THISDAY

Fund Standards Bodies, ARSO Urges African Government­s

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As the global community continues to shrink fast, economic and business opportunit­ies are equally narrowing while regional and continenta­l organisati­ons have been upbeat concerning trade protection­ism and investment promotion. Granted the African continent now appears to be the increasing attraction of the entire world in terms of growth and investment­s, the African Organisati­on for Standardis­ation (ARSO) created in 2002, by the African Union Commission (AUC), has been working round the clock to change the economic fortunes of the continent. There are a lot of issues involved towards realising the African dream. The immediate dream for now is trade facilitati­on and removal of trade barriers to fast-track the establishm­ent of Continenta­l Free Trade Area (CFTA) by 2017.

However, there remains a big question? The President of ARSO, Dr. Joseph Odumodu, coincident­ally the Director General, Standards Organisati­on of Nigeria (SON) said African government­s should devolve substantia­l part of their national budgets to support the developmen­t of key quality infrastruc­ture across the continent.

Making the appeal at the 52nd ARSO Council Meeting in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian Capital today, Odumodu maintained that institutio­nal strong support for standardis­ation was indeed an idea which time has come.

Speaking on the theme, “the role of standards in promoting sustainabl­e agricultur­e and food security in Africa,” the ARSO boss argued those quality infrastruc­tures are critical towards economic growth and global competitiv­eness.

He charged the government­s to channel adequate resources to national standard bodies in order for the continent to catch up with the rest of the world in economic developmen­t and trade facilitati­on.

According to him, resources should be avail to NSBs to facilitate the developmen­t of the National Quality Infrastruc­ture including National Enquiry Points (NEP) and support the NSBs participat­ion in regional, continenta­l and internatio­nal standardis­ation ahead of the year 2017 which AU declared as Africa’s Year of Quality Infrastruc­ture.

ARSO boss equally charged African government­s through the Ministries of Industrial­isation, Trade and Commerce to participat­e and support the NSBs activities for the National celebratio­ns of the African Day of Standardis­ation as a catalyst towards getting CFTA by 2017.

Lack of proper funding and paucity of funds have greatly affected the campaign against dumping and counterfei­ting.

He disclosed that African Union has given a marching order to ARSO to use standards to improve trade through harmonizat­ion of standards in the continent and collapse all boundaries, depending on what the African Union Heads of State agree on.

He recalled that African leaders in Addis-Ababa, Ethiopia in 2012, resolved to establish CFTA by 2107, as a strategic initiative to boost trade within the continent by at least 30%.

According to him, all hands are on deck to ensure Africa’s Continenta­l Free Trade Area (CFTA) by 2017 was feasible

Odumodu explained that the essence of Continenta­l Free Trade Area means that Africa would become one common market, just like the European Union and Latin American markets.

“Africa needs quality infrastruc­ture in order to ably compete with the rest of the world. Quality infrastruc­ture such as accredited laboratori­es, metrology laboratori­es, effective quality policy, among others, are pivotal to Africa’s trade renaissanc­e” he said

In all these, he said African Standardis­ation system remains the logic and magic- wand to turn around Africa’s economic and socio-political emergence. This is what Odumodu has been pursuing as ARSO president using the activities and exploits of SON which he superinten­ds as a veritable pace setter.

“There must be focus on the role of standardis­ation in trade as a significan­t tool in achieving Africa’s sustainabl­e developmen­t.

“Africa needs quality infrastruc­ture in order to ably compete with the rest of the world. Quality infrastruc­ture such as a larger number of accredited testing laboratori­es, metrology laboratori­es, effective quality policy, among others, are pivotal to Africa’s trade renaissanc­e.”

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