The World Bank has raised an alarm that Nigeria might be facing an existential threat due to its dwindling economy.
The international financial institution opines that the dwindling revenue, the continued payment of trillions of naira on fuel subsidy by the government, and the attendant economic challenges put Nigeria in an unfavorable position economically.
The Senior Public Sector Specialist, Domestic Resource Mobilisation, at the World Bank, Mr Rajul Awasthi, raised the alarm at a virtual pre-summit, with the theme ‘Critical Tax Reforms for Shared Prosperity’, organized by the Nigerian Economic Summit Group on Wednesday, August 10. He insisted Nigeria would have to eliminate the subsidy regime eventually.
In a slide he shared during his presentation, which showed Nigeria’s Development Update, Awasthi explained that between 2015 and 2019, Nigeria’s non-oil revenues were among the lowest in the world and as a result the second lowest in spending, and that oil revenues were also falling even when oil prices were higher.
“Nigeria has the largest economy in Africa and the largest country in Africa by population, so it is critical to Africa’s progress. There is no doubt about that. But the government of Nigeria, from the public finance perspective, is really facing an existential threat.
Let’s not downplay the situation. That is the actual reality. he said Nigeria is 115th out of 115 countries in terms of the average revenue to Gross Domestic Product ratio.
Despite the oil prices rising the way they have been, net oil and gas revenues have been coming down because of the tremendous impact of the subsidy.So, what is going to happen in 2022? The federation’s revenues are going to be significantly lower.
They are already very low, and Nigeria is already the lowest in the world out of 115 large countries and this year, it’s really going to be lower than what it was in 2020 because of the debilitating impact of fuel subsidy.”
Speaking on how to get out of the impending threat, Awasthi stated that in the non-oil sector, Value Added Tax compliance gaps were immense and they needed to be breached as well as rationalise tax expenditures.
SERAP has asked the Buhari administration to demand a refund of the N1.4billion it gave to Niger Republic authorities and use the refund to offset ASUU funding.
The Nigerian government on Wednesday, August 3, confirmed that President Muhammadu Buhari approved the purchase and donation of vehicles, worth N1.4 billion, to neighbouring Niger Republic.
This revelation sparked outrage and the Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, said that the donation was to help Niger address its security concerns. Reacting, civil society group, Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) tweeted:
“The Buhari administration must immediately ask Niger Republic authorities to refund the N1.4 billion approved for them to buy vehicles, and use the money to offset the funding for ASUU, so that poor children can go back to school.”
The Lagos State Governor, Mr Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has restated his commitment to providing affordable housing for different strata of citizens in the state.Sanwo-Olu said this on Tuesday during the inauguration of the Channel Point Apartments project executed by the Lagos State Development and Property Corporation and Brook Assets and Resources Limited on Victoria Island.
He said,
“In the housing industry, this is the 16th housing project that we have handed over to our citizens and I want to assure you that there are still a whole lot more. For instance, before the end of the year, I am sure the Ministry of Housing has about four major projects to hand over hundreds of flats to citizens.
We are not just building; we are ensuring that we build affordable housing for different strata of our citizens – from the low budget to the middle budget to beautiful apartments like this in the heart of Victoria Island and we are also building in Ikorodu, Badagry, Epe, Ilupeju, Surulere, and Ikota.
As we pursue this housing agenda, we are also rigorously pursuing a comprehensive urban renewal.”The Managing Director of LSDPC, Ayodeji Joseph, disclosed that its partnership with the private sector will lead to more projects in the next 18 months.
“We are glad that through this joint venture with Brooks Assets and resources Limited, we have been able to deliver 38 family residential units of commensurable value and quality, and the flats have modern facilities,” he stated.
The President of the Nigerian Bar Association NBA, Olumide Akpata, has said that various attempts employed by the association towards the release of a popular lawyer, Inihebe Effiong, have been unsuccessful.
On July 27, Effiong raised an alarm on social media after an Akwa Ibom Chief Judge, Justice Ekaette Obot, sent him to jail for one month following his alleged contemptuous conduct while in court. He alleged that he was sentenced to one month in prison after he asked the Chief Judge to remove the armed policemen in the courtroom. He shared photos of himself in the prison van after he was escorted out of the court premises. Read here.
In an update given this morning on social media, Akpata said efforts to get the matter resolved and get Effiong released from prison have been unsuccessful. According to him, the Chief Judge indicates that she is ”unwilling or unable to further entertain the matter.’ Akpata says findings by the NBA show the court did not follow due process in the committal proceedings.
He said Effiong was not given a ‘fair hearing in court and an opportunity to recant or purge himself.’ He added that the NBA will now explore the option of appealing the decision of the judge.
Read his statement below…
”Last week, I provided an update on the efforts being made by the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) towards securing the release of our colleague, Mr. Inibehe Effiong, who was remanded in custody on the order of the Chief Judge of Akwa Ibom State on account of alleged contemptuous conduct in Her Lordship’s court.
Unfortunately, attempts to secure Mr. Effiong’s release through sustained engagements at different levels have been unsuccessful with the Chief Judge indicating that she was unwilling or unable to further entertain the matter.In the circumstance, the NBA is left with no choice but to work on an appeal against the decision of Her Lordship, and I have instructed the NBA team to work with Mr. Effiong on an immediate appeal.
This is not the outcome that we had expected because there is a high chance that Mr. Effiong would serve out his one-month custodial term before the end of the appeal.
Regardless of the conduct of Mr. Effiong in the courtroom on the date of the proceedings that led to his committal, one thing that has come out from the various accounts that the NBA has so far received is that Hon. Justice Ekaette Obot did not follow due process in the committal proceedings.
Mr. Effiong was not put in the dock, told what his wrong or contempt was, given fair hearing or even an opportunity to recant or purge himself (a courtesy that the Bench should, at the minimum, extend to counsel where counsel’s conduct is said to be contemptuous).
This on its face not only runs afoul of known practice and procedure in such cases but is also unconstitutional. In view of the foregoing and depending on the outcome of our ongoing investigations, the NBA may be forced to take this matter up with the National Judicial Council.”
Nollywood actress, Monalisa Chinda has revealed that the numbers used to communicate with her kidnapped colleagues can easily be traced. Monalisa, who is the Director of Communications of the Actors’ Guild of Nigeria (AGN), took to Instagram to question the kidnap of actress Cynthia Okereke and actor Clemson Cornel after they didn’t return home from a movie location. The kidnappers have demanded ransom of $100k. Expressing shock over the amount demanded by the kidnappers, Monalisa said she doesn’t understand why anyone would think Nollywood actors have such money. She added that the numbers used to communicate with the actors in captivity can easily be traced.
Recall that Isa Pantami, the Minister of Communications and Digital Economy in Nigeria, had directed that all SIM cards should be linked to their owners’ National Identification Numbers (NIN) to tackle insecurity in the country. Phone lines not linked to owners’ NIN were barred from making calls earlier this year.
A broadcaster, Rufai Oseni, has come under fire from the Lagos State Police Command spokesman, Benjamin Hundeyin and the Chief Press Secretary to the Lagos State governor, Gboyega Akosile, for committing a traffic offence.
Oseni first tweeted, claiming that a gun was pointed at him and his vehicle driven away.He said, “A Nigerian police officer pointed a gun at me and forcefully took my keys and drove my car off, because he wanted to enforce a traffic infraction.”
Responding, Hundeyin said,“Rufai, let’s not do this. You admitted to me that you passed a BRT lane. It’s against the law. Your claim that Google maps took you there is not tenable. You disobeyed and resisted the officers. We’ll sanction the officer who misused firearm if proven.”
Oseni fired båck saying, “#BenHundeyin, a gun was pointed at me and my car was forcefully driven off. Now you are lying Ben, if I resisted how did they drive my car off and why did you ask me to send my car details? All I want is justice. I noted there was an infraction.
It’s best you stop the lies!”Meanwhile, the CPS joined the fray saying, “Thank you Rufai, while the #PoliceNG deal with the police officer in their own way, we’d ensure that necessary action is taken against you for driving on BRT lane as you’ve admitted to the police.
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is unlikely to devalue the naira, despite rising demand for the dollar at both official and parallel markets, The Nation has learnt.
A report by Augusto & Co. titled: “2022: The Story So Far & What Lies Ahead”, said the naira, which started this year at N567/$ at the parallel market, now exchanges at N707/$. It is N416.37/$ at the official market.”The report added that the declining value of the local currency “has pushed up the exchange rate premium between the official and parallel markets to N290.63/$.
”The last devaluation of the naira was in May 2021, when the CBN adopted the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Rate (NAFEX), also known as the Investor and Exporter (I&E) forex window rate, as its official exchange rate to the dollar.The report read in part: “We do not expect the CBN to officially devalue the exchange rate despite sustained pressure. At the official market, we expect the naira to hover between N419/$ and N425/$ through the end of 2022.The persistent swings and volatility of the naira exchange rate have worsened in recent time. It began a wild race on July 19, depreciating by 16 per cent to N717/$ on July 28 before appreciating to N707 on July 29.
”The report explained that election-related uncertainty will severely limit capital inflows in the remaining months of 2022, even if domestic interest rates rise further.The Agusto & Co. report noted that long-term inflation is one of the exchange rate stoking factors, adding that the differential between two countries’ long-term inflation rates would be mirrored in the exchange rate depreciation between both nations.In other words, the long-term rate of inflation of the naira compared to that of the US Dollar plays a significant role in what the value of the Naira would be relative to the dollar.This, it predicted, will also impair CBN’s ability to intervene in the foreign exchange market, hence, the reserves level will stabilise at about $41 billion by the end of 2022.Since the Naira has a higher long-term rate of inflation (12 per cent) compared to the US Dollar (two per cent), it is a weaker currency and will depreciate by approximately 10 per cent,” it said.The report enumerated three major mechanisms for exchange rate determination, namely, pegged exchange rate system, floating currency, and a crawling peg.It explained that although each of the options has its own shortcomings, a crawling peg option is more suitable for Nigeria.
As a result, external reserves accretion, which has been ostensibly triggered by the CBN’s interest rate hike, is expected to be constrained.An Economist and Managing Director, Financial Derivatives Company Limited, Bismarck Rewane, said the naira surprised speculators and market watchers by appreciating by 1.5 per cent from N718/$ to N707/$ on Friday.“Most analysts were fearing that an N1000/$ was within shouting distance. As unpalatable as N707/$ may sound, some Nigerians are breathing a sigh of relief. The reason for this respite is mainly because of a naira crunch,” he explained.
He said there is temporary resistance at N718/$ and a market correction which means the naira may appreciate N695/$ before falling again.These are technical movements which do not address the fundamental weaknesses in the Nigerian forex market and the short supply of dollars from the CBN and exporters. That means, there is a limit to how much naira is available in the system,” Rewane said.
A cursory investigation of the Nigerian economy reveals diverging fortunes for the finance sector led by banks and the real sector led by manufacturing. With the decline in manufacturing, now at 9% of gross domestic product from a height of 20% in the early 1980s, pundits would expect banks’ fortunes to decline with the belief that the real sector, manufacturing et al, sustains banks at least for developing economies. Such logic has been turned on its head.
In regions of the country, while manufacturing has disappeared, bank branches have increased. Meanwhile, the Central Bank of Nigeria has assumed the role of retail banks by directly funding all types of sectors from farming to power generation and aviation. These banks had ignored government-sponsored funds, like SME FUND and AGRICFUND, sequestered for intervening in these sectors. These funds had been set aside from profits of banks to encourage them to finance the real sectors. This they refused to do leaving the apex bank to fill the gap and is being done in an inefficient manner.
Historically, banks were not mere payment intermediaries but catalysts of economic development and transformation. Banks evolved by warehousing savings of citizenry and lending to investors thus financing trade and later the industrial revolution. Japanese banks paid the cost of making Japan the second-largest world economy to the detriment of Japanese banks’ balance sheets. America did not have a central bank for its first 140 years yet it transformed through decentralized banking and cross-border financing from the old world.
Beginning of banks in Nigeria is attributed to Sir Alfred Jones of Elder Dempster. His company, Bank of British West Africa, has since morphed into First Bank Nigeria. No doubt the first 100 years or more of banking in Nigeria was attached to colonial apron strings. Activist banking in Nigeria, beyond changing currency, started during the tenure of the present Governor of Anambra State as CBN governor. Prof Charles Soludo identified a core weakness in Nigerian banking: under capitalisation. He set out to correct it through the banking consolidation policy. While the survivor banks were better capitalised the DNA of Nigerian banks didn’t change, in reality, it got worse because with the easy monies raised from the public they proceeded on self-aggrandisement rather than developing the economy.
The local version of the global financial meltdown almost brought down the Nigerian economy as well, but a new governor of the CBN, Lamido Sanusi, stemmed the tide. He had earlier saved First Bank from the jamboree of marginal loans that undercut the new generation banks that arose under Soludo’s consolidation policy. Those new generation banks helped to pump up the Nigerian Stock Index to unprecedented heights of 60,000 index points.
Before the global financial meltdown struck, these banks had applied double standards of action on the population. In the drive to achieve consolidation targets, and later play the stock market, they highlighted market appreciation of shares as a selling point to buyers of bank stocks. On the other hand, they discounted the same shares when used to secure loans. At the height of the financial crisis, banks stopped accepting bank shares as collateral.
These banks are also reaping from fields they did not cultivate. Their complicity in not providing finance for manufacturing and the real sector had led to the exodus of Nigerians abroad, the first wave in the 80s to 90s, and a new wave today, the Andrew and Japa syndromes respectively. Banks reap from these forced emigrations through commissions on emigrants’ remittances and their relationship with Western Union, MoneyGram, etc.
Finally, banks discouraged and killed off most manufacturing with high-interest rates padded with other charges. The question is how is it banks flourish while the real economy remains in the doldrums? The answer lies in the fact that, for long, Nigerian banks have not been hooked to the material economy. They have remained in the Nigerian economic space like parasitic leeches on exposed parts of human body, simply sucking on blood as rent takers. You gather this from their annual reports, which revealed over 50% of banks’ profits, is from the commission on transactions not from loans to businesses. When you factor in that a large chunk of their non-commission profits is also from financing short-term trading, including imports of finished items then we recognize how pernicious they are.
In a bid to change the above narrative, the penultimate governor of the CBN, Sanusi, introduced some changes. He started a phased withdrawal of commission on turnover. He reduced cheque clearing time from five days to three days. With this removal, the phased removal of COT was stopped and renamed administrative charges and account maintenance charges. Thus the rent taking by banks has continued.
At the individual customer relationship level, these banks behave as though they are masters at the top of the pyramid. Customer service and relationships are appalling. It starts at bank entrances, where the guards could be downright uncouth. In the banking hall, you can perceive profiling going on when guards approach customers and ask why they are in there.
There is the wilfulness to harness financial resources, not theirs. Entrepreneurs lucky to get loans and have been repaying diligently are suddenly told they still have liabilities. How come simple reconciling of loan accounts ends up in courts often? Also, banks have stopped sending hard copies of bank statements to customers limiting this information to emails. In addition, issuance and use of cheque books that can inform of account ownership are becoming anachronistic. The import of this is that beneficiaries of a deceased person can be wittingly denied access to their benefactor’s bank assets as they have no access to parents’ emails and no hard copy might be found linking the deceased to his accounts. Bankers know the implications of this, rather than put a stop to it they have surreptitiously anchored it to the system, thus inheriting accounts of deceased persons.
How about loss of funds in accounts to banks when digitisation was introduced? I have personal experience with this. My brother and my dad’s accounts in Nigerian banks were lost due to movement from analogue to digitisation. This is in apposition to my experience of UK banking where after 27-year hiatus the account that was opened in the analogue year of 1977 was restored without fuss in 2004. This highlights the DNA problem of Nigerian banks.
The time has come to reshape Nigerian banking and reset its DNA to achieve national objectives. 85% of the N500 trillion price tag on the Medium Term National Development Plan 2021-2025 is to be financed by Nigerian banks. This remains a tall order if our banks remain the way they are, reinforcing the need to re-engineer their DNA to deliver on national aspirations.
What to do? Break the rent-taking culture by removing avenues for commissions on transactions that go through banks. This is a continuation of what Sanusi started by moving to phase out COT. Make them seek their own forex independent of CBN and crude oil receipts. Implementing this will make CBN’s non-oil export initiative RT 200 achievable. Increasing competition in the finance sector by encouraging entrance of new Investment Banking to energise the sector. The phenomenon of ‘too big to fail’ should not be allowed at this stage of national development.
Appointing bankers as governors of CBN should be reconsidered. Three of the last four CBN governors have been from banks and this have missed results. Having bankers as governors indeed is an unusual practice that has underlying conflict of interests to which a banker governor is exposed. It has contributed to the current situation where we have the tail wagging the dog.
In 2019, Tecnimont company was awarded contract by the NNPC to carry out a complete integrity check and equipment inspections of the Port Harcourt refinery complex.
The House of Representatives has queried the $49 million contract for integrity test on Nigerian refineries awarded to Tecnimont company by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) in 2019.
Ganiyu Johnson, the chairman of the House ad hoc committee investigating the state of the refineries, issued the query during a meeting with the company and NNPC officials on Thursday in Abuja.
Mr Johnson said the company had failed to execute the contract properly as the state of the refineries were not verified.
He also blamed the NNPC for failing to undertake regular turn around maintenance on the refineries leading to their current poor state.
He asked the company and the NNPC to submit the contract documents, especially the approval by the Federal Executive Council and payment proofs including the level of work done to the committee for scrutiny
Nigeria has four refineries, owned by the government, but imports basically its refined petroleum products.
The refineries are located in Port Harcourt, Warrington and Kaduna.
In 2019, Tecnimont was awarded contract by the NNPC to carry out a complete integrity check and equipment inspections of the Port Harcourt refinery complex.
The Phase 1 Rehabilitation contract is worth approximately $50 million and entails a six-month assessment at sitete with relevant engineering and planning activities for the complex.
The complex is composed of two refineries totaling an overall capacity of approximately 210,000 bpd (barrel per day).
The Association of Flight Attendants Union President Sara Nelson slammed Elon Musk on Friday over allegations that he sexually propositioned a SpaceX flight attendant.
According to a report published by Insider Thursday, Musk was accused of exposing himself to one of his SpaceX employees and asking her for sex.
Later Thursday, the Tesla CEO denied the allegations which he called “wild” and “utterly untrue.” “The attacks against me should be viewed through a political lens — this is their standard (despicable) playbook — but nothing will deter me from fighting for a good future and your right to free speech,” said Musk Thursday.
However, Nelson said that the allegations against the billionaire are a “stark reminder” of why flight attendants organized decades ago. “Musk’s alleged actions in the cabin are a stark reminder of why Flight Attendants first organized 76 years ago: to beat back discrimination and sexual harassment/assault by claiming our power to put misogyny and the privileged corporate class of men in check,” Nelson told The Hill.
SpaceX and the unnamed flight attendant reportedly reached an out-of-court settlement of $250,000, according to Insider. The settlement included a nondisclosure agreement.
Nelson said that Musk thinks that his wealth “gives him the right to do anything that he pleases, regardless of the rights, humanity, or protestations of others.”
“The fact that he required Flight Attendants to become licensed masseuses on their own dime demonstrates what we see all too often — the super rich think they own everything and have to pay for nothing,” said Nelson. She continued: “Flight attendants are not just another accessory on Musk’s little rocket. His corporate America no longer holds the power it tried to take from workers.
We know our worth and the power we have together. We’re here on earth, there on SpaceX, and everywhere. He’s going to have to face it or face the final frontier without any of the people who make it possible.”
The news comes amid the news that Musk reached a deal with Twitter to purchase the social media platform. The move was cheered by lawmakers and conservatives who say that the CEO will bring the principles of free speech back to the platform.
Elon Musk has overtaken Facebook founder, Mark Zuckerberg, on the list of the richest social media owners, after his acquisition of the largest share in competing microblogging firm, Twitter.
It was gathered that the top five social media billionaires are worth almost half a trillion dollars, about $465.9 billion to be exact, however, only Musk and Zuckerberg, crossed the $100 billion mark, according to data collated by Ripples Nigeria.
Elon Musk
Zuckerberg started the year on the list of the richest social media owner. However, he fell to the second spot, behind Musk, the wealthiest man on earth, whose networth is $282 billion as of April 7, 2022.
Ripples Nigeria recalls that Musk purchased 9.2% in Twitter, which has a market valuation of $38.45 billion, to add the social media firm to his investment portfolio, which includes automotive business, Tesla, and Space company, SpaceX.
Mark Zuckerberg
Zuckerberg, ranked second, is worth $79.6 billion, drawing his wealth from Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and virtual reality business. The 15th richest man, according to Forbes, is also planning to add digital currency to his portfolio.
Although, Zuckerberg’s firm, now known as Meta Platform (Facebook), is worth $606.86 billion, according to Thursday’s trading, making it the world’s most valuable social network.
Zhang Yiming
The third spot was taken by TikTok founder, Zhang Yiming, who is an Internet entrepreneur from China. The 39-year-old’s total fortune is estimated at $49.5 billion, sitting on the 26th spot.
Yiming’s Bytedance created TikTok in 2015, and it has a market valuation of about $250 billion according to Forbes report in 2021. The billionaire also owns news aggregator, Toutiao.
Ma Huateng
The internet company of Chinese billionaire, Ma Huateng, Tencent Holdings, owns WeChat, China’s largest social media gathering, although the messaging app was created by Allen Zhang.
The 50-year-old businessman is ranked 33rd on Forbes world’s richest, with a networth estimated at $39.7 billion, which he gross from Tencent, carmaker Tesla, streaming service Spotify, and Snapchat.
Pavel Durov
Pavel Durov is the founder of Telegram, and the Russian billionaire is worth $15.1 billion, ranking 130th in the world – thanks to the over 600 million users connecting on the social app.
Durov and Telegram were both based in Russia before he relocated to become a French citizen and based his business in Dubai, following his refusal to share users’ information with Russian secret service.
First Bank of Nigeria Limited has announced the appointment of three additional Executive Directors by the Board.
The company said in a statement on Wednesday that the appointment of the directors was subject to the approval of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
According to the statement, which was signed by the Company Secretary, FBN Holdings, Seye Kosoko, the directors include Olusegun Alebiosu, Executive Director, Risk Management and Executive Compliance Officer; Oluwatosin Adewuyi, Executive Director, Corporate Banking; and Ini Ebong, Executive Director, Treasury and International Banking.
The statement said prior to their appointments, Alebiosu was the Group Executive and Chief Risk Officer of FirstBank Group, while Adewuyi was the Group Executive, Corporate Banking where he was responsible for the Bank’s corporate banking business following the exit of the previous Executive Director.
It added that Ebong was the Group Executive in charge of the Treasury and International Banking at FirstBank where he was responsible for the Bank’s Treasury business, its international banking franchise across sub-Saharan Africa covering six countries, among others.
Over $4.9 billion was attracted by Africa as investment deals, and Nigeria accounted for the lion share compared to funds received by other countries on the continent, a new report shows.
Nigeria topped South Africa, Kenya and Egypt in the boardroom deals, which was split into unannounced disclosed funding of $4.65 billion, and undisclosed deals of which accounted for $300 million.
This brought the total investment deals into Africa to $4.9 billion according to African Investment Report 2021 by Briter Bridges, which used data sourced from investors.
The $4.9 billion was secured in more than 480 deals which was led by Nigeria on the country segment, and Financial Technology (Fintech) on the market category.
According to the report, Fintechs accounted for 62 percent of the total funding, while 8 percent and 7 percent were of the capital went to health & biotech and logistics respectively.
A further breakdown showed that investors concentrated their funds on payments, solar home kits, assets financing, Point of Sales (POS), banking, while most of the deals were recorded by payment, transfers, banking, medical delivery, B2B commerce, and professional skill development amongst others.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has knocked commercial banks across the nation for not promoting the eNaira launched with fanfare in October, 2021.
The apex bank also said commercial banks in Nigeria are not doing much to educate the Nigerians about the many benefits of eNaira platform.
Officials of the CBN took turns in Kaduna on Wednesday to lecture youth corps members, hundreds of students from tertiary institutions across the state and other members of the public on the eNaira initiative.
Head, Development Finance Department of the CBN, Aminu Muhammad, an assistant director, made this known while speaking in Kaduna stressing that financial institutions that are under the purview of the CBN are supposed to play critical roles in growing the economy.
Speaking at the CBN Fair which held in Kaduna and simultaneously in Kano, Muhammad said the commercial banks were not effective in promoting the eNaira.
He said; “Commercial banks are lagging behind and that is why the CBN is coming in to intervene. For example, the information asymmetry like what we saw when they were talking about the e-Naira in Kano. Kaduna people had that awareness, earlier unlike in Kano, which is because of information asymmetry.
“All the banks knew about e-Naira but members of the public do not know. Some people probably might be hearing it for the first time. There is imbalance of information as regards the e-Naira, and that is why the CBN has come out to sensitize the public, give people the opportunity to come in so as to block that information asymmetry.”
The National President of Nigeria Society of Chemical Engineers (NSCh) has revealed that Dangote Oil Refining Company will be the highest employer of chemical engineers in the country when the refinery comes on stream.
The Society’s National President, Engr. Saidu A. Muhammed, stated this during the NSCh’s visit/tour of the Dangote Refinery and Petrochemical project at Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos at the weekend.
He commended the company for its contribution to energy security in Nigeria.
Engr. Muhammed, who led members of NSCh on a tour of the Dangote 650,000 barrels-per-day refinery project in Lagos, to mark the end of the association’s 51st-anniversary celebration, said the industries in Nigeria have not been able to absorb the over 1,000 engineers yearly from Nigerian Universities.
Muhammed stated, “We, the Nigerian Society of Chemical Engineers, have keenly been watching the progress of the refinery project.
“When completed, the refinery will be the singular largest employer of chemical engineers in the country. Nigerian Universities turn out about 1,000 chemical engineers every year and the avenues for employment have been very scarce.
“The industry has not been able to fully absorb the number of chemical engineers that passed out of the universities years ago”.
Also speaking, Technical Consultant to the President of Dangote Group, Babajide Soyode, said the commencement of the firm’s refinery will help Nigeria exceed its gas and diesel demand.
Soyode stated that production from the Dangote Refinery will also push output of jet fuel and kerosene beyond the current supply level, while increasing export volume of the products.
What you need to know
Nigeria has been struggling to meet its oil quota of recent, and this made Libya to surpass the West African country as the largest oil producer on the continent.
It was gathered that Nigeria’s output fell to 1.23 million barrel per day in October [down from 1.25 million bpd in September], against Libya’s 1.24 million bpd in October, which climbed from 1.16 million bpd of September.
Some of the country’s production lines has been reporting damages, which affected about 60,000 bpd last month. Royal Dutch Shell Plc had contributed to the fall in output following a pipeline halt, forcing the oil giant to suspend exports from its Bonny Oil Terminal, to avoid leakages.
Other production lines like Forcados was on a force majeure, hence, not contributing to the 1.6 million quota expected from Nigeria, while Nembe Creek Trunk Line was also damaged at the end of Q3 into Q4 2021.
Aside from this costing Nigeria, the country also losses part of the commodity during export for refined products and spend heavily on the refine process.
Can Dangote refinery fill a void?
Dangote refinery is expected to stop the tradition of refining crude oil outside Nigeria, as it will be refining 650,000 barrel-per-day once it begins operation next year.
Soyode said, “This connotes significant positive economic impact on Nigeria and the West African region, transforming Nigeria from a net importer to exporter of refined petroleum products and curtailing significant foreign exchange outflows.
“Additionally, the availability of excess fuel will also provide a catalyst for eliminating Nigeria’s expensive fuel subsidy,” he added.
The oil and gas is one of many commodities produced from the infrastructure which is located at Lekki Free Trade Zone in Lagos. The facility will produce fertiliser as well, while also serving as power plant for the community close to it.
“When completed, this infrastructure complex will create a significant economy of scale for one of Africa’s largest industrial conglomerates, supporting jobs in both Nigeria and other African countries”, Soyode said.
The wealth of Africa’s richest, Aliko Dangote, dwindled on Tuesday after two of his companies, Dangote Cement and Dangote Sugar, continued their disappointing trade periods.
Dangote Cement share had been trading flat since it appreciated end of Q3 this year to N280 per share from N261, while Dangote Sugar stock depreciated by 6.32 percent.
The drop in the sugar stock value has cost investors N13.36 billion quarter-to-date, with total investors fund declining from N211.35 billion to N197.99 billion within the same period.
Dangote Cement’s flat trade and the drop in the sugar’s capital market price has held back the fortune of the billionaire who occupies 191 position on Forbes billionaire index.
According to the wealth index, Dangote’s networth was down to $13.5 billion as of November 23, against the $13.6 billion his estimated fortune was in October.
As of last year, the cement boss was said to be worth about $8.3 billion, with his wealth declining in the last five years, when he was worth $14.7 billion in 2015.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has released N200 million worth of eNaira to banks for use in the country.
The CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, disclosed this at the launch of the digital currency on Monday in Abuja.
He said that there had been overwhelming interest and encouraging response in the system, adding that 33 banks, 2,000 customers, and 120 merchants had already registered successfully with the platform, which is available via an app on Apple and Android.
Emefiele said: “Today, customers who download the eNaira Speed Wallet App will be able to perform the following:
“Onboard and create their wallet; Fund their eNaira wallet from their bank account; Transfer eNaira from their wallet to another wallet; Make payment for purchases at registered merchant locations.
“Mr. President, today you make history, yet again, with the launch of the eNaira – the first in Africa and one of the earliest around the world. Mr. President, as you make groundbreaking reforms, there had been continuing debates on the true value of the Naira.”
The CBN governor said the launch of the eNaira was not a one-off event, adding that the bank would continue to fine-tune the digital currency.
He added: “A key feature of the eNaira is that it can be accessed without internet, an attribute the government hopes will engender financial inclusion.
“Therefore, Nigerians should expect to see additional functionalities in the coming months, including Accessibility and onboarding of customers without BVN, and the use of the eNaria on the phone without the internet will further drive financial inclusion, making Nigeria one of the first countries in the world to deploy the CBDC via USSD on phones without relying on internet connectivity.”
Justice Taiwo Taiwo of the Federal High Court, Abuja, on Thursday gave the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) the approval to use the eNaira for its digital currency.
A firm, ENaira Payment Solutions Limited, had challenged the CBN’s use of the name at the court.
In a document signed by its lawyers, Olakunle Agbebi & Co, the company accused the apex bank of trademark infringement for adopting the eNaira.
It asked the CBN to desist from using the proposed name.
At Thursday’s proceedings, the CBN legal team led by D. D. Dodo (SAN) urged the court to dismiss the plaintiff’s motion to halt the launch of the digital currency.
In his ruling, the judge held that the use of eNaira would be in the national interest.
He ordered the apex bank to go ahead with the launch of the eNaira.
The launch of the digital currency which was slated for Friday was later postponed.
The judge said he expects the CBN to adequately compensate ENaira Payment Solutions Limited for using its trademark name.
The Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) said it has completed the incorporation of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited in line with the new Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).
The Registrar-General of CAC, Garba Abubakar, said this on Wednesday at the quarterly meeting of heads of agencies in the federal ministry of industry, trade and investment.
He noted that the registration was completed the same day after fulfilling all requirements set for the incorporation of the NNPC Limited.
A quick search on the CAC website on the new company returned information as being registered on September 22, 2021 with ‘Active’ status. It retained the NNPC Towers on Central Business District, Herbert Macaulay Way, Abuja as the business address.
The two Persons with Significant Control (PSC) of the company are the Ministry of Petroleum Incorporated and the Ministry of Finance Incorporated.
President Muhammadu Buhari had directed the incorporation of the new firm a fortnight ago. The company is expected to take off within six months as stipulated in the PIA, marking a concrete reform of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).
According to Information on the CAC website, to register a public limited company not having a share capital, it will cost at least N20,000.
Meanwhile, NNPC has expressed willingness to partner with Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited to sell its shares to the public in two years time.
Kyari in a statement when a team of NGX directors visited said, “The recent signing of the Petroleum Industry Act has opened up unique opportunities to create value for our shareholders. As such, there will be the need to access capital to build on our positioning as the largest corporation in Africa and expand capacity.
“We will, therefore, be pleased to collaborate with NGX on the short-term and long-term financing options available in the market and I must thank you for taking the time to visit us today to take this conversation further.’’
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Wednesday revealed how the digital currency, e-Naira, would boost cross-border trading in the country.
The apex bank will launch the pilot scheme on the digital currency in partnership with Bitt Inc., a Barbados-based financial technology company on October 1.
The CBN’s Director of Information Technology, Rakiya Mohammed, who spoke at a virtual forum of the committee on the e-business industry in Abuja, said the adoption of the digital currency would boost cross-border trade and enable the apex bank to formulate better macroeconomic policies.
She said: “If people adopt more of the usage of the e-Naira, then we will be able to have more data to formulate better macroeconomic policies.
And when countries come on board and create their own digital currencies then we will be able to have a faster exchange of currencies, and therefore we might be able to boost cross-border trade at a much lower cost.
“Of course, payment efficiency, even though we know that Nigeria has one of the best payment systems in the world, we will still be able to improve on that.
“We believe that the e-Naira will be a catalyst for the digital economy because the people who are outside the formal banking sector will be integrated.”
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