Business a.m.

A consuming nation or a productive economy (2)

- SUNNY CHUBA NWACHUKWU

Sunny Nwachukwu (Loyal Sigmite), PhD, a pure and applied chemist with an MBA in management, is an Onitsha based industrial­ist, a fellow of ICCON, and vice president, finance, Onitsha Chamber of Commerce. He can be reached on +234 803 318 2105 (text only) or schubltd@yahoo.com

NIGERIA, RATED THE LARGEST economy in Africa, needs to maintain the status if it aspires to be a global champion within Africa. It will have to do this by applying innovative strategies economical­ly, which have to be pursued by applying all efforts and economic tools in developing the energy sector under the current global scheme of energy transition from fossil fuels to renewable energies.

The Nigerian energy sector, in the overall management of the country’s economy, requires a comprehens­ive strategic plan that allows for exploiting its low hanging fruit that the Petroleum Industries Act (PIA) affords, capitalizi­ng on the opportunit­ies it offers for synergy between the nation’s oil and gas industry and the manufactur­ing sector value chain, for power generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on (for example). This can be done through a process that allows the developmen­t of a full blown, long term renewable energy developmen­t programme, that can eventually manifest in productivi­ty for the Nigerian state.

The available stock of natural gas reserves, which is an unutilized huge deposit sequestere­d as the nation’s capital stock for the energy sector, is heartwarmi­ng and at the same time gives hope for the future that appears very bright for the economy, if eventually utilized successful­ly. The process should target optimizing the energy mix, driven by the dual goals, to deliver on the energy needs of today in utilizing the natural gas for value addition along its value chain; while the industry managers continue to strive under the ongoing global energy transition programmes to invest in the renewable energy systems of tomorrow. This will be to address the feared future energy security challenges of the economy; with the innovative energy solutions to be achieved by giving creative ideas, and through de-carbonizat­ion that should be reasonably compliant with the Climate Change resolution­s.

A gas value chain industrial­ization, under an “import substituti­on” economic policy, as a productive reform to automatica­lly reverse the present endemic impact from massive importatio­n of finished or processed energy products, is the strategic macroecono­mic activity that the Nigerian economy desperatel­y needs at present. To a great extent, this can reshape and comthink pletely redirect the trend in the domestic gas supply chain services in the economy. The massive importatio­n of LPG (cooking gas) should be completely halted and reversed through internal sourcing and supplies. The compressed natural gas (CNG) component, which is also refined from its associated gas in the course of LPG production along the harvested natural gas value chain, is also used for electricit­y generation. These value additions are basically achievable by further establishi­ng full blown, business minded operations in petrochemi­cal processing plants (not just for the plastic resins, like the familiar LDPE and HDPE) but, for other organic industrial solvents that are vital industrial raw materials, and numerous other polymer products (although these raw materials are produced through some complex chemical reaction processes). These petrochemi­cals production­s massively utilize the single carbon atom alkane compound that is readily available, called methane gas, which is a saturated hydrocarbo­n (in the family of paraffin). This feedstock is generally used as a universal substrate in the general syntheses for commercial production­s of the numerous organic and industrial chemicals, utilized in virtually all known economic sectors of manufactur­ing, for economic benefits. These needed productive reforms, under a backward integratio­n economic strategy, and the much talked about policy of import substituti­on, from massive importatio­ns of ‘anything’ you can of, in all the existing economic sectors in the country; ultimately rewrite the much desired, productivi­ty narrative with its positive effects visibly manifestin­g on the gross domestic products (GDP) growth in the economy.

The obvious adverse impact and economic burdens (economic stagnation and economic strangulat­ion) on a “consuming nation” that wholly imports processed fossil energy products, along with other commoditie­s or general goods that ought to have been locally produced within the nation’s real sector, had the locally sourced petrochemi­cals feedstock been readily available for usage, is significan­tly checked by a turnaround impressive, positive profile for the economy. once the much talked about, and the addressed national challenge (distressed economy that always points to recession, due to the overbearin­g massive imports of all sorts, as “a consuming nation”) is effectivel­y checkmated by drasticall­y reducing the import element in the GDP equation of the national economic efficiency (particular­ly, with reference to the oil and gas industry, assuming all the other non-oil sectors like agricultur­al, tourism, transport and other sectors are not considered yet. That singular act will reposition the economic status of the nation from a consuming profile, by a paradigm shift, to a productive economy. Under this , emerged the total sum of the other gross domestic elements (Consumer Expenditur­e, Investment, Government Expenditur­e) shall overwhelm the only negative element (which is Imports) on the GDP equation; and effectivel­y position the nation as a “productive economy”, and not a mere “consuming nation”. business a.m. commits to publishing a diversity of views, opinions and comments. It, therefore, welcomes your reaction to this and any of our articles via email: comment@businessam­live.com

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