Posts Tagged ‘Nigeria’

China-Africa: Chinese firm to start crude exploration in JDZ

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Sinopec china Africa

China Petrochemical Corporation (SINOPEC) will drill its first exploration well in the Nigeria-Sao Tome and Principe Joint Development Zone (JDZ) in July.

The Chinese firm will start the oil exploration after some delay caused by the shortage of deepwater rigs, competent industry watchers told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Wednesday.

Nigeria and the two archipelago islands of Sao Tome and Principe have a treaty to jointly manage the resources of their common maritime boundary in the ratio of 60 percent to 40 percent respectively.

Under the joint development agreement, both countries would ensure the orderly exploitation of the hydrocarbon and non-hydrocarbon resources in the JDZ.

Some officials familiar with SINOPEC’s activities said the exploration was in line with efforts to speed up exploration in oil Block 2 in the JDZ, as the Chinese firm seeks to take over Addax Petroleum Ltd., one of its partners in the JDZ.

JDZ oil blocks

The 692 sq. km. Block 2 is linked to many partners including SINOPEC, which has a majority stake of 28.67%, ERHC (22%), Addax (14.33%), ONGC Videsh (13.5%), Equator (9%), MoMo Deepwater, JDZ Limited and Foby Engineering (each with 5%), and A & Hartman (with 2.5%).

Apart from having a 14.33 percent working interest in Block 2, Addax Petroleum is also the operator of Block 4 with a 45.5 percent interest as well as 40 percent and 15 percent interests in Blocks 1 and 3 respectively, according to the company’s 2008 Annual Report.

“The Transocean SEDCO-702 deepwater rig is due to arrive at Block 2 around July 1 and drilling will start immediately afterwards,” NAN quoted an official with the JDZ.

“SINOPEC secured the production and sharing contract on the block in 2006, but it has not been able to start drilling due to a shortage of deepwater rigs,” a SINOPEC official and the JDZ official said.

The two officials, who preferred anonymity, declined to speculate on the SINOPEC-operated block’s potential reserves, but industry reports point to a pre-drill resource estimate of about 275 million barrels.

There have been varied reports on the Addax-SINOPEC deal, but nothing has been concluded.

SINOPEC offer

Initial reports on the buyout had earlier quoted the Chinese firm denying making an offer of $8bn for Addax’ assets in Nigeria and the Middle East.

But Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday that China Petrochemical Corp. has agreed to buy Addax Petroleum Corp. for C$8.3 billion ($7.3 billion) in the nation’s biggest overseas takeover, gaining oil reserves in Iraq’s Kurdistan and West Africa.

The report quoting an Addax statement on Wednesday also said that SINOPEC, China’s second-largest oil company, will pay C$52.80 a share in cash, which is 47 percent more than Addax’s closing market price in Toronto on June 5, the day before the company said it was in takeover talks.

It further said that parts of the deal would see the SINOPEC Group getting 42.5 million barrels of proved and probable reserves in the Kurdish region of Iraq, where the start of oil exports earlier this month sparked a wave of takeover interest.

China has spent as much as $5.4 billion since December on oil assets in Singapore, Syria and Kazakhstan after the price of crude fell from a record high and equity markets tumbled.

“The offer price is fair given prevailing oil prices and project risks,” Gordon Kwan, head of Regional Energy Research at Mirae Asset Securities Ltd. Hong Kong, said by email. The transaction would be “China’s single largest oil acquisition” by value, he said.

The deal surpasses China National Petroleum Corporation’s $4.18 billion takeover of PetroKazakhstan Inc.. in 2005 and comes three weeks after Rio Tinto Group scrapped a $19.5 billion proposed investment from Aluminum Corporation of China.

The takeover “fits well with the nation’s global energy strategy as the country pushes for diversification of its oil supplies, and increased access to oil in the Middle East and Africa will no doubt boost its energy security,” said Jiang Xinmin, an energy researcher at the National Development and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planner.

NAN reports that SINOPEC’s executives might have travelled to London last week to meet with Addax Petroleum to discuss the takeover bid.

SINOPEC said the acquisition of Addax is a “transformational transaction,” as it would help it to “achieve its strategic objective to build a stronger presence and operations in West Africa and Iraq, accelerating its international growth strategy as well as optimising its offshore oil and gas asset portfolio,” the unit said in a statement in state-run China Daily on Wednesday.

(234next.com)

China-Africa: FG Partners China On 500mw Electricity

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

To meet up its target of generating 6000mw by December this year, the Federal Government is to partner the Peoples Republic of China to generate 500mw.

The Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Mrs. Dieziani Alison-Madueke, made this disclosure in Abuja, during a meeting with the Chairman of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) Limited, Mr. Jiang Jianqing.

She said “We want to start with modules of 500mw transmission, but we will be using the smaller modules of 300mw in multiples, just as you have in Botswana 150mw in multiples.”

She described it as a strategic project since the era of colonial masters in the 60s.

“The coal has been there. We have over 2.7 billion metric tonnes of coal in the country, and for these projects not to have been kick-started seems bare, but it is an exciting project. We expect to support the ministry of power very adequately in doing this, in conjunction with Standard Bank, since you have currently gone into over 60 deals infrastructure across the African continent,” she added.

The minister also said that the project was of great interest to Nigeria because the country has other strategic mineral resources it is keen on developing with its creation of a very robust framework on which to move forward, like the bitumen, which more major investors are expected to show interest in.

She noted that economic emphasis on some key minerals was strategic because of their economic importance to the nation. “Some of these minerals, are coal for the cost of diesel because it is high in terms of commodity market”, she stressed.

“Limestone has very high quantity of 2.2 feet trillion and Nigeria also has deposit of cement which has other uses and we have 27 billion barrels of bitumen and tar sands in Nigeria not to mention the actual asphalt content of the bitumen that we would like to exploit for the purposes of road construction, Barite, lead and zinc as well.

“And so, this is really the time that we are deliberating and articulating very strong programmes and projects to try and exploit our mineral resources to the optimum. We have 100 percent ownership of mines by foreign investors, they are also guaranteeing tenure as well as various incentives that are being put in place to ensure that we improve the environment and put things on ground this time for international investors. This is an on-going effort by the federal government.

She added that the Nigeria is in dire need of extra power in the national grid of the country, to this effect, we have put together eleven strategic coal cluster, the intention behind this is to ensure that each of these strategic clusters will provide quantities of coal to supply Independent Power Project (IPPs) that will be situated within the clusters that will generate power to transmission of five megawatts and above as production rounds up.

The reason for having the IPPs situated within the strategic clusters is to mitigate the amount of infrastructure logistics required to take the heavy quantities of coal from the companies to the actual power point themselves, because as you know we do not have the requisite quantities of infrastructures like the railway in the country at the moment to take these coal to the seaports or other parts of the country where they are demanded or the supply required.

We have gone ahead and put together this strategic platform with the expectation that with an alignment with the power ministry, we would be able to kick off this project in not too distant future. That was the whole purpose of creating the strategic clusters. So, we put together various blocks to ensure that the quantities of coal within those blocks will be able to supply these items.

The power ministry had to come in because of cost as this is happening, they will not only increase but strengthen the transmission grid to the nearest major power plants and then from there out to other parts of the country. We are looking hopefully to pick up a pilot project, and we have had discussions with IBTC regarding strategic support for the framework that will assist us in taking off this particular project with great interest and your strategic project in Botswana .

“The fact that you have put up power plants and have in-fact estimated that you will be able to put up about four independent turbans that is giving at least 150MW each at the end of the day and this is exactly the sort of project we would like to be put up in Nigeria.

Speaking also, the Chairman ICBC, Mr. Jianqing said as it is his last visit among the four countries trip to Africa; Nigeria is the most important economy in Africa due to its large population and big market.

According to him, “the rich natural resources and the short break in power, the shortage of Electricity is a symbol of the very hard movement of a country, we are here for an agreement for power station project.”

Adding, he said the choice of Nigeria among the countries to visit is of great benefit to both countries.

“I came to you and the Ministers of Finance and Power and also the Chief Economic Adviser to the President and they mentioned seven challenges in seven most important areas for Nigerian economic development and power industry is the ministry’s top agenda from the meeting.

Yesterday, I had lot of discussions with local companies and the government representatives and I got to know the importance of developing energy infrastructure and power. So far, a lot of people may know that Nigeria is rich in oil and gas resources production. It is also important to know that Nigeria as a country is rich in oil resources and in this regard, we do hope to work with the ministry to develop close cooperation with the mining industry in the country,” he added.

Assuring, he said, “ICBC as China ’s largest bank, hopes to provide the bridge between Nigeria and China in economic and social development.
(leadershipnigeria.com)

China-Africa: ‘Chinese Engagement In Nigeria Would Aid The Industrialisation Of The Country’

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Deborah A. Br?utigam, an associate professor of the School of International Service, was in Nigeria for two weeks as part of a research work on the impacts of Chinese engagement in Africa. Br?utigam, who will tour not less than 12 African countries in the course of the project spoke to ONYEDIKA AGBEDO on her findings concerning Nigeria, with a verdict that it stands a chance to benefit from the relationship in the long run if well harnessed.

What informed your current visit to Nigeria?

I have been here for two weeks as part of a research project on Chinese engagement in Africa. I chose to come to Nigeria because I have been here three times before now.

However, my mission this time is to see how Chinese engagement is doing in the country and what impacts it is having on the country’s economy. The intention is to approve or disprove what I read in the newspapers about China and Africa.

The study is part of a book project I am writing a called the Dragons Gift, which will tell the real story of China in Africa. I have visited some countries in Africa in for this purpose. I have been to Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Zambia, Mauritius and South Africa and I expect to go to Zimbabwe and Mozambique soon. I have an assistant that is also going to Ethiopia, Egypt, Kenya and Uganda. He will equally go back to Zambia.

What are your findings so far from these expeditions?

Well, I would say it is a mixed impact here in Nigeria. On the one hand, a lot of Nigerian manufacturing companies have been battered by competition. I went to Nnewi in Anambra State where I first visited in 1991 and then in 1994 and found that a lot of the industries I visited then have folded up because they could not face the competition from China. People said Nigerian industries don’t really have a fair chance to compete because of the problems of power, poor road networks, unpredictable taxes, poor water supply and poor security, among others. These problems combine to make their products and services cost higher, which results in unfair competition.

On the other hand, one can also see some very interesting signs in the Nigerian engagement with the Chinese companies. In Nnewi I found out that there are some robust factories in the town, which had Chinese partners. There are other factories that had only Chinese technical partners where they don’t put in any money but put in the expertise. This was interesting to me because such partnerships are helping some new industries take off again in Nnewi. So, on the one hand is the Chinese competition and on the other hand you have the Chinese stimulating industrial development in Nigeria.

The competition might seem harmful to the Nigerian economy at present but in the future, I think it is quite possible that the technical cooperation could aid in the industrialisation of Nigeria. It is possible.

Of what benefit is this study to you and the American academic community as a whole?

Actually, I was commissioned to write the book by the Oxford University Press in England. They asked me to do that because 10 years ago, I published a book on Chinese aid to Africa. Initially, not many people were interested about China and Africa and I was one of the few experts that really undertook to look at that. So, when the Oxford University Press learnt that I had worked on in the past, they asked me to write a fresh book on the topic for further explanation and understanding.

I think the United States and Europe are very concerned about China. In fact, I find the United States and Europe more concerned about China coming to Africa than Africans themselves. It makes me think that a lot of people are afraid of China in my country and see China as a threat to American interest. May be, they also think that China is a threat to Africa. So, that is what I am trying to work out, to find out whether China is really a threat to Africa or it is merely being misconceived. I would also be looking at what the good things about this relationship are and then the demerits. So, I am trying to sieve facts from fiction, realities from myths. I may not be able to get to the bottom of if here but I think by being here, I would be in a better position to forge ahead than if I had not come at all.

I visited the Chinese Embassy in Nigeria and they gave me some statistics. I understood that they have invested about $6 billion so far in Nigeria. So they are growing in putting industries here. I don’t know how Nigerians regard them; what the impression is, but I think it is interesting that they have been here. Some of the companies have been working in Nigeria since 1979. That makes it 30 years. So, it has been a long time and a long relationship.

What material benefit do you hope to gain after this study or you are just doing it for academic fulfilment?

As a scholar, I think there is a benefit to understand what is really happening between China and Africa. As I earlier said, there are a lot of people that are interested in the topic. But I think they have some mistaken ideas already that have become widely accepted.

There is this believe that Chinese aid is so big on Africa, but it is not. There is also the belief that China is only interested in oil but it is interested in business. The trading between China and Nigeria is mostly Chinese export to Nigeria. Last year Nigeria exported almost no oil to China but they exported a lot of goods to the country. For America, I think China is competing really with us. They are penetrating our markets. So, they are just competitors like Japan is today and they are not as threatening as some people in America seem to think. I don’t think they are very different actors in Africa.

How would you react to the view in some quarters that Nigeria has become a dumping ground for Chinese products, which are allegedly sub-standard mostly?

I guess this is the way to look at it. China produces some of the best products in the world now. But they are also producing very poor quality products that are very cheap. So, when Nigerian traders go to China to import goods to the country, they have a choice. They can buy the best quality or go for the cheap goods. The Chinese would sell to them. So, what they bring back is a lot of what you have in the market. If you go to a shopping mall in Lagos, you can get very good quality things from China and you will pay more. But if you go for the cheap ones, which are of poor quality and it breaks down the next day, then you got what you bargained for. So, I would not say that they are actually dumping their goods in Nigerian markets. The technical definition of dumping is selling something below cost, which I believe is not what is going on. It is only a question of ensuring proper regulation by the authorities to safeguard the health of the citizenry.

We have had the same issue in America and even China in the past. So, these things are problems elsewhere and it is probably as a result of an early stage of capitalism without good regulatory systems in place. So beefing up your own standards, health inspectors and borders would help to protect Nigerians. But at the end of the day, you get what you paid for in terms of the quality of goods.

Let me take you back to your trip to Nnewi. What exactly were your findings about some of the companies you visited in the past that have folded?

Let me say that it is natural for companies to fold. It is unnatural for companies to succeed. If you look over a 10-year period and the businesses that were started then, most of them have gone out of business. That is the natural way that it happens. It is competition.

An Australian economist that visited the United States sometime ago gave us this idea of creative destruction. He said capitalism is not about destruction but about creative destruction because new products and new competition will make things better. So, that is one thing that is going on in Nnewi. Another thing that has happened over the course of industrialisation is that some of the smaller companies will go into a business and after sometime become bigger and diversified. This has also happened in Nnewi.

There is the Ibeto group, which was before now a very small business until it grew and diversified. There is also Chikason, which started off an agro industry in a very small scale but it has now become very large. There is Innoson, which started with a motorcycle assembly. Now he has built a factory in Enugu where he would be producing tyres and assembling vehicles. There are many more companies like that which have taken the place of the other ones which are using simpler technologies and not able to compete.

It is probably the result of Nigeria liberalising trade over the past decade over the past decade or so and making competition greater for Nigerian manufacturers. But again if the Nigerian government could guarantee infrastructure, a lot of businesses in Nnewi would bounce back because they are very entrepreneurial. Inadequate infrastructure constitutes extra costs for manufacturers and they don’t have these kinds of problems in China by and large.

Which other parts of the country do you intend to visit apart from Nnewi and Enugu?

I have been to Abuja, the Federal Capital. I am now in Lagos where I will be visiting some of the companies.

When do you hope to complete the study?

Well, I have gone very far now and hope to get the work out soon.

With what you have seen so far, to what extent do you think China could assist in the industrialisation of Africa?

The Chinese are interested in investing outside their country now. They have a policy called the New Centre Back 2001, otherwise known as going global. For over a period of 20 to 30 years, the Chinese government has invited foreign investments into China. They have invited foreign industries and technologies and learnt about how to do things. Now the government is try to push Chinese companies to go out and become multinational corporations and invest overseas. So they have been doing that since 2001 and are interested in coming to Africa.

You may not know it but there are two special economic zones that the Chinese are setting up in Nigeria. The Chinese found that the special economic zones were very useful for their own development in the past and now they want to do such overseas. Right now they have seven in Africa with two situated in Nigeria. These zones would have their own power supply and infrastructure and would be close to the port and I think they would be doing manufacturing and exports from there. They are doing it in Zambia, Egypt, Algeria, Ethiopia and Mauritius with the support of their government. And so, I see their interest in the industrialisation of Africa as very real. I think you would be seeing more Chinese companies coming here when the zones are finished.

There will be benefits in the form of employment. You can also benefit through technology transfer. I don’t know what the system is but it is possible that Nigerians could also invest in those special economic zones. I don’t know for sure if it is possible but I know in some countries it is possible for local industries to invest in those zones. And if your government is smart it would ensure that Nigerians could also invest there.

This is your fourth visit to Nigeria. What is your impression about the country?

Well, when I first came here there was no Abuja so that is a big change. But I think a lot of things are still the same. A lot of the challenges are still here especially in infrastructure. When I came here in 1987, people said NEPA meant ‘Never Ever Power Again.’ And they are still saying that today. I am wondering when it would become over.

I think the country should at appoint figure out something other than NEPA to provide power. In Abah there is an interesting experiment going on by Geometrics. I didn’t visit the place but I understood the man is trying to do an independent power production. If more of this could happen around the country, may be the people could take care of the power problems themselves.

I keep coming back to Nigeria because I really like it; I enjoy the country. And Nigerians are the most amazing people. They are so intelligent, so full of ideas and creativity that I think if channelled to how the country could be developed, it would just take off. Nigeria is a country with so much potential but being held back. I wish it good luck.

(ngrguardiannews.com)

China-Africa: Standard Bank and ICBC Considering Nigeria, Uganda

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

By Renee Bonorchis

(Bloomberg) — Standard Bank Group Ltd., Africa’s largest bank, and its 20 percent shareholder, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd., will visit four countries on the continent next month as the two lenders seek investments.

ICBC chairman, Jiang Jianqing, 56, will visit Nigeria, Botswana, and Uganda after visiting South Africa to co-chair the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town next month, Jacko Maree, Standard Bank’s Chief Executive Officer, said in an interview in Johannesburg today.

ICBC, the largest bank in the world by market value, and Standard Bank announced on May 12 the first of what they said would be many African partnerships when they arranged as much as $1.6 billion in financing for the expansion of Botswana’s Morupule B power station.

Standard Bank said in a trading update after its annual shareholder meeting today that it’s unlikely to match last year’s profit in 2009 as South Africa slips into recession and loan losses increase. In the four months to April normalized headline earnings, a measure of profit that excludes some one- time items, fell 14 percent to 4.1 billion rand ($499 million).

The bank fell 2.4 percent to 83.21 rand in Johannesburg trading today, giving the company a market value of 129.4 billion rand.

To contact the reporter on this story: Renee Bonorchis in Johannesburg at rbonorchis@bloomberg.net

(Bloomberg)

China-Africa: Nigeria To Revisit Trade Ties With China

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

The newly appointed Nigerian  Ambassador to the Republic of China, Alhaji Aminu Wali, has said that his main mission to the Asian country is to find a lasting solution to the influx of the Chinese finished products that have posed as threat to the domestic markets.

Aminu Wali, who was speaking during a dinner organised in his honour by the Nigerian Harmonizs Traders Union and the Kano Business community, said he was worried that over time, the Chinese have turned  Nigerian to a dumping ground of their finished goods and the effect of which has continued to devastate the nation’s economy and put many on the unemployed list.

He said, “even though I’m not a policy maker, my main work will be centred on trade bilateral relationship between China and Nigeria. China is a very important country and its influence has affected the growth of our economy. I promise you that I will do my possible best to ensure that Nigerians too can go to China to set up industries or bring the Chinese to create a viable industry here that will create job opportunities for our people.”

In his speech, the President of the Harmonised Traders Union, Dr. Bature Abdulaziz, who commended President Umaru Yar’Adua, for appointing Aminu Wali as the Ambassador to China, said traders in Kano were paying the hard price due to the “Chinese invasion”.

He said “many small businesses have been taking over by the Chinese who come to do retail business rather than allowing Nigerians to go there and supply the goods”., expressing optimism that soon, Chinese would take over the world’s most viable economies, “hence it is good for Nigerian business community to establish beneficial relationship with them but not by way of flooding the nation’s markets with finished goods which is not wokay for the nation’s economy”.

He promised, “we are ready to give President Yar’Adua our ultimate support for the second term if he wishes to go for it. Ours is genuine course not because we are party affiliated, but because we have seen his mission which is sincerely aimed at reviving the country’s lost glory”.

(leadershipnigeria.com)

China-Africa: China, UN provide rainwater harvesting training for African countries

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

LANZHOU, (Xinhua) — A Chinese expert said Friday he hoped more African countries could tackle water shortages in the future with the help from China.

Li Yuanhong, president of Gansu Provincial Water Conservation Research Institute, said his organization had offered consulting services and helped design and build water storage and purification facilities in several countries including Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Algeria and Niger.

Li’s institute is helping to carry out an ongoing training program in northwest China’s Gansu Province for rainwater-harvesting technologies for seven African countries.

Nineteen government officials and engineers from Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Uganda, Burundi, Rwanda and South Africa are attending the two-week training program that opened Monday in Lanzhou, capital of Gansu.

With sponsorship from China’s Ministry of Science and Technology and the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), the training program is a part of the “Rainwater harvesting technology in Africa” program, one of the four programs included in the China-UNEP memorandum on African environmental technologies signed last year, according to Li.

After a three-day seminar, the trainees visited Daping Village of the arid, mountainous city Dingxi Thursday for a field study trip.

Bob Muzyamba, Secretary General of Zambia’s Rainwater Harvesting Association, said his country was hoping to promote rainwater-harvesting technologies, especially in its arid south.

“We did start doing some demonstrations of rainwater harvesting, and the concept itself is growing,” he said.

Gansu Province, one of the driest Chinese provinces, reports an annual precipitation of about 300 mm. It began collecting rainwater for irrigation purposes in the 1980s.

The province has so far trained more than 200 rainwater-harvesting engineers from more than 70 countries.
Editor: Wang Guanqun

China-Africa: Nothing Can Stall China’s “Promising” Development, Prosperity: Former Nigerian Ambassador

Friday, May 15th, 2009

By Qiu Jun and Li Huailin

The fast reconstruction and recovery from the catastrophe of Wenchuan earthquake have once again demonstrated that nothing can stall China’s “promising” development and prosperity, former Nigerian ambassador to China Victor Nwaozichi Chibundu has told Xinhua recently.

Tuesday marked the first anniversary of the massive Wenchuan earthquake that rocked China’s southwestern Sichuan province on May 12 last year and claimed about 69,000 lives.

Chibundu said neither the natural disaster like Wenchuan earthquake nor the global financial crisis could hamper the Chinese people’s bright future.

The ambassador, who is also founder and chairman of the Nigeria-China Friendship Association (NICAF), also expressed his great respect for the Chinese government’s timely rescue measures and efficiency in rebuilding the quake-hit areas.

“The quake-hit people will surely need to forget the pain and stride forward,” he said.

Apart from the sad memory of the quake, this year also marks the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.

Chibundu noted that China has stood the tests of all kinds in the 60 years like the Wenchuan earthquake. The Chinese people have never given up to any of the difficult times, he said.

“The Chinese success story makes me ponder on the reasons behind. I now believe that a strong central government could be one of the most important factors that you make it,” Chibundu said, adding that the Chinese government’s policies are well-planned and people-oriented so that they gain people’s full supports.

On last year’s Beijing Olympic Games, Chibundu said he was glad to see his prediction turned into reality. In an interview with Xinhua on May 20, 2008, he assured that China would present the world a “perfect” Olympic Games.

“You have made it nothing less, the game is gorgeous”, he said. The 78-year-old former diplomat who served as ambassador to China since 1981 to 1984 recalled his experience, saying that China’s reform and opening-up is becoming ever more successful and China is having more and more influence in the world. To host the Olympic Games is a natural outcome of all this.

“The world just can not at all ignore a fast developing country like China,” he repeated what he exactly said in the last interview with Xinhua before the Olympics.

Responding to questions concerning the current financial crisis, he praised China for “acting in accordance with its position as a major economic player in the world”, believing that the Chinese government and people would absolutely win the battle.

After retiring from the Nigerian Foreign Service in 1990, Chibundu threw himself into the efforts to improve the ties between Nigeria and China and founded the NICAF in 1994, which is a nongovernmental organization dedicated to promoting exchanges and cooperation between the peoples of the two countries.

Chibundu has written four books on the development of Nigeria- China ties since his retirement. His works are strongly recommended for international relations students in Nigerian universities and have become important reference books for researchers on the Nigerian-China ties.

(english.cri.cn)

Africans-In-China: Chinese police detained nine African nationals for passport fraud

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

FUZHOU, (Xinhua) — Nine Nigerian citizens who were allegedly forging passports were detained by police in east China on suspicion of illegal entry and residence, local police said Tuesday.

Police in Xiamen, a coastal city in Fujian Province, raided the fake passport ring — including 10 Nigerians and one Ghanaian — on May 6. Nine members of the ring, all Nigerians, lacked valid identity documents.

Yusuf Olalekan Mustapha, a Nigerian national, was involved in another passport-forging case in the province, according to the Fujian provincial department of public security.

Xiamen police found many photos of foreign nationals, false documents and bank cards at the residences of the ring members.

Mustapha and eight other Nigerians without valid ID documents were detained on suspicion of illegal entry and residence, while the tenth Nigerian, Fuseini Haruna, and Ghanaian national Yusuf Idiyat Omolara were fined.

Police investigations against the nine detained are still in progress.

Editor: Pliny

Africa: Nigeria surpasses Hollywood as world’s second largest film producer – UN

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Nollywood of Nigeria rivals India’s Bollywood in film/video production

5 May 2009 – The Nigerian film industry has overtaken Hollywood and closed the gap on India, the global leader in the number of movies produced each year, according to a new United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) report released today.According to the UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) survey, Bollywood – as the Mumbai-based film industry is known – produced 1,091 feature-length films in 2006. In comparison, Nigeria’s moviemakers, commonly known as Nollywood, came out with 872 productions – all in video format – while the United States produced 485 major films.

“Film and video production are shining examples of how cultural industries, as vehicles of identity, values and meanings, can open the door to dialogue and understanding between peoples, but also to economic growth and development,” said UNESCO Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura.

“This new data on film and video production provides yet more proof of the need to rethink the place of culture on the international political agenda,” he added.

The three cinema heavyweights were followed by eight countries that produced more than 100 films: Japan (417), China (330), France (203), Germany (174), Spain (150), Italy (116), South Korea (110) and the United Kingdom (104).

Key to Nollywood’s explosive success is Nigerian filmmakers’ reliance on video instead of film, reducing production costs, and, as the survey points out, the West African country has virtually no formal cinemas, with about 99 per cent of screenings in informal settings, such as home theatres.

The survey also revealed that about 56 per cent of Nollywood films are made in local languages, while English remains a prominent language, accounting for 44 per cent, which may contribute to Nigeria’s success in exporting its films.

According to the study, US movies continue to dominate cinema admissions around the world, and all of the top ten films seen in Australia, Bulgaria Canada, Costa Rica, Namibia, Romania, and Slovenia were US made.

(un.org)

Technology: An Internet Bandwidth Bonanza Coming to Africa

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

One of the great drags on African economic development in general, and on one-to-one computing in education and OLPC in particular, is the staggering cost of bandwidth. Until recently, for example, the Fantsuam Foundation in Nigeria was paying $1700 a month for a 128Kbps satellite link, whereas I pay $35/month for 6 Mbps. (Fantsuam switched to terrestrial wireless last year.)


Africa’s Ku band satellite footprint

In a completely Free Market, such price disparities should not exist, which tells you how free the communications market has been where Africa is concerned. In fact, existing satellite systems have acted just as economic theory says an oligopoly will, to keep prices up. In effect, we have an informal cartel.

My focus today on this obstacle is not to ignore the cost of travel (San Francisco to Accra, Ghana: $1250, vs. SFO-Athens, Greece $515), or the astounding level of corruption and mismanagement in many countries in Africa, or the wars, oppressions, epidemics, and so on. But we must leave those for another day. Today we have news about fiber.

Russell Southwood’s Balancing Act e-mail newsletter reports on the Satcom 09 conference, the global meeting of the satellite communications industry. The headline is “Satcom 09: Africa’s satellite providers find themselves looking at a less rosy future”, which is to say, a competitive future in which they don’t get to overcharge an entire continent any more.

The specific event that triggered this prediction was the announcement of yet another fiber optic cable project for Africa. Fifteen years ago, in 1994, the Africa One project announced the laying of the first optical fibre in the ocean all around Africa, a project which in fact was delayed for years after that, and finally canceled.

Eventually Africa got the SAT3/WASC cable down its west coast from Europe to South Africa, and then a line from South Africa across the Indian Ocean as far as Malaysia. Planning for the EASSY cable down the east coast took several years more, but cable laying began in 2008, and is expected to be finished by the middle of 2010. But none of this activity has yet brought prices down. The organizers of SAT3/WASC have simply joined the existing informal cartel,


Africa’s fiber optic future

Now, however, we have half a dozen international fiber projects for Africa, and fiber within countries scheduled to mushroom. (Map) Some of the new projects have announced competitive price cuts in advance, and prices for existing satellite connections are beginning to drop seriously.

It is too soon to say how far prices will fall, that is, whether they will begin to have some relationship with the cost of providing service rather than what the market will bear. O3B, at any rate, is offering satellite rates as cheap as common fiber rates for the fleet of satellites it plans to launch over Africa in 2010.

So: one obstacle coming down, only a few dozen more to go. But note what the predictable effects of reasonably priced bandwidth will be:

  • A rush to lay fiber all over sub-Saharan Africa.
  • A surge in outsourcing to Africa for data-intensive services that do not require the foreign company to have a physical presence in sometimes unstable countries. Data entry and customer service, for example.
  • The first-ever electronic banking network for Africa.
  • Lots more schools connected to each other and to the world, particularly in OLPC deployments.
  • Increased economic growth throughout the region.
  • Much greater pressure for economic and governance reform.

Contrary to the impression given by tales of civil war, corruption, and so on, sub-Saharan Africa has for more than a decade been growing at a fairly steady rate of more than 5%. Just as with Japan in the 1950s, followed by Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, and China, naysayers have doubted that the growth can be sustained, or that Africa can catch up with the rest of the world. I personally never bet against exponential growth.

In fact, I predict that as economic reform takes hold, growth rates in Africa will increase, which will lead to further reforms. The current global financial mess has slowed Africa down, but not stopped them. It certainly hasn’t stopped investment in communications for Africa.

This is of course a big deal for OLPC, and for countries in Africa wanting to deploy laptops. Before these cables began to go in, there simply wasn’t the bandwidth for that many computers at any price. From now on, we can expect bandwidth growth to keep pace with the need, even as we put more than 100 million computers in African schools, and see several hundred million Internet-enabled jobs appear over time.

(olpcnews.com)

Africa: Can South South ever catch up?

Monday, April 27th, 2009
Written by IKEDDY ISIGUZO, Chairman, Editorial Board

Newsvine!

THERE are good reasons to be concerned  about the chances of the South South developing an economy that can drive anything related to sustainable development.

The rosy pictures painted at gatherings like the 1st South South Economic Summit that rounded up in Calabar on Friday pale against the realities of institutional policies and practices that hamper meaningful development in any sphere of national life.

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From left; Delta State governor, Emmanuel Uduaghan; Bayelsa State governor, Timipre Sylva, Akwa Ibom State governor Godswill Akpabio; Cross River State governor, Liyel Imoke, Vice president Goodluck Jonathan; Edo State governor Adams Oshiomhole, and Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amaechi at the 1st South South Economic Summit in Calabar

Tinapa, venue of the successful summit (quality attendance, quality papers delivered with enchanting candour, engaged audience that sat out the lengthy sessions, endless suggestions) bears testimony to the duplicitous approaches to economic development in Nigeria. South South is merely a part of that mismanaged entity with a peculiarity that manifests in the injustices that deny the people respectable existence.

Mr.  Chima Ibeneche, managing director, Nigeria LNG Limited, in an enthralling narrative at the summit over lunch, Thursday afternoon, laid the facts again on the table. He wanted to know if with the enormity of the challenge the region faced whether it had a chance. He answered his own question, whether that was his intention or not.“Exactly two years, President Olusegun Obasanjo commissioned this beautiful facility, advertised as the business and economic hub of West African sub region,” Mr. Ibeneche said, without delving into the disrepair Tinapa remains in because its status as a free trade zone and the legislations that would see it conform to federal fiscal regimes, are absent.

Ibeneche spoke about “the connection between natural resources (oil and gas in this case) and human resources and how we can sort through some of the often bitter arguments that we have been seeing over the last several years.

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From left: Niger Delta minister, Ufot Ekaete, Wife of Cross Rivers State governor,Mrs. Imoke and Akwa Ibom deputy governor, Patrick Ekpotu at the summit

“Religion and science might sometimes conflict, but they are never diametrically opposed to each other. They are both in search of the truth. In these climes, where the truth is sometimes a moving target, I would like to set the premise for my thesis, the first being that Nigeria is a poor country, despite its huge population and abundant natural resources!” This assertion would shock some.

Jeffry Sachs in his famous book The End of Poverty … how to make it happen in our lifetime said that extreme poor countries lack six major kinds of capital:
*Human capital: health, nutrition and skills needed for each person to become economically productive
*Business capital: the machinery, facilities, motorized transport used in agriculture, industry and services

*Infrastructure: roads, power, water and sanitation, airports and seaports and telecommunications systems that are critical inputs onto business productivity

*Natural capital: arable land, healthy soils, biodiversity and well-functioning ecosystems that provide the environmental services needed by human society

*Public institutional capital: the commercial law, judicial systems, government services and policing that underpin the peaceful and prosperous division of labour

*Knowledge capital: the scientific and technological know-how that raises productivity in business output and the promotion of physical and natural capital

Nigeria has not fared well on all these benchmarks. If we need further evidence of Nigeria’s poverty, we should look at her membership of the club of Least Developed Countries, (LDCs). With about $1000 per capita GDP, Nigeria occupies a lowly position of 193 out of 208 in World Bank’s league table of nations,” Mr. Ibeneche continued in his presentation.

The emphasis on human capital development, its effects and implications for the South South hint at the low chances of Nigeria being competitive, more daunting for the South South with its unique challenges.

Nigeria poor: The debates about Nigeria’s potentials are often confused with its wealth. It is more so in the South South where every oil barrel is counted as if it would solve the problems of the community.

Ibeneche again put this in perspective, “Nigeria is ranked sixth among the oil exporters of the world. It also accounts for 10 per cent of all traded LNG in the world, exporting about three million bbl/d and 15 million tonnes of LNG per annum. If we looked at oil alone, assuming that 90 per cent of the value of produced oil accrues to Nigeria (and we know it is less) at $50/bbl, Nigeria would earn US$ 135 million per day.

Assuming that there are 140 million Nigerians, this translates to less than a dollar per person per day. You can double this either by doubling the price assumption or the volume assumption, but the conclusion is the same – oil does not make Nigeria rich. What Nigeria does with its oil could indeed make her rich. So far, she has not done anything with the oil that would make her rich, so she remains a poor country.

“The period between 1960s and 1980s was not only the golden age of university education in Nigeria, but also the golden age of research. In fact, it was unanimously agreed by the World Bank, the National Universities Commission, the Nigerian academic staff union and industries, that in terms of quality and quantity of research output of tertiary institutions, Nigeria was the best in Sub-Saharan Africa (Karani, 1997; Okebukola, 2002)”.

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House of Reps speaker, Dimeji Bankole with Cross River governor, Liyel Imoke ..at the summit

Nigeria’s decline from competitiveness in business actually started from decline in attention to education as Ibeneche related. “The Association of Indian Universities comparing the growth of tertiary education between India and Nigeria in 1981 praised the remarkable progress made by Nigeria. It said that “except for Nigeria in the last half a decade, or so, no other country in the world has had a growth rate of 13-14 per cent per year”.

However, this head start was lost because of lack of foresight, changing directions, poor funding, and poor quality and quantity of research emanating from its ever expanding national university system.

University rankings
“Today, no Nigerian university is listed among the top 500 universities in the world as ranked by the 2007 THES – QS World University Rankings. The University of Cape Town, South-Africa is the only African university in the top 500.

The place of Nigerian universities in the African rankings is more pathetic because they trail universities from Kenya, South Africa, and Ghana, countries endowed with fewer natural resources. Only four Nigerian universities - Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife (44th), the University of Ibadan (65th), the University of Benin (79th) and the University of Lagos (90th) – made the list of top African universities.

“This reflects the poor staffing and funding situation in our schools. There are only 16,000 teachers in universities, a shortfall of 30,000 according to chairman, Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) branch of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Mr. Muazu Maiwada (2005).

“These are not credentials of a rich country. The most generous description of Nigeria would be a potentially rich country inhabited by poor people who are hardly able to meet their needs of food, power, water, good roads and adequate health care,” Ibeneche said, as the audience munched away the sumptuous lunch.

South – South: The challenges for this region makes its fate a little worse than the rest of the country. Again Mr. Ibeneche, “The South–South region shares the same fate with the rest of the country. For instance, investment in education is especially lagging behind.  There are not enough quality schools and not enough teachers. There is a preponderance of poor performing students.Of the state universities accredited by National Universities Commission (NUC), the South–South region performed badly. It is obvious from the above that the South-South is as poor as Nigeria, if not poorer. The implication is that oil and gas has not made the region rich either. It is also clear that a different strategy is required to change the situation.

Wealth is human capital: “In his book, The Origin of Wealth Eric Beinhocker asks the following questions: “But where does wealth come from in the first place? How does the sweat of our brows and the knowledge of our brains lead to its creation?” Implied in these is the truism now accepted by all economists that wealth is the product of people’s efforts and the interaction of people in exchange and trade.

It is not the endowments of minerals, land, geography, or even population. Without investment in human capital development, no economy has ever moved from agrarian to industrial stage.

It is, therefore, necessary for Nigeria, and yes, the South-South region to focus on the development of human capital as the only viable route to wealth. Converting the limited rent derived from mineral resources to human capital is the only strategy that will lead to wealth creation. This is the route followed by all emerging nations”.

Ibeneche proposed a plan of action, strands of which include:
*Establishment of elite secondary schools

*Establishment of shared facilities (just same as schools sharing stadiums for sports development)

*Establishment of specialist institutions for shipping, aviation, etc, such as Maritime Academy, Oron

*Establishment of regional specialist schools

*Establishment of vehicles for effective Public Private Partnership (PPP) schools

*Secondment of professionals to schools

*Sabbatical for teachers in oil and gas industry

“To benefit from the numerous opportunities presented by the oil and gas industry, we must have the right skill set and the requisite education. Investment in science education is critical to getting a significant toehold in the industry. The key skills needed through the life cycle of an oil and gas field are based on science education or on science related crafts and technology.

“The key to quality human capital lies in provision of good secondary education. Secondary education is critical to building human capital. Deficiencies in primary education can be remedied at the secondary school level by dedicated teachers. However, it is far more difficult, and almost impossible, to repair the damage of a failed primary and secondary education at the university level.

At the tertiary level, it is assumed that the child has learned how to learn,” the NLNG managing director said. His suggestions along these lines: “Two strategies are required for the growth of human capital. First is for the development of leaders and professionals. The second is the development of the executors in industry – technicians and crafts people. Any successful economy will need both.

Elite secondary schools: “The development of leaders and professionals will require the creation of institutions that cater for the talented and the best. For this group, a few elite secondary schools must form the heart of the strategy.

The pull of these elite schools will encourage excellence in primary schools as teachers and students work hard to earn admission into the elite schools. Here I wish to commend the foresight of Governor Chibuike Amaechi in sponsoring students from Rivers State to elite secondary schools in the country, and for his initiative in building model schools in Rivers State.

Good elite schools act as magnets and bring about competition that rubs off well on both students and the general level of education. This has been the role Kings College and other Federal Government colleges played in the 70s and 80s. To wrap up on this, I must emphasise that an elite school is not made of brick and mortar. Rather it is more of dedicated and motivated teachers equipped and supported to foster learning.

“If there is a need to trade off because of the limitations of funding, it must be said that one good school is better than a thousand worthless ones. However, it may be necessary to share facilities to ensure that the region can fund the number of elite science secondary schools it needs.

Science equipment
Science laboratories and equipment can be shared by schools located in the same locality to reduce the cost per capita of each student. Information Technology centres can also be shared by giving schools in the same vicinity access to the internet and to online libraries. This done, the elite schools should be able to feed the universities with bright students.

“What applies to secondary schools applies even more to universities. One good university in the South-South region will do more good than the many we have today that simply do not work. Universities need to focus on a few subjects in which they become centres of excellence. Effective universities are both purveyors of and creators of knowledge. Knowledge is created in the process of problem solving, hence the need for elite universities to get involved in solving the economic and social problems of the region”.

There are a few glimpses of explored opportunities in education. Ibeneche pointed at IPS of the University of Port Harcourt as one. He explained it.

“The Institute of Petroleum Studies (IPS) is an international post graduate institution established through collaboration between Ecole du Petrole et des Moteurs (IFP School) France and the University of Port Harcourt Nigeria in 2002. The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)/Elf Petroleum Nigeria Limited (EPNL) Joint Venture as part of its sustainable development Programme sponsors the collaboration.

“IPS offers post-graduate training programmes for both the upstream and downstream sectors of the petroleum industry. Instructors are drawn from Nigerian universities, IFP School and the petroleum industry (from Nigeria and abroad).

“The University of Port Harcourt and IFP School France award the joint degrees in conjunction with IFP Continuing Education, ENSPM France, and other local content services providers. The Institute offers broad-based continuing education programmes to professionals in the petroleum industry. The courses are designed to meet the needs of managerial, engineering and technical staff in oil, gas and refining, petrochemical and chemical companies. IPS is planned to become an International Well Control Forum (IWCF) Certification Centre in Africa.”

Middle Level Manpower: Ibeneche stressed the imperatives of manpower and some of the setbacks that have been suffered along these lines. “The second strand of the strategy is aimed at the majority of the population who are as endowed as the group of leaders and professionals. For these, vocational and trade schools are needed. These schools will focus on City and Guilds level of qualification in trades like welding, catering, scaffolding, fitting, bricklaying, tiling, auto mechanics, sea faring etc. Is it not a shame that when we were fitting out Bonga in Nigerian waters, we had to import fitters, welders and scafolders from the Philippines and the UK?

“The oil and gas companies have taken the lead in the production of middle level manpower by setting up specialised schools to equip the students with the right skills for today’s labour market. The schools include:

*Shell Intensive Training Programme (SITP) was designed to develop the skills of young Nigerian graduates and technicians to prepare them for employment in the oil industry. Over 100 trainees are selected after a competitive test for each of the sections to run a 44-week session.  SITP has two streams: SITP/1 for Science Graduates and SITP/2 for school leavers with technical background.

Both courses are based in Warri. There are three areas of specialisation; Instrumentation Engineering Technology, Electrical Engineering Technology and Mechanical Engineering Technology with Production Operations common to all of them. The training is provided by the Aberdeen branch of the IPEDEX Group. At the end of the training, beneficiaries receive the City and Guilds Technicians Diploma. The affiliation/accreditation with City and Guilds International, London enables graduates of the programme to obtain its internationally recognised Technicians Diploma.

*Bonny Vocational School (BVC) is an NLNG/Bonny Kingdom partnership project designed to promote vocational/entrepreneurial skills acquisition, development of technical competencies and self reliance in youths in Bonny community in particular and Rivers State in general. It is geared towards meeting the needs and aspirations of community through three tier curriculum. On successful completion of training, the trainee is awarded the International Technical Vocation Level 3 Certificate of London City and Guilds and or the Nigerian Skills Technical Certificate. The centre, which started in 2005, has trained over 500 youths in various technical vocations and competencies.

*The Petroleum Training Institute (PTI) was established in 1973 by the Federal Government as a prerequisite for the membership of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to train indigenous middle level manpower to meet the labour demands of the oil and gas industry in Nigeria and the West African sub region. It awards National Diploma and Higher National Diploma certificates. Its main task is to improve the knowledge and practical skills required within the oil and gas industry, both downstream and upstream. It is my contention that the focus of PTI on the award of qualifications of HND which competes with degrees awarded by universities makes this institution irrelevant and unsuccessful.

*The Maritime Academy of Nigeria, Oron, formerly known as the Nautical College of Nigeria, was established in 1979 as an integrated institution for the education and training of shipboard officers and ratings and shore-based management personnel. It provides education, training and upgrading of officer cadets through the development of knowledge and skills necessary to enable them perform duties at sea as Deck and Engineering officers in compliance with the stipulated international conventions for the training of such officers. The education and training enable cadets to perform creditably, the functions required of junior managerial staff in the operations department of shipping companies, shipping agencies, ports and other organisations in the maritime industry.

NLNG is supporting the Nigerian Maritime Academy, Oron, to train manpower for the industry. The Warsash Maritime College, Southampton, was engaged to review the academy’s STCW 95 courses. Warsash Maritime College also provides accreditation to the Nigerian Maritime Academy, Oron, through the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA), United Kingdom. NLNG has contributed to enhancing training and providing equipment for the Nigerian Maritime Academy, to help it achieve the recommended standards. To date, NLNG has employed over 160 graduates of the Maritime Academy, Oron.

“In 2008, 28 cadets were recruited from the academy by Nigeria LNG Limited. They commenced their cadetship training at Warsash Maritime Academy and Glasgow Nautical Studies in the UK in January 2009.

Opportunities in oil and gas business
It is pleasing to note that despite the global financial and economic crisis, oil and gas industry remains robust, taking the ups and downs in its stride. Not withstanding the prophesy by doomsayers, and even President Obama’s crusade to break his country’s addiction to oil – USA’s annual oil consumption per capita is 25 barrels – the global energy demand in the medium and long term will continue to grow, regardless of the present economic recession. Indeed, in the latest World Energy Outlook, the International Energy Agency believes the current economic storm has not changed the market’s long-term outlook. It sees world energy use growing more slowly to 2030 than it projected last year, but still expanding by 45 per cent between 2006 and 2030 with an average growth rate of 1.6 per cent.

“Fossil fuels will account for 80 per cent of the global energy mix in 2030 with oil being the dominant fuel. China and India will account for more than half of the incremental energy demand by 2030, it said. China’s per-capita consumption of oil, for example, climbed from 1.58 barrels in 2003 to 1.75 barrels in 2004. This trend is expected to continue.

The petroleum landscape in Africa is changing rapidly, and experts say that confidence that the continent can develop into a worldwide petroleum centre remains unchanged. The optimism has been substantiated repeatedly: bringing new acreage offers, substantial onshore/offshore hydrocarbon discoveries, commissioning of numerous fields, and development of much needed infrastructure.

“A push to divert the United States’ oil dependence from the Middle East has also led to a new rush to Sub Saharan Africa and to the marginally tapped reserves of Angola, Equatorial Guinea and Nigeria, where major discoveries receive fast paced development programmes.

“IHS reports that although Africa’s oil reserves are estimated to be only eight percent of the world total, great potential remains. Past capital investments are paying off handsomely; further flow of capital is expected and analysis suggests that investments in the Gulf of Guinea will soon exceed expenditures in the Gulf of Mexico.

Saharan Africa is a growing region of hydrocarbon exploration and the region is a proven giant in terms of gas and oil production and export. Activity in Sub Saharan Africa is principally concentrated offshore with the highest success rates in the central and southern Gulf of Guinea.

“Nigeria still presents a chaotic yet compelling picture. Political maturity is taking sometime to arrive, especially with the legislature trying to stake out its turf and the executive and judiciary struggling to get their acts together. Yet Nigeria remains one of the big hitters in terms of global oil supply, something that is expected to continue into the future. Oil-hungry nations without exception pay close attention to the availability of Nigerian low-sulphur crude. In addition, Nigeria is becoming central to the global LNG trade - Nigeria LNG Limited is today supplying 10 per cent of world’s LNG.

“The energy industry in the 21st Century is at the very centre of the challenges the world faces so we must endeavour to rise to these challenges wisely, confidently and rationally. Among the numerous things that could afflict the oil industry in the coming years - equipment shortages, barriers to access, ill-considered taxes - the one that seems the most intractable is the perceived shortage of new talent with which to replace today’s aging work force, many of whom will be retiring in the next decade.

“Recently, Schlumberger Business Consulting (SBC) published a study titled “Surviving the skills shortage: Results of a global survey quantifying supply and demand of petrotechnical expertise.

“SBC used databases from 115 universities and public sources as well as that of its own and other companies and leveraged its considerable network of recruiters to quantify the number of graduates in petroleum engineering and geosciences.

“The problem, according to the survey, centres around two demographic groups: new graduates and mid-career (30 to 45 year old) professionals. On a global basis, it turns out; there are more than enough graduates to meet demand in some regions and a serious deficit of them in others. Meanwhile demand for mid-career professionals everywhere will far exceed supply over the next ten years.

This study published in 2006 has surveyed the worldwide workforce demand and supply in petrotechnical expertise (geologists, geophysicists and reservoir engineers) until 2016. They looked at 115 universities, which covers more than 70 per cent of all relevant universities. The study found that annual deficits resulting from the balance between supply and demand of petrotechnical graduates over the coming decade exist in:

North America – annual shortage of 420; the Middle-East – annual shortage of 350; Russia – annual shortage of 160. The study found that there is a surplus of petrotechnical personnel in China - annual excess of 410; Indonesia - annual excess of 900; India - annual excess of 100; Venezuela – annual excess of 500; Mexico – annual excess of 100.

In other words, North America, the Middle East and Russia are undersupplied by nearly 900 new graduates while Latin America, Asia, China and India have about 2000 more than the region requires.

“Please note that Nigeria was not seen as a potential supplier of these needed human skills. The fact that shortages and surpluses are out of balance on a geographic basis means there are prospects and opportunities for everyone willing, including Nigeria, to develop manpower to fill the imminent vacuum.

“This study was done when the economies of the world were booming and the demand for skills in the service sector and Information Technology was draining resources from the energy sector. The current economic slowdown, may mean that a surplus of unemployed but skilled people may become available from the US and Europe once again.

This means that the recent uptake of Nigerians in the international Oil and Gas industry will face a new challenge that can only be met with better quality of professionals. We should be training people not only for our local consumption - which means that our products must meet global standards.

“There are currently not enough students to replenish the senior experts. There are some 1,700 people studying petroleum engineering in 17 US universities compared with over 11,000 in 34 universities in 1983.  The bigger problem that comes to light from this study is the capability shortage. The most experienced geologists, geophysicist and petroleum engineers will retire in a big bar wave. So the race for replacement of aging professionals has already started. We must groom our people quickly to be able to take over and this must be done quickly to meet the next oil boom.

A sweep of opportunities “Besides, the challenges posed by the crew change, which will throw up opportunities worldwide, the reform in the oil and gas industry, the ongoing OGIC reforms, the focus on the power sector and IPPs, government’s push for local content, creation of economic free zones (Onne and Tinapa, for example) and the numerous road construction projects in the states present us with a wide arc of opportunities to constructively train and productively engage our human resources.

Can the South-South ever catch up?
“The answer is that it depends. First, we must accept that productive capacity, underpinned by a virile human capital and based on knowledge, is the real wealth of our country – not the oil and gas or the solid minerals in our soils. Acceptance of this fact will force certain imperatives on us. Among these imperatives are:
A new emphasis on quality education aimed at broadening access to practical and adaptive knowledge that can be used in production. An education which recognises that most people should be taught skills and competencies useful in the productive process

The creation of avenues and opportunities for apprenticeships in productive skills There should be accessible institutions where young people can go to learn the art of music, painting, welding, tailoring, catering and cooking, photography, etc. These institutions should provide training that can be certified to meet minimum standards of proficiency acceptable to employers in industry.

Proper regulation and control of the jobs of artisans and crafts people There is a crying need for standards and the enforcement of minimum standards in the work of butchers and meat sellers, auto mechanics, electricians, masons and other building artisans. The absence of standards and enforcement leads to a lot of waste and excessive cost of production.

“I believe this is the path, not only to recovery, but also to becoming competitive on the global level,”Ibeneche rounded up to the applause of the large audience. We were grateful for the lunch, others for the thoughts shared, more left wondering where all these would lead the South South – and Nigeria – in the search for competitive productions, better living for its numerous citizens and wealth creation away from the penury that uninvited oil and gas resources represent.

Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, Minister of Mines and Steel Development, presented these dampening statistics of the South South (though not at the lunch) as she proposed more attention for the opportunities in solid minerals:
•Per cent of attainment of primary school -43.3 per cent

•Per cent of attainment of secondary education -43.2 per cent

•Per cent of attainment  of post secondary -13.5 per cent

•Malaria ranking highest in health burden of the region -71.2 per cent

• Per cent of people with distance as reason for lack of access to health facilities -34.8 per cent

• Per cent of people with money as reason for lack of access to health facilities -47.1 per cent

• Per cent of rural dwellers population  living under poverty -88.0 per cent

• Per cent of employed people living at less than N5,000 per month -46.0 per cent

•Youth between the ages of 16-29 constitute 62 per cent of total population;

•87 per cent of the youth population in the region are unemployed i.e. only one in every seven youths is employed.

Back to Tinapa, it stands in its majesty challenging Nigeria to find the right mix between politics and economics, if really Nigeria wants to join the evolving markets. What results would the summit produce away from the pall of Tinapa? The South South can catch up once the political will is found, rooted in the understanding that these opportunities, no matter how attractive they look, cannot last forever.

Watch out for exclusive interview with Governor Lyle Imoke on Tinapa, South South Economic Summit and the solution to militancy in the region. Only in Vanguard, the newspaper that covers South South better than all the rest put together.

(vanguardngr.com)

Chinese-In-Africa: Boat blast kills 5 Chinese workers in Nigeria

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

LAGOS — An official with the Chinese Consulate-General in Lagos confirmed that five Chinese crew members were killed in a fishing boat explosion in Nigerian economic hub Lagos on Monday night.

Another member, who narrowly escaped the mishap, sustained serious injures on his right ankle.

According to the official, the victims are all Chinese sailors working for the fishing company, but their identification remains unknown unless rescue facilities arrived to uncover their bodies, which have still been confined inside the sunken ship.

The Chinese owner of the fishing boat, surnamed Zheng, said that the blast happened to the ship’s engine cabin when the five crew members were trying to start the boat for a new journey.

He said the consequent fire lasting for about seven hours would have dismissed any hope of his sailors’ survival.

It was learnt that the reason of the accident is still under investigation, and reporters at the scene were promised to be informed as soon as results come out.

The injured worker has been sent to hospital to receive medical treatment, while the body-uncovering job has still not been seen by now.
(ChinaDaily)

China-Africa: Technology cannot be transferred, says forum

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

No nation can consciously transfer its technology to another and the best model for any nation is to develop a policy framework for technological advancement. This view resonated through the deliberations of the BusinessDay CEO Forum where the plenary session focused essentially on Chinese –Nigeria Economic relations.
The panel during the session which was moderated by Frank Nweke Jr, former minister of information and currently of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group, had as its members, Zhang Li Jun of the Chinese Embassy in Nigeria, Walter Jason Wu Ji of Huawei Technologies, Yibing Wu of Legend Holdings and Dominic Barton of McKinsey. The panel agreed that certain critical factors that propelled the Chinese economic and industrial revolution in contemporary times could serve as a veritable lesson for a country like Nigeria.
Among these success factors are a stable polity, separation of ideology from economic policy making, consistency of purpose, adoption of a reward and appointment system that gives credence to meritocracy, capacity to sustain a system that can learn efficiently from those who had perfected certain technologies, ability to sustain a low-cost high quality manufacturing and the leverage on a regional market for export expansion. It can be recalled that China maintains a high volume of intra-Asian trade.
Still on what China could offer Nigeria, the panel stated that the strength of the Chinese in infrastructure development can be tapped through enlisting the support of their construction companies towards the development of Nigeria’s infrastructure. However, the panel equally cautioned that the actual benefits that Nigeria will derive from China would depend more on a strategic bilateral economic relations framework which will ensure that the ties between the countries remain mutually beneficial.
It would be recalled that in recent times China has found Africa a haven for trade expansion and a source of the much needed oil to fuel its massive industrial growth. It is equally remarkable that the Chinese new found interest in the economic potentials of Africa has generated some controversy bordering on its somewhat lackadaisical attitude towards the conflict situation in Sudan and the perception in some quarters that the Chinese companies operating in Africa may after all not be much concerned about the welfare of Africans but would rather be obsessed by what they can get from Africa.
However, it appears that a constructive engagement of Chinese investors by the local business communities and African governments would enthrone a more fruitful business relation between Africa and China.

(businessdayonline.com)

Africa: GDPAU Signs Exclusive License Agreement for an Anti-diabetic Herbal Drug with Professor Louis Nelson

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

New Brunswick, NJ, - GDP Ayurvedic University (GDPAU), New Brunswick, NJ. Chairman and President, Professor (Dr.) Ramesh C. Pandey announced today that GDPAU has signed an exclusive worldwide license agreement for the commercialization, sales and marketing of an anti-diabetic herbal drug (currently named AD-1) with Professor Louis Nelson of Abuja, Nigeria. The history making signing ceremony was held on February 3rd, 2009 at the Sheraton Hotel in Abuja in the presence of Nigerian and International distinguished guests and dignitaries including the Honorable Minister of State for Health, Dr. Aliyu Idi Hong; Director-General of the National Institute for Pharmaceuticals Research and Development (NIPRD), Dr. Uford Inyang; and the Senate President represented by the Vice-Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health Honorable Senator Gyang Dantong.

Honorable Minister Dr. Aliyu Hong said “The occasion is an epoch and historical day in the history of Nigeria. The drug would expand the landscape of medicine in the world and encourage more researchers into herbal drugs in the Country.” The Honorable Minister further said “There is hardly a house you go to in Nigeria, that one person will not be affected by this killer disease.” He pledged the support of the Federal Government, especially those who are into herbal medicine research.

Dr. Uford Inyang, the DG of NIPRD, commended Professor Pandey for taking this bold step of signing the agreement and expressed the inability of the Federal Government to explore the enormous benefits in the herbal market. He stressed the need to focus on the herbal drugs.

Professor Nelson said “We are excited and looking forward to working with Professor Pandey and GDPAU in the further development and commercialization of AD-1 for diabetes patients worldwide.” The discovery of the anti-diabetic drug was a result of extensive research and firm commitment of Professor Nelson in the natural plant products of Nigerian biodiversity. With the financial support from Akwa Ibom State further work was carried out at NIPRD and clinical trials at University of Jos by the Nigerian scientists.

The Chairman and President of GDPAU Prof. Pandey described the drug AD-1 as the second great drug that has come out of the continent, particularly from Nigeria. The first being the herbal drug NICOSANTM for the prophylactic management of Sickle Cell Disease (SCD), which was licensed by Prof. Pandey from NIPRD in July 2002. Prof. Pandey further said, “I believe in African Natural Biodiversity and all Nigerians should be proud that they have given two herbal drugs to the world for the two important diseases.”

About Diabetes: Diabetes which afflicts over 180 million sufferers worldwide is a life threatening condition. Diabetes is a syndrome of disordered metabolism resulting in abnormally high sugar level (hyperglycemia). The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that by the year 2030 the number of people that suffer from Diabetes will exceed 366 million.

About Prof. Nelson: Prof. Nelson, 61 holds a Ph.D. in Molecular and Computational Chemistry from the University of Ibadan and hails from Akwa Ibom State of Nigeria. He served as the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Science and Technology in the year 2001 and worked with the Raw Materials Research and Development Council.

About GDPAU: GDP Ayurvedic University (GDPAU) is a “not-for-profit” tax exempt 501 (c) (3) organization established in the year 2001 at New Brunswick, New Jersey with the vision to bring credibility and recognition to the Traditional Systems of Health and Medicines through research, education, training therapy and mass promotion. The mission of GDPAU is to establish a state-of-the-art center of excellence in the field of Ayurveda, Yoga and Allied Alternative System of Medicines in the USA, India and other parts of the world. GDPAU envisions a center where people, experts and researchers from “Alternative Systems of Medicines and Modern Medical System” work together for the Health Care Delivery, Health Promotion, Integral Disease Management and Adjunctive/Alternative Management of diseases, which are cost effective, reliable, easy and credible with constant support of advanced medical sciences in the respective fields. GDPAU’s website is http://gdpau.org/.

For Further Information Contact:

LaMonte Forthun

GDP Ayurvedic University (GDPAU)

(732) 317-8124

(GDPAU)

China-Africa: China to replace satellite made for Nigeria for free

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

BEIJING (Reuters) - China has promised to replace a Nigerian telecommunications satellite free of charge after the last one, made and launched in China, failed after about 18 months in orbit, the China Daily said on Wednesday.

The $340 million Nigerian Communication Satellite, or NIGCOMSAT-1, was launched to great fanfare in 2007, with Nigeria hoping it would offer advanced telecoms, broadcasting and broadband multimedia services for 15 years. Its solar-powered battery failed in November 2008.

The replacement NIGCOMSAT-1R will be launched from Sichuan province in southwestern China in the fourth quarter of 2011, Yin Liming, president of China Great Wall Industry Corp, said at a signing ceremony on Tuesday.

The satellite was supposed to make Africa’s most populous nation a technological hub, saving broadband users and phone users hundreds of millions of dollars a year and enabling Internet access to remote rural villages.

China is marketing its engineering and launch services to developing countries, as well as to telecommunications firms in the developed world, as a less expensive alternative.

It is also developing its own space capabilities, and plans to land a vehicle on the moon in 2012.

Africans-In-China: Nigerian man carrying 87 kg marijuana detained in Beijing

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Customs officials at the Beijing airport Tuesday announced they have detained a Nigerian man who was carrying a suitcase filled with more than 87 kg of marijuana earlier this month.

Police claimed it was this year’s biggest drug haul.


Beijing airport officers question the man suspected of carrying 87 kilos of marijuana. [Lei Hong/China Daily]

The man, whose identity was not disclosed, arrived at the Beijing Capital International Airport from Lagos, Nigeria, on March 2, and left his suitcase at the airport, fearing tight security, police said in a statement.

When frisked at the security check, the officials found only a bag, containing some clothes, and $1,600 cash on the Nigerian, police said.

However, the man returned to the airport the next day to claim the suitcase and was nabbed.

A total of 72 bricks of marijuana - wrapped in black plastic bags - weighing 87.25 kg were found in the suitcase, it said.

The police have detained the man, the statement said.

Drug smugglers have started using more “sophisticated ways” to transport illegal and banned substances, but the police will continue to crackdown on them, it said.

Chinese customs handled 387 cases of drug trafficking last year, seizing 774 kg of drugs, China News Agency said.

Drugs smuggled into China have almost “doubled” in the past few years, the General Administration of Customs said.

The number of registered Chinese drug addicts has risen by a third in the past three years, and reached 1.08 million as of October 2008, the Ministry of Public Security said.

The number is continuing to increase and the situation is serious, Deputy Minister Zhang Xinfeng said. According to the ministry, the number of addicts in 2005 was about 785,000.

(chinadaily.com.cn)

China-Africa: Nigeria expects more investment from China

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

Nigeria hopes China to invest more in the country, Vice President Goodluck Jonathan said in Abuja, the capital, on Monday.

Receiving a delegation of China Council for Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT), Jonathan said the Nigerian government would do everything within its powers to improve the power sector to boost economic growth.

Jonathan, who noted that power was the driver of investment, stressed the determination of the federal government to improve the electricity situation in Nigeria in order to achieve its ambition of placing Nigeria among the top 20 economies of the world by 2020.

He called on the Chinese delegation to come to Nigeria to invest in various sectors, noting that Nigeria will overcome the problems in the power sector.

Jonathan maintained that with the cooperation of Chinese in the areas of trade and investments, Nigeria was sure to become one of the leading economies in the world by 2020.

He also talked with the Chinese delegation led by Zhang Wei, Vice-Chairman of the CCPIT, on transport and rail projects as well as power project like Mambila project to be built in northern Nigeria.

“We will look into the issue of Mambila project when we meet this week and I can assure you that we are going to look at it critically and see what can be done,” said he.

In his brief address, Zhang Wei expressed his hope that more Chinese businessmen or enterprises will invest in Nigeria to facilitate the development in the country in the coming years.

Editor: Sun

(XINHUA)

China-Africa: China, France battle for the soul of Nigerian rail system

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009
Written by Chris Ochayi
Monday, 16 March 2009

Just as the Federal Government is still pondering on cancellation of the $8.3 billion contact for 1,315 kilometres Lagos-Kano rail project awarded to Chinese firm, CCECC, the French Government has indicated interest to participate in the rail modernization project.

French Ambassador to Nigeria, jean-Michel Dumond told the Minister of Transport, Alhaji Ibrahim Bio that his country was blessed with competent firms to undertake contracts for the construction of modern rail system and rehabilitations of the old gauges.

Ambassador Dumond particularly said the French firm is ready to move in and commence works on the Lagos-Kano rail modernization project should the Federal government decided to revoke the $8.3 billion contract awarded to CCECC.

The Ambassador, who said he has had the privilege and opportunity of travelling to the most parts of the country since assumption of duty in Nigeria, advised that the nation needed a functional rail system to ease movement of goods and hasten the track of development.

Apart from the rail sector, the Ambassador also reiterated the readiness of French to get involve in deepening the development of power and aviation sectors in the country.

Responding, the Minister of Transport, Alhaji Ibrahim, said, though the contract is yet to be revoked because the House of Representatives which fault the award of the contract was currently investigating it.

“The whole project is not yet cancelled and if that happens, I will be the person to announce”, he said.

He said “the Chinese Government has reversed its decision to provide $2.5 billion counterpart funding to Federal Government for the execution of multi-billion dollar modernization of rail projects”.

The Chinese government according to him said it is only committed to the provision of $500 million concessionary loan while Federal Government is to obtain the balance of $2 billion from Chinese banks at current interest rate.

The Minister however, advised the Ambassador to indicate interest in the rehabilitations of the old rail system, which were not in service in the last twenty years, for example, the Port Harcourt-Kano amongst others.

He said President Umaru Yar’Adua has directed that the narrow gauges are to be rehabilitated immediately and that we should procure more locomotive for the hauling of goods and commodities.

China-Africa: Nigeria, Chinese firms sign N2.5b pact on vehicle plant

Friday, March 13th, 2009

From Emeka Anuforo, Abuja

A NIGERIAN firm, Matreach Logistics Limited and its Chinese partner, Monde have reached an agreement to establish an assembly plant for the production of three-wheel and four-wheel vehicles in Nigeria.

The construction of the assembling plant is in the second phase of the agreement and it’s expected to commence in 2010.

Matreach Logistics is already investing about $16 million or N2.5 billion into the importation of first batch consignment of the three-wheel and four-wheel cars with adequate spare parts back up into the country.

The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was co-signed by Managing Director of Matreach Logistics, Mr Martins Okonkwo, and Vice-President of Monde, Mr. Rulyiu Gou.

Okonkwo, a member of Nigerian in Diaspora Organization (NIDO), Germany Chapter, explained that the decision of the Chinese firm to divest its investment to Nigeria was partly in response to the global economic crisis._

_ By the MoU, the Nigerian firm has the exclusive right to import and sell all the products manufactured for both the three-wheel and four-wheel cars across West African sub-region.

_ Okonkwo disclosed that the first set of the cars would arrive Nigeria by the end of March 2009.

He added: “We are delighted to enter into this world-class venture aimed at alleviating transportation challenges in West Africa especially in Nigeria which is the heart of Africa.

“Considering the huge population of our country, we believe it is morally justified to take-off in Nigeria and later expand to other West African countries.”_

He disclosed that his company had already signed agreements with some financial institutions in the country, for the project.

_ He stressed that the company, in collaboration with the Chinese firm, would construct maintenance sites in several states across the country, where the cars are to operate.

_ “Our projection is to provide these means of transportation to teeming Nigerians with the view to reduce the level of unemployment among youths despite the lingering financial crisis across the world.

“The cost of getting the car is about half of other cars in the market today. It is durable and already in use in South America and China,” he explained.

In his presentation, Rulyiu stated that his company would be supplying the cars at prices far below what they are sold in other parts of the world.

(ngrguardiannews.com)

China-Africa: FG tasks Chinese Government on counterfeiting

Monday, March 9th, 2009

THE Federal Government has called on the Chinese Government to help Nigeria put a total stop to the counterfeiting of some branded Nigerian textile products allegedly being produced in China.

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Textile industry

The government has also urged the Chinese Government to grant Nigeria zero tariffs that is being offered the least developed economic nations in Africa. “We may not fall into that category but at the same time, judging by the amount of trade we are doing with you especially imports coming in from China, we will a`lso like you to extend that zero tariff to Nigeria,” the government said.

Speaking on Thursday in Abuja when the Chinese Ambassador to Nigeria, Xu Jianguo visited him in his office, Minister of Commerce and Industry, Chief Achike Udenwa said: “It has been discovered that the counterfeit products which are substandard compared to its Nigerian original, are printed mostly in China then brought back into the country and sold at a relatively cheaper price than the ones produced in the country.”

Udenwa who noted that the issue has been investigated and found to be further compounding the problem associated with the ailing textile industry in the country, said, “they take our own textile brands and fake them, then bring them illegally into Nigeria. We will like you to investigate this and please if it is found to be correct, let’s try and address it because it is killing our own local industries here.”

According to him, what is actually required now by Nigeria is legal trade which will be guided by the World Trade Organisation (WTO) principles, just as he warned that the Chinese Government must ensure that their goods coming into Nigeria were of good quality.

In his remarks, the Chinese Ambassador to Nigeria, Xu Jianguo who noted that the Chinese Government can never encourage the illegal act of counterfeiting Nigerian branded textiles, stressed that there was the need for both countries to cooperate if the act must stop.

According to him, “We need to cooperate because the act does not only involve illegal businessmen from but also illegal businessmen from Nigeria. We should do our best and I sincerely believe that if we cooperate more closely, we can solve the problem.”

The envoy who explained that the problem of trade between Nigeria and China was imbalance, said that the trade policy of his country is mutual which ensures a “win-win” situation, adding: “Our government encourages Chinese companies to directly invest in Nigeria for them to help Nigeria improve its manufacturing ability. By so doing, you can export and I believe that this is very important and it can solve the problem of imbalance.”

(vanguardngr.com)