DPR approved 14 refineries in 2020 – Report

The Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) granted licences to 14 private investors to build refineries in the country last year.

The agency disclosed this in its latest report on the list of valid refineries obtained by Ripples Nigeria on Sunday.

The 14 refineries, according to DPR, have the capacity to refine 362,000 barrels of oil per day, (bpd).

This was in addition to the 579,000 bpd capacity refineries approved by DPR between 2017 and 2019.

The report revealed that the refineries are to be located in four states.

These are – Delta (7), Bayelsa (3), Akwa Ibom (3) and Ogun (1).

Ripples Nigeria gathered that out of the 14 investors, three got the Licences to Establish (LTE).

This means that DPR has approved and confirm their proposed project, market plan, products specifications and site selection of proposed crude oil.

10 investors got the Approval to Construct (ATC), a licence that gives the investors a period of 24 months to record at least 50 percent mechanical erection otherwise the revalidation of the approval to construct refineries will become necessary.

The remaining investor got the Approval to Relocate (ATR) licence, meaning the investor can relocate and construct its refinery in Nigeria.

UBA interest expense declines, as PAT hits N113.76bn in 2020

Interest expense of United Bank for Africa (UBA) fell by 7.9 percent in 2020, analysis of the company’s financial statements showed.

Interest expense, which is a cost incurred on borrowed funds hit N168.39 billion.

The N168.39 billion in twelve months showed a difference of -7.9 percent when compared to the N182.95 billion reported as interest expense in the corresponding period of 2019.

During the same period of dip in interest expense, UBA grew its payment of interest (Interest Income) to customers, after borrowing fraction of account holders’ deposit to fund loan applicants.

According to the financials obtained by Ripples Nigeria, UBA’s Interest Income rose to N427.86 billion in 2020 full year, surpassing the N404.83 billion paid to customers in the same period in 2019.

The financials also reported that UBA grew its profit before tax (PBT) and profit after tax (PAT) during the twelve months period of last year. PBT ended closed the year 2020 with with N131.86 billion, surpassing the N111.28 billion reported for 2019 period.

PAT rose to N113.76 billion during the twelve months period of last year, rising above the N89.08 billion UBA reported during the corresponding period of 2019.

Unilever extends losses for second-straight year in 2020

Unilever Nigeria Plc, has reported a loss of N1.59 billion in 2020, 62.3 percent lower than the 2019 loss of N4.22 billion.

The last profit recorded in the company books was N10.6 billion in 2018. This is according to figures obtained from its unaudited account on the website of the Nigeria stock exchange.

The improved performance in 2020, as against 2019, was largely driven by a decline in borrowing, sales growth, and reduced cost of sales.

A breakdown of the figures show, the company aggressively reduced its borrowing by 72 percent to N223.2 million from N824.1 million in 2020.

Also, it grew its sales to N61.5 billion, up by 1.3 percent from N60.7 billion in 2019.

Cost of sales dropped 115 percent to N47.7 billion in 2020 compared to N3.5 billion in 2019.

During the lockdown, buying and selling activities were disrupted along the value chain as factories worked below capacity, while some stores or outlets were shut down.

Other reduction was a loss before tax which fell by 77.4 percent from to N1.956 billion.

The company recorded no finance cost as against the last three months of 2019 when it recorded a borrowing cost of N381 million.

However, earnings per share were 62.2 per cent lower at -N0.28 compared to the -N0.74 posted in the corresponding period of 2019.

We arrested 471 drug offenders in Lagos in 2020 —NDLEA

The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) on Tuesday revealed that it arrested drug offenders comprising 424 males and 47 females in 2020 amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.

This was disclosed by the state Commander (Narcotics), Mr Ralph Igwenagu, during an interview with newsmen in Lagos.

Igwenagu said the offenders who were between the ages of 14 and 58 were all arrested in Lagos.

He said, “Out of this numbers, 257 associated with the offences directly or were accomplices to the crime were charged to court.

“A total of 214 people, who are drug users, were counselled and released,’’

He also revealed that 11,798 kilogrammes (over 11 tons) of various illicit hard drugs and 722.31 litres of the same illicit drugs (liquid) were seized in the year 2020 from people who were in illegal possession of the drugs.

He said, “These comprised of cannabis sativa (hemp) 11,598.549 kg, Cocaine 0.848 kg, Heroine 0.101 kg, Tramadol 167.869 kg, Diazepam 7.645 kg, Exol-5 2.05 kg, Methamphetamine 0.072 kg and Rohypnol 21.707 kg.

“The liquid seizures are Codeine base Cough Syrup, Diazepam injections and Tramadol injections that makes 722.31 litres.’’

According to him, the agency in the same year convicted 72 defendants at the Federal High Court in Lagos

“This comprised 71 males and a female with various degrees of jail terms,’’

“In the same vein, the unit successfully rehabilitated six drug-dependent persons brought in by their parents,’’ he said.

He went on to say that the command also embarked on advocacy visits to various stakeholders such as traditional institutions, relevant Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and the likes to sensitise the stakeholders and the public on the dangers of drug abuse and trafficking.

“The command, however, still seeks continuous assistance from all Lagosians by providing credible information on illicit drug activities in their neighbourhoods.

“Together we will reduce the menace of illicit drug abuse and trafficking in Lagos to the barest minimum,’’ he said.

MANY CALENDARS, ONE EARTH.

MANY CALENDARS, ONE EARTH.

  1. Gregorian Calendar
  2. Pawukon Calendar (Bali, Indonesia)
  3. Ethiopian Calendar
  4. Jewish Calendar
  5. Chinese Calendar
  6. Hijrah Calendar (established)
  7. Persian Calendar
  8. Japanese Calendar
  9. Julian Calendar
  10. Buddhist Calendar
  11. Hindu Calendar (Vikram Samvat, Shaka Samvat, and Kali Yuga)
  12. Mayan Calendar
  13. Egyptian Calendar
  14. French Revolutionary Calendar
  15. Sumerian Calendar
  16. Zoroastrian Calendar
  17. Celtic Calendar
  18. Cappadocian Calendar
  19. Achaemenid Calendar
  20. Attic Calendar
  21. Ancient Greek Calendars.

Up there???? you have over 20 different calendars in use or once in use in the world. The Gregorian Calendar in use in most part of the world, Nigeria inclusive, is not the only regulator of man and his activities on earth.

In other words, while we’re in a mad rush to make it before December 31st, 2020, some persons in another part of the world are less concerned about our death-race hustling. This is because these Calendars do not begin and end the same time.

Ògá, take it easy with yourself. Man invented calendar and over the years adjusted it, abandoned it or reinvented it to suit his purpose. You must know January 1st is not the beginning of the year for everyone on earth. Likewise, December 31st isn’t the end of the year for everybody on earth. Instead of killing yourself for not achieving your goals for the year, try to draw up a broad plan for yourself and pursue it throughout the days of your sojourn on earth.

Natural yarn
Naijapremiumgist.

Nigeria may end 2020 worse than it started, and it’s not only about COVID-19

Holiday season is coming at the worst possible time for millions of Nigerians.

Already, it’s been an economic calendar to forget and things look like they’ll get worse in the run-up to December 31st.

On Saturday, 21st November, the National Bureau of Statitics announced Nigeria economy was in recession, slumping by 3.62% in second quarter of 2020. The country had earlier recorded a negative 6.10 per cent growth in the second quarter.

The recession announcement follows October inflation figure of 14.25 per cent, the highest in the last 30 months.

While the latest GDP figure was expected, considering the snail-like scenario growth since 2016, Nigerians will be hoping the government economic policies will help the country exit as quickly as possible, and also keep to its promise of  projected  6 percent growth in its 2021 proposed budget.

A cursory look at GDP figures shows Nigeria had the best growth quarter on quarter, an outstanding +12.1% QoQ GDP Growth rate and improving from -6.10% in Q2 2020.

However, trying to make sense of the improvement will be a little harder to coming out of recession itself.

A closer inspection of the figures shows where the country missed it and spells doom for millions of Nigerians.

Of all the 46 sectors, 29 sectors contracted while growth was recorded in 17 sectors. Trade sector which not only accounts for 15% of the economy growth but also employs millions of Nigerians was badly hit.

An unpalatable storm heading to the end of a torrid year, when added to the rising food prices, with October inflation figure of 14.25 per cent representing the highest in the last 30 months, and 21.7 million unemployed population.

NBS had earlier reported in its COVID-19 impact report for the month of August 2020 that many households have had to take out loans to meet their pressing financial obligations with majority reporting it was food.

The trade sector (wholesale and retail), in real terms, year on year growth stood at –12.12%, which was –10.67% points lower than the rate recorded the previous year (Q3 2019), but 4.46% points higher than in the preceding quarter at –16.59% growth rate.

Trade’s contribution to GDP was 13.88% lower than the 15.23% it represented in the previous year, and the 14.28% recorded in 2020.

Explaining the Scenario,  Kala Aja a financial analyst tweeted, “Recession?What does it mean? Imagine a bakery making Agege bread, They buyFlour SugarYeastPay salaryPay taxesDeposit cash in bank, banks use that deposit and creates loans. An econony built by Agege bread  Ioaf cost N50, output 1000 so “GDP” is N50 x 1000 =N50,000″
“Then crisis, and people lose jobs. Instead of buying one Agege bread and day, they buy one every two days. So bakery sells less bread, instead of 10,000  loaves they sell 5000So “GDP” is N50 x 500 = 25000 A 50% fall in output of Agege bread.”

“What happens? Well less Agege bread output means less flour bought less sugar bought Less salary paid Less cash deposited So Agege industry states to infect other sectors like banking. Those sectors also cut down on spending, pay less workers…a vicious cycle starts

“In summary, a recession is normal business cycle, but if you do bad policies (like closing border) you make Agege bread expensive to produce so the loaf price goes from N50 to N150 Again this makes the bread expensive and reduces sales and cycle starts again”

How Nigeria will exit this recession which experts have considered to be worst than that of 2016 remains to be seen but one thing is certain, Nigeria needs a plan.

By Dave Ibemere…

Neco sets new date for suspended SSCE Examination

The National Examinations Council (NECO) has fixed new dates for the suspended Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) across the country. in all states and the FCT from Monday 9th November 2020.

 The Council was constrained to postpone the examinations indefinitely on Monday 25th October 2020 due to security challenges, which disrupted the smooth conduct of the examinations in some parts of the Country.

A statement signed by the Council’s Head Information and Public Relations Division, Azeez Sani said the examinations will now resume from Monday 9th across the country.

“Following the return of normalcy in the states and FCT, the examinations will now continue with a new Time-Table from Monday 9th November 2020 to Saturday 28th November 2020.

The new timetable will be made available to the general public, schools and candidates from Wednesday 4th November 2020. “The timetable can also be seamlessly downloaded from the NECO official website: www.neco.gov.ng,” the statement added.

While the council thanked the general public and candidates for their patience and understanding during the period the SSCE was suspended, it also assured them of quality service in the discharge of her statutory responsibilities at all times.

All terrorists and their sponsors will not see 2021.- Pastor Adeboye

Pastor Enoch Adeboye,the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), prayed that all terrorists and their sponsors will not see 2021 yesterday.

Adeboye also assured Nigerians that the Almighty God will arise against those pretending to be the country’s friends while planning to enslave the nation.

In his prayer, he said:

“Where they say there is no way, God will arise and make a way for Nigeria and everyone. Any form of stagnation in Nigeria will come to an end and every terrorist and their sponsors will not see the New Year in Jesus’ Name, Amen.”

Claiming that God has given the country victory over the Coronavirus pandemic, Adeboye admonished everyone to always praise God at all times.

He made a statement;

“We thank God for the victory over Coronavirus and we pray that the victory will be total and permanent.”

He said further;

“We also pray that God will help us to be united and let our tomorrow be alright.”

The RCCG General Overseer, who took his reading from the book of Psalms 68: 1 to 4, also said;

“God will fight for us, arise and make a way where there is no way.”

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