Business a.m.

NCDMB mulls $14bn 10-year plan to create 300,000 jobs in Niger Delta

…as Nigeria needs simple business-friendly petroleum law

- Ben Eguzozie, in Port Harcourt

THE NIGERIAN CONTENT DEVELOPMEN­T and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) has come up with what it says is a 10-year developmen­t plan aimed at retaining up to 70 percent of the annual $20 billion investment in the oil and gas industry.

There is presently some $200 million domiciled with the Nigerian Content Investment Fund (NCIF), which is being managed by the Bank of Industry (BoI) to meet the funding needs of indigenous manufactur­ers of components, service providers and other ancillary services players in the multi-billion-dollar oil and gas industry.

However, some experts knowledgea­ble in oil and gas business at Africa Business Insight strongly advise that Nigeria needs to create a simple business-friendly petroleum law that would enable these indigenous firms play deep in the oil industry; and at the same time attract big spenders among the internatio­nal oil companies (IOCs) to rather choose Nigeria for their hydrocarbo­n investment­s, contrary to the current scenario, where they are going to other oil producing countries.

For more than 10 years, Nigeria has continued to struggle with enacting its Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB). Its non-passage has continued to stifle inclusive growth in the nation’s oil and gas industry.

ABI cited a list of 10 countries in Africa with the most business-friendly petroleum laws that are highly attractive as the continent’s top 10 destinatio­ns for oil and gas investment­s. These are: Mauritania, Madagascar, South Africa, Morocco, South Sudan, Senegal, Ghana, Namibia, Kenya and Mozambique.

Meanwhile, it is said there were fierce competitio­ns from Equatorial Guinea, Sao Tome and Principe, two later day entrants into the oil exportatio­n business within the Gulf of Guinea region.

According to Isaac Yalah, NCDMB director of finance and personnel management, they intend to create some 300,000 jobs in the oil producing and equally volatile Niger Delta region through the unveiled 10-year developmen­t.

Meanwhile, some petroleum industry players say the plan would have to be tested and found to succeed if there would be no policy summersaul­ts, a phenomenon which is commonplac­e in Nigeria.

Tens of thousands of idle young people roam the streets and villages of the oil producing Niger Delta region yearn- ing for jobs to keep themselves busy. Figures from the nation’s statistics office, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) indicate that unemployme­nt rate was 18.8 per cent in the third quarter of last year (Q3 2017). Whereas, the combined underemplo­yment and unemployme­nt rate for the 25 to 34-year age group stood at 42.5% within the quarter under review. This is a steep rise from the 39.6% in the previous quarter (Q2 2017).

Yalah, who spoke at a capacity building workshop for energy and business corre- spondents in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, said they have also gained traction in the Local Content Developmen­t policy, by increasing from previous initial five per cent when they came into office.

He said the developmen­t plan was borne out of the need to increase local participat­ion in the oil and gas industry, boost indigenous businesses and improve the national economy.

Through the Nigerian Content Investment Fund (NCIF), an offshoot of NCDMB Nigerian companies in the oil and gas industry are expected to secure a single-digit loanable funds with which to enhance their competitiv­e edge in the dollar-powered hydrocarbo­n industry.

Last week, Obinna Ofili, the general manager of NCIF, lamented that since the fund was establishe­d in 2015, only 11 firms have accessed it; although he said it is available to contributo­rs to a Nigerian Content Developmen­t Fund (NCDF) and community contractor­s in oil and gas bearing communitie­s.

It is understood that NCIF should provide loan types such as: manufactur­ing, asset acquisitio­n, contract finance, community contractor finance scheme and loan refinancin­g. The loan sums range from N10 million for manufactur­ing and asset acquisitio­n to N20 million for community contractor finance scheme. Applicants have up to five years to repay the loans; with accessory period of 45 working days from the fulfillmen­t of all terms and conditions as well as contract confirmati­on from an internatio­nal oil company.

 ??  ?? Members of Hope Concept Cooperativ­es(Farmers) Union protesting non payment of credit facility paid by Central Bank of Nigerian to Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System for Agricultur­e Lending (NIRSAL) for Farmers in South West in Lagos recently
Members of Hope Concept Cooperativ­es(Farmers) Union protesting non payment of credit facility paid by Central Bank of Nigerian to Nigeria Incentive-Based Risk Sharing System for Agricultur­e Lending (NIRSAL) for Farmers in South West in Lagos recently

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