bring in other stakeholders and groups in the sector “so that we can eradicate substandard goods from oil and gas sector”.

    ”We shall sign an MOU by first setting up a working committee and a task force team  that will bring sanity to the sector with in 90 days,’’ he said.

    Reacting, Comrade Braimoh spoke against the damages caused by adulterated products to engines and machines and the attendant effect on the economy, expressing worries over complaints about  poor quality of imported lubricant brands to the detriment of locally produced ones.

    He said this mandated the need that SON and NUPENG should synergise to reduce the incidents of adulterated and substandard products to the barest minimum for the good of the public.

    Other top executives of SON at the meeting, include: Mr Bede Obayi, Director Enforcement, Engineer; Timothy Abner, Head Petroleum; Mr Ofalayo, Group Head Chemical Technology, Engineer Gabriel Abba, among others.

  • SON to tackle substandard products

    The Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Chinese Certification and Inspection Group (CCIC) to stop the influx of substandard goods.

    SON Director-General Dr. Joseph Odumodu said the partnership would open a new chapter in quality assurance.

    Odumodu said: “We started querying the effectiveness of the SONCAP regime and we later found out that some of its features were not properly implemented. These are the issues we are going to address with this collaboration.

    “Every product that must come into the country must undergo some form of testing and certification. That is why we have said the independent accreditation agency has to take a sample of the batch that is being exported to Nigeria or any of its neighbours.

    “There was gross under-reporting of transactions involving SONCAP certificates. SON will now issue the certificates.”