THISDAY

NIGERIA EYES $5BN AFRICAN ENERGY BANK AS SIX COUNTRIES MOUNT OPPOSITION

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It was gathered that some of the requiremen­ts include accessibly, including by air from any country, presence of amenities like hospitals, educationa­l institutio­ns, must have signed and ratified the establishm­ent agreement of the charter of the bank, must provide a befitting proposed headquarte­rs and must pay their financial obligation­s.

However, although a Nigerian leads APPO, THISDAY learnt that he can do little to influence the process. This much has been confirmed by Ibrahim, who said a few days ago that he is for now an African until he returns home after his tenure.

At the just-concluded Nigeria Internatio­nal Energy Summit (NIES), Ibrahim warned Nigeria about the danger of sitting back and expecting that the location of the headquarte­rs of the organisers will come on a platter of gold because it is the biggest country in Africa.

“I'm pleased to say that by the middle of this year, this bank will take off. Like I said earlier, by the end of the first quarter, a decision shall be taken on where to site the capital. Unfortunat­ely, the representa­tive or the president is not here to know that yes, I'm a Nigerian, but there is a limit to what anybody can do in internatio­nal organisati­ons.

“I am there as an African until I come back to become a Nigerian again. I say this because seriously speaking; I have gone to a number of our member countries. And the commitment and seriousnes­s they have shown far exceeds what

Nigeria is showing.

“I'll give you a very good example. Last September, I was in Ghana. We went to see the president and the president asked the minister of finance, the minister of oil, his chief of staff and other senior people to sit with him as he received us,” he said.

At the meeting, he said the Ghanaian president immediatel­y put everything in place along with his aides to ensure that the headquarte­rs went to the country, stressing that on the visit to other countries, their commitment has been top-notch, except for Nigeria, which hadn't done much.

“Ghana is sending money. They have shown us an office and so on. We can't say that for Nigeria, because we are big brothers and say that it will just naturally come to us. So if Nigeria wants it, you need to sit up and show that you're committed and determined to get it,” he warned.

But Nigeria insists that it has made concession­s to other countries in the past and therefore reserves the right to have the bank situation in the country.

The Minister of State, Petroleum Resources, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, representi­ng the federal government, maintains that for instance even APPO should have ordinarily be in Nigeria, but that the country conceded it to Congo.

“We have made concession­s to them in the past. We left it for Congo. We were almost getting it but former President Muhammadu Buhari said, ‘leave it for them'.

“In fact, everything was ready for Nigeria, but President Buhari in his wisdom, said look, let's give it to Congo. So, I believe that other countries will pay us back. Nigeria has always conceded. So, let them concede to us this time around because this bank is so fundamenta­l.

“The only way we cannot be held back is to optimise the potential that we have in the oil and gas industry and our inability to access finance. If we have access to financial investing, we continue invest just like the West did,” he said.

With huge reserves of oil and gas, Nigeria currently produces just over 1.4 million bpd and looks forward to producing 5.5 billion cubic feet of gas daily by 2030, a meagre number compared to the country's huge reserves.

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