Archive for Money

Edo acquires 2 rigs to boost water supply

Edo acquires 2 rigs to boost water supply

The Edo State government has acquired
two water rigs capable of drilling 1,400-metre deep boreholes, in order
to boost its rural water supply programme.

Governor Adams
Oshiomhole said this at Ekpoma in Edo State, on Wednesday, while
inaugurating one of the rigs deployed to Edo central senatorial
district for the drilling of boreholes.

He noted that the
acquisition of the rigs for the drilling of boreholes was in
fulfillment of his electoral promise to provide potable water to people
of the state. The governor said that he was aware of the water problem
in area, pointing out that the people were forced to store water during
the rainy season against the dry season.

Mr. Oshiomhole said
that the situation was regrettable because when Chief Dennis Osadebe
was the Premier of old Mid-Western Region, water was flowing freely in
the entire region.

Joseph
Ololumenosen, a community leader in the area, thanked the governor for
his bold steps to tackle the water problem confronting the people.

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World Bank gives Anambra N5m grant

World Bank gives Anambra N5m grant

Three co-operative
societies in the Ogbaru council of Anambra State have benefited from
the over N5 million ongoing Federal Government/World Bank sponsored
Fadama III project grants.

Charles Epundu,
director of agricultural services in the local government area, made
the disclosure in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on
Thursday, in Atani, near Onitsha in Anambra State.

“Osamala Community
Fadama User Group (FUG) took their grant for yam production; Odekpe
Community FUG took theirs for rice production; and Atani Community FUG
took theirs for provision of storage facilitie,” Mr. Epundu said.

He disclosed that
the co-operatives under the Fadama 111 project had also been provided
with over 20 hectares of arable land for the purpose.

“More communities’ co-operatives are joining the Fadama III project,
and the facilitators are not relenting in their efforts in the council
to spread the message of Fadama to every remote community, as well as
supervision of the various benefiting co-operative societies. “Fadama
III project is moving on fine in this council area. The council took
the first position in the state’s World Food Day, due to its success in
FADAMA projects for some years now,” he said.

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UK to launch Asian, African low-carbon energy funds

UK to launch Asian, African low-carbon energy funds

The UK government
will launch two new public-private partnership funds to promote
generation of renewable energy in Africa and Asia next year, the
secretary of state for international development said on Thursday.

The funds will target low-carbon energy and related investments in Asia, and large-scale renewable energy projects in Africa.

“We hope to launch these partnerships next year,” Andrew Mitchell said at a briefing in London.

A spokesman for the
UK’s department for international development said it was looking at
ways the funds could be financed, and could not put a value on them yet
or identify the potential private sector partners.

Early modelling of
the Asian fund suggests that it could bring 9 pounds of private sector
investment for every pound committed by the government.

Over the next 25
years, the project could generate up to 5 gigawatts of renewable energy
and avoid 150 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions.

The African fund
could generate up to 500 megawatts of new renewable energy per year
from 2015, providing enough electricity for over four million
households.

The government will
also launch a new advocacy fund to help the poorest nations get heard
in international climate change and trade negotiations.

“This fund will
provide access to legal, technical, and logistical support to the
poorest and most vulnerable countries (…) whose full participation is
essential if we are to achieve an equitable deal,” Mr. Mitchell said,
referring to a global agreement on climate change.

Finance

In its spending
review in October, Britain said it would provide 2.9 billion pounds of
international climate finance to 2015. This will partly fund a 1.5
billion pound pledge of fast-start finance from 2010 to 2012.

At last year’s
Copenhagen climate summit, rich countries pledged $30 billion of “fast
start finance” to help poorer countries adapt to climate change and
reduce their greenhouse gas emissions during 2010-2012.

Although European
governments have fulfilled a promise to deliver 2.2 billion euros to
help developing countries tackle climate change, critics have said the
money might have come from rebranding existing aid pledges.

“We promised to
report openly on our fast-start commitments. The UK aid transparency
guarantee was testament to our commitment to be open and transparent
and we are abiding by that promise,” Mr. Mitchell said in response to
such criticism.

“(Our climate
finance pledge) gives us the credibility to press other donors to meet
their commitments and press for an agreement on new and innovative
sources of climate finance,” he added.

Climate finance has
been a contentious issue since the Copenhagen Accord last year.
Developing countries say funds to help them are not enough, while
developed countries struggle to allocate aid in the wake of an economic
downturn.

A U.N. summit in
Cancun, Mexico, from November29-December10, will be trying to find ways
to leverage finance and stimulate investment in low-carbon technologies.

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Researcher wants states to explore resources

Researcher wants states to explore resources

Emmanuel Akinsanya,
the managing director, Datum Nigeria Company, a local raw material
research firm, has urged state governments to explore the resources
within their domain.

Mr. Akinsanya gave
the advice on Thursday, in Lagos, ahead of the company’s forthcoming
international exhibition of local products and services in all sectors
of the economy.

He told the News
Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the 6-day exhibition, with the theme: ‘The
challenges of productivity in a modern economy’, will hold between
November 29 and December 4 in Lagos.

Mr. Akinsanya said
that before the discovery of oil, Nigeria was a major exporter of palm
oil, cocoa, and groundnut. According to him, there is need for states
to go back to modern agriculture, to produce these raw materials in
sufficient quantities because their by-products are needed in today’s
industries.

He said states that
have resources should explore them, to enrich their revenue generation,
instead of depending on Federal Government’s monthly allocations.

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OIL POLITICS: Nigeria’s unacceptable biofuels policy

OIL POLITICS: Nigeria’s unacceptable biofuels policy

At the time the
barrel price of crude oil shot up, the world began to sing the biofuels
song. Biofuels were touted as a replacement for fossil fuels and the
answer to poverty and even the climate crisis. They were presented as
being both renewable and environment friendly.

Moreover, it was
said that they would not compete with food crops in terms of land
uptake, as some of them would be grown only on degraded and marginal
lands. The idea of biofuels giving fossils fuels a good fight was so
widespread that the formation of a “green” OPEC was proposed.

Research has shown
that biofuels are just as harmful to the climate as fossil fuels when
factors like loss of soil carbon and deforestation are computed. It has
been proven that the energy output is actually same or less than what
it took to cultivate, process, and transport the fuels. Thus, biofuels
are not so green.

The reality of the
push for biofuels is that they quickly metamorphosed into agrofuels –
targeting food crops and pumping foods into machines rather than empty
stomachs.The food crisis that hit the world when commodity
speculations, conversion of grains into fuels, and other factors drove
food prices up, made the mantra of agrofuels of the energy saviour of
the world to be re-examined.

Lester Brown, of
the Earth Policy Institute, warned in 2007, for instance, that the
“grain it takes to fill a 25-gallon (95 litres) with ethanol just once,
will feed one person for a whole year.” In the same year, the United
Nations special rapporteur on the right to food described agrofuels as
a “crime against humanity”, and called on governments to implement a
5-year moratorium on their production.

The Nigerian
biofuel policy has been gazetted as Nigerian Bio-fuel Policy and
Incentives No. 72 Vol 94 and is dated June 20, 2007. Let us briefly
look at what the wholesale adoption of the agrofuels highway means to
Nigeria and the world.

The push for
agrofuels has meant a massive uptake of lands for the cultivation of
oil palms, corn, cassava, sugar cane, and jatropha, among others. It
has translated to land grabs in Africa, loss of lands by pastoralists
to jatropha in Africa and India, and slave-like engagement of farmers
as mere outgrowers in many parts of the tropical world.

The rush for
agrofuels has some benefits, but the benefits have been for
agribusiness, and the losers are small scale and family farmers and
pastoralists.

In Nigeria, this
rush saw cassava as the major target, with large swaths of farmlands
being set aside for cassava to be converted into ethanol. Jatropha has
also been an attraction with one company allegedly promoting its
cultivation in Ogoni land for the production of what they cheekily call
Ogoni Oil! In many parts of Northern Nigeria, the best-watered lands,
often along rivers, have been grabbed for agrofuels cultivation.

In many cases,
communities have been cajoled to give up their lands and become farm
hands to big business on the promises of regular income and a better
life that often is nothing more than a mirage.

Bio fuel policy

The Nigerian
Bio-fuel Policy was produced, packaged, and delivered by the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) without any public participation.
It follows the signature pattern of oil sector arrangements where
everything is skewed in favour of corporate actors while the
environment is opened to nothing except exploitation.

The policy allows
for massive tax breaks and all manners of waivers – exempting the
operators from taxation, withholding tax and capital gains tax. They
are also exempted from paying import duties and other related taxes on
the importation and exportation of biofuels into and out of Nigeria.
Moreover, for the first 10 years, such companies would not have to pay
excise duties and would also not be required to pay value-added tax.

For what is known
as the seeding stage, Nigeria is expected to engage in large-scale
biofuels importation. This appears to follow the path already well
oiled by the NNPC, a path where Nigeria exports crude oil and still
depends on imports of petrol to meet our domestic needs. Starting off
with massive biofuels import may be a clever way of not kick starting
the use of the fuel but of entrenching the dependence on imports, while
the farms point at unreachable possibilities.

The biofuels policy
also recommends a most liberal loan system for the industry, with the
funds coming from an ‘Environmental Degradation Tax’ that would
probably include fines from gas flares. The policy expects to profit
from continued massive environmental degradation in the oilfields of
the Niger Delta, rather than taxing polluters and utilising the funds
to detoxify the degraded Niger Delta environment. The policy aims to
benefit from the crude oil and also from the damage inflicted on the
land and the people.

Instead of
requiring that the biofuels sector strictly obeys the Nigerian EIA Act
of 1992, this policy requires the Federal Ministry of Environment to
“prescribe standards” for the conduct of Environmental Impact
Assessment of biofuels projects. It appears the plan is to ensure the
subversion of subsisting laws and regulations.

The policy says
nothing about the social and other impacts assessments that an industry
of this sort requires. The idea is to build up sacred cows, as seen in
the oil industry with its jaundiced joint venture arrangements that
allow fines and charges (including community development project costs)
to be computed as production costs and, therefore, never touch the
profits of the oil companies. In addition, it sees local farmers as
outgrowers, with no sense of ownership or control in the entire scheme.

The present
Nigerian biofuels policy must be repealed and public debate opened over
what sort of policy is needed for this sector.

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Stock Exchange gains N2.334tr in October

Stock Exchange gains N2.334tr in October

The
Nigerian Stock Exchange recorded a total gain of N2.334 trillion on
equities at the close of trading activities in October, showing the
improvement of some key market indicators on the upturn.

The
market value of the 214 listed equities, which opened the month at
N5.648 trillion, closed on the last trading day in October at N7.982
trillion, reflecting a N2.334 trillion gains, or a 41.32 percent
increase. Also, the NSE All-Share Index, which opened at 23,050.59
basis points, closed the month at 25,042.16, an increase of 1,991.57
units or 8.64 percent, as against the decline of 1,217.65 points or 5.1
percent recorded in September.

The
Exchange’s strategy and business development department said the
increase in market capitalisation in October can be attributed largely
to the listing of Dangote Cement in the Building Materials subsector.

“Other factors included the listing of Kaduna State Bond and the increase in equity prices,” it said.

The
Exchange also said the stock market recorded a 10-month growth rate of
55.4 percent and 40.8 percent in equity market capitalisation and
aggregate market capitalisation.

Market turnover

The
market recorded a turnover of 6.71billion shares, valued at N90.6
billion, in 117,203 deals during October, in contrast to a total of
4.84 billion shares, valued at N47.25 billion, exchanged during
September in 117,366 deals.

Consequently,
trading volume and value rose by 39 percent and 92 percent, while the
number of executed trades dropped by 0.1 percent, when compared with
September. The value of trades had in September rose by 0.7 percent,
while the trading volume dropped by 8.1 percent.

Aggregate
stock market turnover between January and October 2010 were 79 billion
shares, valued at N670.42 billion, exchanged in 1,677,550 deals. In the
comparable period during 2009, the market recorded turnover of 85.94
billion shares, valued at N582 billion, in 1,504,778 deals.

Measuring
by turnover volume, the Banking subsector was the most active in
October, with traded volume of 3.9 billion shares valued at N30.81
billion, while the Insurance subsector was second, with traded volume
of 893.14 million shares, valued at N595.54 million, exchanged in 4,220
deals. The Food/Beverages subsector was third, with transaction volume
of 351.72 million, valued at N10.1 billion.

A
total of 165 equities out of the 214 listed were traded during the
month, compared with 174 in September. First Bank of Nigeria Plc was
the most active stock in October, with transaction volume of 443.82
million shares, followed by Access Bank Plc, with 404.44 million shares.

Research
team at Access Bank said, “The market would likely receive further
support from the recent creation of the Alternative Securities/Private
Placement Exchange, to replace the second-tier securities market, in a
bid to stimulate the activities of the capital market.”

Bond trading

Over-The-Counter
(OTC) bond market, a turnover of 1.1 billion units worth N1.036 billion
was recorded in October, in contrast to a total of 998 million shares
valued at N946.5 billion exchanged during the preceding month.

The
most active bond, in terms of volume, was the 10 percent Federal
Government of Nigeria (FGN) Bond July 2030 (formerly 7th FGN Bond 2030
Series 3), with traded volume 284.8 million units valued at N230.5
billion. It was followed by 9.45 percent FGN January 2013, with a
traded volume of 123.65 million units valued at N127.84 billion.

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Government considers new biofuels development policy

Government considers new biofuels development policy

The Federal
Government is considering a new biofuels development policy for a
viable alternative to the continued dependence on imported petroleum
products as fuels for energy supplies in the country.

A forum recently
facilitated by the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA)
has already recommended the constitution of a technical committee to
undertake a comprehensive review of the 2007 national biofuels policy,
to remove all impediments to achieving the bio-fuels development
initiative, and replace with a framework that will be more commercially
friendly.

The Energy
Commission of Nigeria (ECN) is expected to provide the necessary
technical input to the deliberations, particularly concerning previous
and ongoing biofuels initiatives, as well as the existing relationship
between producers and foreign off-take partners from China and
Singapore. This will also enable Nigeria gain access to the carbon
credit available under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM).

During a recent
meeting in Abuja, attended by the Department of Petroleum Resources
(DPR) and other government monitoring and regulatory agencies in the
oil and gas industry, members observed that the provisions of the
existing policy document were inadequate to help realise the national
objective.

Participants were
of the opinion that rather than have an agreement entered into solely
with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), as envisaged
under a previous arrangement, the proposed policy should make it an
industry-wide pact, to enable depot owners and petroleum products
marketers partake, in line with the current reforms in the petroleum
industry.

Unhelpful policies for local production

They also pointed
out that the current import-based policy on petroleum products supply
in existence was a dis-incentive to local production and domestic self
sufficiency in fuels production.

The Biofuels Policy
and Incentives (2007), which was approved by the Federal Executive
Council on June 20, 2007, and gazetted to facilitate the promotion of a
national bio-fuels development programme in the country, was, however,
found to contain some lapses, including its being dependent on import
as well as state-controlled monopoly.

The NNPC was
mandated to create an enabling environment for the take-off of a
domestic ethanol fuel industry, to gradually reduce the country’s
dependence on imported petroleum products, reduce the negative impact
of environmental pollution, as well as create a commercially viable
industry capable of sustaining the creation of domestic job
opportunities.

“The imperative for
a policy review is that given the fact that bio-fuels markets worldwide
are mandate-driven, Nigeria cannot afford to be an exemption. There
need for the biofuels policy document to be reviewed by a sub-committee
before presentation to the main committee. There is also the need to
incorporate other relevant organisations, such as the financial
institutions, farmers association, etc.,” said Abiodun Ibikunle, the
PPPRA executive secretary.

The technical
committee on biofuels development, which is expected to be inaugurated
next week by the minister of petroleum resources, Diezani
Alison-Madueke, will include the NNPC, Major Oil Marketers Association
of Nigeria (MOMAN), Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association
(DAPPMA), DPR, PPPRA, and Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON).

Others are
representatives of the ECN, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), New
Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD), National Association of
Road Transport Owners (NARTO), farmers association, federal ministries
of finance and petroleum resources.

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Manufacturers mute on credit availability

Manufacturers mute on credit availability

The Manufacturers
Association of Nigeria (MAN) will not comment on issues of interest to
its members, particularly as it concerns credit availability.

The association,
whose mission statement is to promote, in close cooperation with its
members, other organs of the organised private sector, the government,
and other stakeholders in the economy, an enabling environment for
industrial development, growth and prosperity of the society at large,
declined to make comments on the state of credit availability to its
members, after several enquiries and visits to its Lagos office.

The World Bank last
week released a report titled ‘Nigeria’s credit squeeze and beyond’,
saying that there was no evidence of credit squeeze in Nigeria and that
credit to manufacturing and commerce have been squeezed, but only a
little, a contrary view to the general belief of a credit squeeze in
the nation’s economy.

“A credit squeeze
does not appear to have taken place. Credit was not going to productive
sectors, instead it was going to margin lending, oil importers, and
insider lending. In early 2010, liquidity rises and interest rates
plummet. After that, rumours and anecdotes about a credit squeeze start
to circulate,” the report said.

The organisation
insists that credit is growing in most sectors and that money is not
the solution, as there are lots of liquidity in the system.

“Our conclusion is
that the real sector is not affected. Credit to the real sector has not
been squeezed, because less than one percent of Nigerian businesses
ever had access to bank finance. There is the need for responsible
growth in lending to the real sector, current incentive for banks with
low interest rates on government paper and squeezed bank margins.”

Bashir Borodo, the
president, Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), refused to
comment as he did not pick his calls. Jide Mike, the director general,
promised to respond to enquiries related to credit to the manufacturing
sector, but did not do so, even after visits to the secretariat.

“We have a
procedure here. It is only the director general and the president that
can speak. I can only facilitate the process of getting a response,”
said Rasheed Adegbenro, the corporate affairs official of the
association.

The association
serves and represents nearly 2000 companies in private and public
sectors in manufacturing, construction, and service sectors of the
national economy. Among other things, it is supposed to advise,
consult, and where necessary, join issues with government and other
bodies. However, on matters that affect its members, it is reluctant to
speak up for them.

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UK to launch Asian, African low-carbon energy funds

UK to launch Asian, African low-carbon energy funds

The UK government
will launch two new public-private partnership funds to promote
generation of renewable energy in Africa and Asia next year, the
secretary of state for international development said on Thursday.

The funds will target low-carbon energy and related investments in Asia, and large-scale renewable energy projects in Africa.

“We hope to launch these partnerships next year,” Andrew Mitchell said at a briefing in London.

A spokesman for the
UK’s department for international development said it was looking at
ways the funds could be financed, and could not put a value on them yet
or identify the potential private sector partners.

Early modelling of
the Asian fund suggests that it could bring 9 pounds of private sector
investment for every pound committed by the government.

Over the next 25
years, the project could generate up to 5 gigawatts of renewable energy
and avoid 150 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions.

The African fund
could generate up to 500 megawatts of new renewable energy per year
from 2015, providing enough electricity for over four million
households.

The government will
also launch a new advocacy fund to help the poorest nations get heard
in international climate change and trade negotiations.

“This fund will
provide access to legal, technical, and logistical support to the
poorest and most vulnerable countries (…) whose full participation is
essential if we are to achieve an equitable deal,” Mr. Mitchell said,
referring to a global agreement on climate change.

Finance

In its spending
review in October, Britain said it would provide 2.9 billion pounds of
international climate finance to 2015. This will partly fund a 1.5
billion pound pledge of fast-start finance from 2010 to 2012.

At last year’s
Copenhagen climate summit, rich countries pledged $30 billion of “fast
start finance” to help poorer countries adapt to climate change and
reduce their greenhouse gas emissions during 2010-2012.

Although European
governments have fulfilled a promise to deliver 2.2 billion euros to
help developing countries tackle climate change, critics have said the
money might have come from rebranding existing aid pledges.

“We promised to
report openly on our fast-start commitments. The UK aid transparency
guarantee was testament to our commitment to be open and transparent
and we are abiding by that promise,” Mr. Mitchell said in response to
such criticism.

“(Our climate
finance pledge) gives us the credibility to press other donors to meet
their commitments and press for an agreement on new and innovative
sources of climate finance,” he added.

Climate finance has
been a contentious issue since the Copenhagen Accord last year.
Developing countries say funds to help them are not enough, while
developed countries struggle to allocate aid in the wake of an economic
downturn.

A U.N. summit in
Cancun, Mexico, from November29-December10, will be trying to find ways
to leverage finance and stimulate investment in low-carbon technologies.

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Consumer price index rises

Consumer price index rises

Nigeria’s Composite
Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 13.4 percent year-on-year in
October, according to the monthly price statistics report just released
by the National Bureau of Statistics.

“This is slightly
lower than 13.6 percent recorded in the previous month in the new CPI
series. The monthly change of the CPI was 0.3 percent increase when
compared with September 2010,” the report dated 16 November stated.

A Consumer Price
Index is expected to measure changes over time in the price level of
goods and services, purchased especially by households. The annual
percentage change in a CPI is usually used as a measure of inflation.

The nation’s bureau
said the urban all items monthly index rose by 0.5 percent, while the
corresponding rural index recorded 0.1 percent increase when compared
with the preceding month; and that the year-on-year average consumer
price level, as at October 2010, for urban and rural dwellers, rose by
11.5 and 15.0 percent respectively.

Food Index

The bureau said
average monthly food prices remained stable in October, when compared
with September, adding that the level of the Composite Food Index was
higher than the corresponding level a year ago by 14.1 percent.

“The average annual
rate of rise of the index was 14.9 percent for the twelve-month period,
ending October 2010. The marginal fall in the index was caused mainly
by slight decrease in the prices of some food items like yam, potatoes,
and other tubers, due to the harvest season,” the National Bureau of
Statistics said.

Lydia Olushola, an
economist and consultant at Skytrend Nig. Ltd., said for the everyday
consumer, a rise in CPI means prices of goods go up.

“The problem is
when their average wages do not increase in accordance with the CPI,
that is, if the CPI rises faster than people’s average wages, then the
consumers’ purchasing power declines. They can’t buy as much as
whatever it is they usually bought,” Ms. Olushola said.

Experts say
inflation effects on an economy can be positive or negative, as the
case may be. Inflation rates in Nigeria have peaked as high as 15.6 and
as low as 11.6 between October 2009 and October 2010.

Bismarck Rewane,
managing director, Financial Derivatives Company, a finance firm, said
“Inflation on items less farm produce increased from 1.3 percent to
12.8 in September, though that of food decreased by 1.1 percent to 14
percent, from 15.1 per cent and 11.3 percent in July respectively.
Presently, inflation is running at 13.6 percent. The current inflation
record is weak, due to fiscal spending,” adding that inflationary
pressures are likely to persist in November.

The Central Bank
said inflation depicts an economic situation where there is a general
rise in the prices of goods and services, continuously. It could be
defined as “a continuing rise in prices, as measured by an index, such
as the Consumer Price Index (CPI) or by the implicit price deflator for
Gross National Product (GNP).”

The bank said price
stability does not connote constant (or unchanging) price level, but it
simply means that the rate of change of the general price level is such
that economic agents do not worry about it. Inflationary conditions
imply that the general price level keeps increasing over time.

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