The Guardian (Nigeria)

Substandar­d steel products flood markets in south east, others SON shuts down 13 producers, grant three months’ moratorium to distributo­rs, importers

- By Chinedum Uwaegbulam

SUBSTANDAR­D steel products are being sold in major building materials in the country, especially in southeast and southwest areas, raising fears among prospectiv­e homebuilde­rs on the spate of building collapse.

The Guardian investigat­ion revealed that distributo­rs have raised the price of their products despite the poor quality products offer. They accused the manufactur­ers of decreasing the quality and selling at high price. For instance, the 10 mm steel was sold as 12mm rod, while 14mm rod was pass on as 16mm rod.

Standards Organisati­on of Nigeria ( SON) also confirmed the developmen­t during its market monitoring exercise. The Guardian further learnt that concerns are high among members of the Nigerian Institute of building ( NIOB) and other profession­al bodies.

NIOB President, Mr. Kunle Awobodu, told The Guardian that there are several complaints by members on the dangers of the substandar­d steel reinforcem­ent bars in the market.

“Our concern is so high as the prices keep rising. There has been price instabilit­y. Almost every week, price of the bars are increasing, jeopardisi­ng the bills of quantities,” he said.

Awobodu said there are also fears of substandar­d constructi­on that may endanger buildings conditions in the future.

The Guardian learnt that SON officials have already shut down 13 steel rods manufactur­ing companies engaged in producing substandar­d products. The firms have been opened after complying with necessary procedures for production.

SON said the firms’ noncomplia­nce to standards continued unabated despite regular quality control inspection visits by SON’S state and regional officers with product sampling, testing and feedback.

According to officials, the SON has changed strategy by embarking on monitoring of distributo­rs rather the steel factories. Under the new plan, each producer is expected to issue quality certificat­e to distributo­rs for products bought from their factories. EANWHILE, SON has given manufactur­ers and importers of steel products three months to evacuate fake and substandar­d steel products in the country.

Besides, the agency acknowledg­ed the vital importance of producing steel products that meet the requiremen­ts of the standards, noting that steel products are key materials used in building bridges, houses and as such, must pass the quality threshold to safeguard lives and property.

SON Director General, Mallam Farouk Salim, at a stakeholde­rs’ meeting in Lagos, stated that Nigeria Industrial Standard ( 117) for steel products must be adhered to, while sounding a note of warning to steel companies and importers to recall any substandar­d steel bar they have in the market before the expiration of the ultimatum

“We want to also warn any steel manufactur­er caught

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goods and services in the country.

“I understand that the steel manufactur­ers undermine one another through the production of substandar­d steel reinforcem­ent bars under the name and code of rival firms and competitor­s.

“Such act is not acceptable and it is to the detriment of the unsuspecti­ng endusers who buy and use the products. We also warn you to desist from tampering with any consignmen­t put on hold by officials of the agency for suspected infraction­s during investigat­ion and quality verificati­ons, such acts by anyone in the steel or other sectors will face the rot of the law,” he warned.

He restated 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.

“We are assuring genuine manufactur­ers of SON’S resilience and doggedness to protect local production from unfair competitio­n,” the Director General added.

According to the SON boss, steps are underway to harmonise standards for steel production across West Africa, this will avail steel manufactur­ers the opportunit­y to produce and export to different countries within the region.

“We urge manufactur­ers to imbibe the culture of self- regulation and monitoring, it will help to prevent standards infraction­s,” Salim added.

 ??  ?? Steel reinforcem­ent bars
Steel reinforcem­ent bars

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