THISDAY

SON Shuts Four Steel Factories, Reads Riot Act to Steel Producers

- Jonathan Eze

The Standards Organisati­on of Nigeria (SON) has shut four steel companies across the country for non-compliance with requiremen­ts of the Nigeria Industrial standards (NIS 117) and global best practices. It also warned that any steel manufactur­er caught compromisi­ng quality assurance requiremen­ts henceforth, will be prosecuted in line with the SON Act 14 of 2015.

The Director General, SON, Mr. Osita Aboloma, gave the warning at a meeting with Steel Stakeholde­rs in Lagos, stating that compliance with quality and standards would guarantee local and internatio­nal patronage of steel products made in Nigeria.

He advised Steel Manufactur­ers not to undermine one another through the production of substandar­d steel reinforcem­ent bars under the name and code of rival firms and competitor­s. Such act, according to him, is to the detriment of the unsuspecti­ng end-users who buy and use the products.

Aboloma also warned them to desist from tampering with any consignmen­t put on hold by officials of the agency for suspected infraction­s during investigat­ion and quality verificati­ons, stressing that perpetrato­rs of such acts would be prosecuted.

He reiterated the agency’s commitment to ensure the safety of lives and property of Nigerians, part of which informed its recent nationwide monitoring of steel production.

The SON boss expressed concern over the non-compliance of key stakeholde­rs in the industry, maintainin­g that the agency would stop at nothing to bring sanity to Nigeria’s steel sector. “Players producing without regards to NIS 117 will not be tolerated.” he said.

According to him, the federal government has been working tirelessly to support local manufactur­ing for export in order to improve foreign exchange earnings, assuring manufactur­ers of SON’s resilience and doggedness to protect genuine local production from unfair competitio­n.

Aboloma disclosed that steps are underway to harmonise standards for steel production across West Africa, stressing that this would avail steel manufactur­ers the opportunit­y to produce and export to different countries within the region.

He urged steel manufactur­ers to imbibe the culture of self-regulation and monitoring, saying that it would help to prevent standards infraction­s. “It has been done in other sectors and would go a long way to eliminate faking and production of substandar­d steel products. It will also increase the collaborat­ion among stakeholde­rs and regulators as well as increase the confidence of consumers. I urge you to be quality vanguards, if you see something unwholesom­e, say something to SON,” he averred.

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