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The twists and turns around 34-year-old Ajaokuta Steel Company

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The steel industry is said to be the backbone of any nation.

The industry will continue to serve as stimulus to national development and economic boaster to industrial growth of a country.

Ajaokuta Steel
Ajaokuta Steel Project is located on 24,000 hectares of sprawling green-field land-mass. The Steel Plant itself is built on 800-hectares of land

The Ajaokuta Steel Company in Kogi State of Nigeria was envisaged to serve as the bedrock of the nation’s industrialisation.

The idea of having a steel industry was conceived in 1958 by the Federal Government and preliminary market studies were carried out and studies were initially directed towards the feasibility of establishing Rolling Mills.

However, because of the growing awareness of the availability of iron ore in Agbaja, Udi and other areas of the country, emphasis later shifted to establishing an integrated steel plant.

Late Sir Abubarka Tafawa Balewa and late Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe between 1960 and 1966 invited and recieved proposals from foreign firms, including those from UK, U.S., Germany and Canada, most of these being on the feasibility of establishing steel complexes.

The efforts of the government did not yield significant positive result because they were based on the use of iron deposits in Agbaja and Udi which were later found to be unsuitable for Direct Reduction.

In 1967, a team of Soviet experts arrived in Nigeria to conduct a feasibility study on the establishment of an iron and steel plant, as a follow-up on a technical/economic cooperation agreement between the Governments of Nigeria and the USSR.

In their report, they recommended the use of Blast Furnace process of iron making. The report also pointed out that the known iron ore deposits in the country were of poor quality and recommended that further geological surveys be conducted to see if better ore could be found.

In 1968, Soviet geological experts came to Nigeria and after a general geological investigation reported that there were high prospects for richer iron ore and coal deposits in the country.

However, the Federal Government signed a contract in 1970 with TyazhPromExport (TPE), a Russian company, under which they agreed to provide specialised equipment to carry out further geological survey to determine the quantity of the deposits of iron ore, coal resources in the country that could be used for the proposed iron and steel industry.

By 1973, suitable iron ore deposit was discovered in Itakpe, Ajabanoko and OShokoshoko all in the region around the Kabba-Okene-Lokoja-Koton Karfe axis, now in Kogi State.

The TPE was contracted to prepare the Preliminary Project Report for the proposed iron and steel industry in Nigeria.

In 1975, during the reign of Murtala Mohammed, the preliminary project report specifying the raw materials base at Itakpe in Kogi plant site location (Ajaokuta), 1st phase production volume (1.3 mmt), process route (Blast Furnace -Basic Oxygen Furnace), Product form (Long products) submitted by TPE was reviewed, discussed and accepted.

TPE was subsequently commissioned to prepare the Detailed Project Report (DPR) on Ajaokuta which was completed and submitted in 1977.

In 1979, Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited (ASCL)/NIOMCO, and Delta Steel Company (DSC), among others, were established under Section 2 of National Steel Council Decree No. 60 of Sept. 19, 1979 and incorporated as Limited Liability Companies.

In 1980, former President Shehu Shagari laid the foundation stone of an integrated steel plant in Ajaokuta on 24,000 hectares of sprawling green-field landmass, built on 800-hectares.

The steel company has four different types of rolling mills inside the plant, such as the Billet Mill which produces billets; the Light Section Mill which produces round, square, strip and angles metals.

The Wire Rod Mill, which produces wire rods and rebars used in construction companies and production of nails, fencing wire, rope mesh, bolts and nut and netting and the Medium Section and Structural Mill produces parallel flange channels, equal angles, unequal angles and standard channels.

The four rolling mills are bigger than Aladja, Osogbo, Katsina and Jos rolling mills put together while the coke oven and bye products plant is bigger than all the four refineries in Nigeria put together.

In 1980 to 1983, the administration achieved 84 per cent of Ajaokuta steel plant as the Light Section Mill of the plant was commissioned earlier than the scheduled date, while the Wire Rod Mill was also commissioned in April 1984, earlier than the scheduled month of December.

In 1994, equipment erection work at Ajaokuta Steel Plant reached 98 per cent completion.

With all these achievements, it was, however, sad that the gigantic steel plant idea conceived and executed by past leaders had failed to contribute to the development of Nigeria.

The Ajaokuta Steel that had reached 98 per cent completion as far back as 1994 has not produced a single steel till date.

The integrated plant was envisaged to have multiplier effects on all sectors of the Nigerian economy such as the industrial, agriculture, transport and construction sectors, among others.

The steel plant was designed to produce 1.3 million tonnes of liquid steel per annum in its phase one, with a built-in capacity to expand its production to 2.6 million tonnes of flat iron and steel products in its second phase and phase three plan was planned to produce 5.2 million tonnes of various types of steel products, including heavy plates.

The steel plant complex also has highly sophisticated assemblage of 43 different plants made up of a web of complex iron, cable and machinery of different sizes and functions.

Out of the 43 plants, 40 are already completed and can produce independently.

Ajaokuta steel has the capacity to become a major producer of industrial machineries, auto-electrical spare-parts, shipbuilding, railways and carriages.

The steel plant’s first phase has the capacity to provide direct employment for 10,000 technical staff and indirect 500,000 for unskilled upstream and downstream employment if it is in operation.

The Federal Government had spent over $10 billion over 34 years and would require another $2 billion to complete the remaining two per cent of the plant.

South Korea, which started its steel construction around the same time with Ajaokuta steel now has a revenue base of over N60 billion dollars per annum and employed over 65,000 staff.

Ajaokuta steel would have done better if it had started production.

According to World Steel Association (WSA) report, South Africa and Egypt produced 6.1 and 5.0 million tonnes of steel in 2016, while South Africa is the 22nd on the list of countries on steel production, Egypt is the 27th.

China, the world’s largest steel producer topped the chart with a production of 808.4 million tonnes representing about 50 per cent of global steel output for 2016, as Japan and India produced 104.8 and 95.6 million tonnes of crude steel to maintain the second and third position on the list.

Virtually all the nations that are playing big globally have enhanced capacities for steel production.

Even those that do not have any of the key mineral inputs needed for steelmaking had over the years developed the capacity to produce steel.

Japan and South Korea, for instance, have no mineral resource for iron and steel, but they rank among the world top 10 countries in steel production.

Nigeria that is blessed with raw materials such as iron ore, coal, natural gas and limestones needed for the manufacture of steel is still struggling with what to do with the dormant plant.

In June 2003, former President Olusegun Obasanjo conceded Ajaokuta steel to Messrs Solgas Energy of USA on a 10-year  tenure; in August 2004, the Federal Government terminated the Solgas Agreement due to non-performance.

In 2004 and 2005, the Obasanjo administration, again, granted another concession to Global Infrastructure Nigeria Limited (GINL) an India company for the operation of Ajaokuta Steel and the Nigeria Iron Ore Mining Company (NIOMCO) at Itakpe in Kogi.

However, the Indian company did not live up to Federal Government’s expectation in managing the two companies.

Consequently, the late Umaru Yar’Adua administration was compelled to revoke the contract in April 2008 without meeting the requirements of the clauses built into the agreement.

The Indian company thereafter took Nigerian government to arbitration court in London, which also crippled the two firms.

In 2016, President Muhammadu Buhari fulfilled his campaign promise on Ajaokuta Steel by settling the legal bottleneck surrounding the companies out of court.

However, the Federal Government signed modified concession agreement with GINL to enable the firm to retain the National Iron Ore Mining Company, Itakpe.

The modified seven-year concession agreement was signed on Aug. 1, 2016, while the Federal Government took over the Ajaokuta Steel.

While the Federal Government was planning to reconcession Ajaokuta Steel again, stakeholders in the Nigerian Metallurgical Society urged it to complete the remaining two per cent and operate the plant for few years before concessioning it.

The stakeholders also urged government to provide clear and articulated plan for the development and growth of metal production sector as the struggle for functional steel company in Nigeria continued.

By Francisca Oluyole, News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)

Farmer lauds government policies on agriculture

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The Chief Executive Officer, Raymos Guanah Farms, Mr Raymos Guanah, has lauded the Federal Government’s policies on agriculture.

Ogbeh
Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh

Guanah gave this commendation in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday, December 26, 2017 in Asaba, Delta State.

“I am impressed with the Federal Government’s policies on agriculture, the policies give farmers the hope that at last, government is matching action with words,” he said.

Guanah, a former Commissioner for Lands and Survey in Delta, however, decried the poor budgetary allocation for the agriculture sector in the country.

According to him, the allocation for agriculture in the nation’s budget is always too low and it is likely to affect the implementation of the government’s agriculture policy.

On the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Anchor Borrowers programme, Guanah said, “It is the best thing that has happened to farmers in Nigeria.

“It has made it possible for farmers to have access to farm inputs and pay after harvest”.

He recalled that the programme, which was inaugurated in March, had impacted positively on the lives of farmers in the state.

The former commissioner said the inputs supplied at the inauguration included, rice seedlings, fertiliser and other chemicals, adding that the farmers were expected to repay after harvest.

By Mercy Obojeghren

Poultry farmers advocate policy review on export of agricultural raw materials

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Poultry farmers in Abuja have called on the Federal Government to review the nation’s policy on exportation of agricultural raw materials to create employment opportunities for youths in the sector.

Poultry
Poultry farming

A cross section of the farmers said this in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday, December 26, 2017 in Abuja, on the sideline of activities marking the Christmas celebrations.

Some of them said the problem of inaccessibility of raw materials was among the challenges militating against local production of poultry substances and job creation in the sector.

They also said that lack of adequate raw materials could hinder growth in the revenue generation of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Others appealed to government to review its policy on exportation of materials used for processing of poultry feed to enable the business to thrive.

A farmer in Kuje, Mr Kunle Adeniyi, said that he stopped rearing poultry birds in April due to impact of unfriendly government policies on materials.

Adeniyi lamented that the price of vaccines, building of the poultry cage and other facilities required for the poultry farming had increased.

He said although government established policy to encourage people to engage in the farming, there were stringent principles that made it impossible for people to achieve the goal.

According to him, one major factor affecting poultry farming negatively was high cost of feed required for provision of nutrient.

“Instead of government to design policy that will bring about result in price reduction, it is rather exporting maize, when we can actually process such raw materials into finished products

“No country ever develops like that, government must review its policy to encourage poultry rearing and boost food production in Nigeria.

“It should monitor policies that are made to ensure the effective implementation; when you export raw materials it should enhance our economy.

“If you want to create jobs, is it by exporting raw materials? Government must review its policy to bring about self sufficiency and sustainable food security.

“We can never grow in the sector through such means; rather, government must come up with measures to process raw materials, to create more jobs and increase the GDP.”

Another farmer in Bwari, Mr Clement Nwanze, said that the business operation yielded profit for him, in spite of the ugly incidence of crisis that ensued during the Christmas celebration in Bwari.

He said inadequate finances, high cost of feed, vaccines and insecurity of the birds were major challenges in poultry production.

According to him, raring of poultry birds is good because “I had a good turn over, despite the fact that it was my first time in the business”.

Nwanze said: “I started by rearing 22 chicks in July that matured into Broilers, although I lost three in the process the turn over was profitable.

“By this time next year, I hope government will have reviewed its policy on exportation of raw materials, to enable poultry farmers to key into agriculture as source of sustainable economy”.

A farmer in Nyanya, Mrs Mary James, decried cost of maize, millet, rice and fish often used in the feed production of poultry.

She urged government to ban exportation of such materials to create room for local production of poultry feed.

James said “if that is done government will be doing poultry farmers great help, because not only will many people venture into it, it will also reduce cost of doing poultry businesses”.

“Exporting a finished product that has added value will promote Gross Domestic Product, but to export raw materials which are major source of production, will lead to business loss.”

She noted that if that was done, it would help to improve the culture of poultry production and ensure profit maximisation in the business.

By Fortune Abang

Maize scarcity informs closure of poultry industries

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The National President of Maize Association of Nigeria (MAAN), Mr Tunji Adenola, says poultry industries across the country are closing down because of shortage of maize for poultry feeds production.

Maize
Yellow maize for poultry feed

The maize grain is a major feed grain and a standard component of livestock diets where it is used as a source of energy.

Adenola, who said this in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja, however, called for urgent government intervention in order not to allow poultry feeds imports to flood country’s markets.

“We, as a nation, are at a crossroads on the issue of inadequate maize production, resulting in excessive prices and regular importation of this essential raw material that is critical to food and feeds industries across the nation.

“Today, the poultry industry is almost in a comatose because maize is in short supply; I have seen many poultry farms that have closed down, and this has to be reversed. The poultry industry must be revived and we have a lot of role to play here.

“I believe the atmosphere is right now for maize farmers to take this decisive and bold step, as we have all suffered from the effect of last year’s maize shortage and now that government is diversifying the country’s economy with tangible emphasis on agriculture.

“I will like to suggest to those working in the maize value chain to proffer a workable, non-theoretical but practical approach which will be business-oriented to enable us to become self-sufficient in maize production, with surplus for exports,’’ he said.

Adenola said that the government’s inconsistent policies and outbreak of diseases had stunted the growth of the poultry sub-sector in the recent past, adding that there was a need to initiate sound agricultural policies that would improve the poultry industry.

“A number of biotic and abiotic stresses have regrettably hindered the pace of growth expected in the poultry industry.

“Some human factors and some government policies have also contributed to the slowing down being experienced.

“For instance, lack of definite government policy that totally prohibits the importation of maize into the country is one limitation; apart from inconsistent government policies.

“The outbreak of pests and diseases like the recent Fall Armyworm infestation of maize farms in some states has constituted major setbacks to massive maize production and discourages investments in maize production.

“We must find ways to eliminate all man-made inhibitions to the growth of maize value chain.

“There is need to get the federal Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to have the same understanding and concertedly promote the fulfilment of government policies.

“A situation where there government ministries take different positions on the same subject within the same government is not ideal for a nation on the path of growth and change,’’ he said.

Adenola, however called for a review of the activities of MAAN to identify what should be done correctly along the maize value chain so as to strengthen the association’s efforts to facilitate the country’s agricultural development.

By Philomina Attah

Dust haze weather to prevail on Tuesday – NiMet

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The Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) has predicted dust haze weather conditions with horizontal visibility range of one to three kilometres over the central states of the county on Tuesday, December 26, 2017.

Dust haze weather
Dust haze weather

NiMet’s Weather Outlook by its Central Forecast Office in Abuja on Monday, December 25 also predicted day and night temperatures in the range of 26 to 33 and 10 to 20 degrees Celsius respectively.

It further predicted that localised visibility of less than or equal to 1000m were likely over some places within the region throughout the forecast period.

The agency predicted that the Southern States would experience moderate dust haze conditions over the inland cities and the coast throughout the forecast period.

It also predicted day and night temperatures of 29 to 33 and 16 to 23 degrees Celsius respectively over the southern region.

According to NiMet, Northern States will experience thick dust haze throughout the forecast period with day and night temperatures in the range of 24 to 31 and 11 to 15 degrees Celsius respectively.

“With a fresh dust plume raised from the source region, thick dust haze conditions are expected to prevail over the northern cities.

“The central cities are expected to be in dust haze condition with horizontal visibility range of one to three kilometres.

“However, localised visibility of less than or equal 1000m are expected over some few places while moderate dust haze is expected over the inland cities and the coast within the next 24 hours,” NiMet predicted.

By Sumaila Ogbaje

Nigeria needs 3,000ha to pilot fuelwood management scheme, says ECN

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For the implementation of the pilot project of Sustainable Fuelwood Management (SFM) to be successful, Nigeria needs over 3,000 hectares of land. The project is aimed at reducing deforestation and the negative impact of climate change.

Kaduna UNDP GEF SFM
L-R: Kaduna State Commissioner for Environment and Natural Resources, Amina Dyeris Sijuwade; Permanent Secreetary, Ministry of Agriculture, Dr. Abdulkadir Kassim; and Okon Ekpenyong of the Energy Commission of Nigeria (ECN), during the opening ceremony of the stakeholders’ meeting in Kaduna

The Director General, Energy Commission of Nigeria (ECN), Professor Jidare Bala, disclosed this on Tuesday, December 19, 2017at a stakeholders’ summit for the SFM, organised by the Commission in collaboration with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and Kaduna State Government, in Kaduna, the state capital.

The Kaduna State Government also used the summit to formally lunch the state Sustainable Fuelwood Management (SFM).

Funded by Global Energy Facility (GEF), the $4.4 million SFM in Nigeria programme with a counterpart funding of $16 million from the three pilot states of Delta, Kaduna and Cross River, and the private sector equity share, is a part of the sustainable development initiatives of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

Represented by the Director, Linkages and Consultancy of the ECN, Mr. Okon Ekpenyong, Prof. Bala explained that the project is also targeted at promoting the re-plantation of millions of fast growing trees on degraded lands for future use.

Declaring the summit open, the Kaduna state Commissioner for Environment and Natural Resources, Mrs Amina Sijuade, applauded the initiative, reiterating that it is in line with the state government’s sustainable development programmes.

The programme will be implemented in nine local government areas across the three political zones of Kaduna State.

The SFM programme is being piloted in the three states of Delta, Kaduna and Cross River.

UNDP is supporting the people and Government of Kaduna State in delivering a strategy to reduce emission from deforestation and forest degradation.

Findings by EnviroNews revealed that, in line with the objectives of the strategy, the SFM project was conceived with the overall objective of supporting the pilot states in promoting sustainable fuelwood production and consumption with attendant socio-economic and environmental benefits.

The summit was convened considering the commencement of the implementation of the SFM project in the state and the desire of Kaduna State to garner the support and cooperation of all stakeholders and carry them along in the operation and gains of the pilot project.

The specific objectives of the Kaduna summit included:

  • initiating information sharing with high-level government officials on the progress and implications of SFM project;
  • promoting relevant inter-sectorial synergy/collaboration critical for the successful implementation of the project in Kaduna State, and
  • adequately interfacing with all stakeholders on what is required for the operationalisation of the different components on the project.

Also speaking at the two-day workshop held December 19 to 20, 2017 in in Kaduna on the programme, the National Project Coordinator, GEF-UNDP Energy Efficiency Programme, Mr Etiosa Uyigue, reiterated that the SFM project would not only help to reduce the rate of deforestation, which he described as “alarming”, but also help to develop and promote clean cooking in Nigeria.

According to him: “Part of the objectives of the project is to see how we can reduce deforestation and also provide alternative to fuelwood use in Nigeria.

The SFM is being funded by the Global Energy Facility (GEF).

Uyigue further explained: “The GEF funds projects on incremental basis. In order words, they look at existing activities and complement them. We all know there is an ongoing REDD programme in Cross River and Delta states. And there are also fuelwood management activities going on Kaduna.”

He, however, expressed optimism that there is the possibility of replicating the project in other states of the federation upon the successful implementation of the pilot programme.

This, he said, may however be done by the federal government as, according to him, the GEF funding cuts across 195 countries of the world.

By Hassan Zayamu

Physician says artificially-ripened fruits can cause cancer

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Clinical Mentor, Kebbi State Primary Health Care Development Agency, Dr Mustapha Bature, has warned that consumption of fruits such as mango, banana, pawpaw and plantain, artificially-ripened by Calcium Carbide can cause cancer.

Fruits
Fruits

Bature made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria on Monday, December 25, 2017 in Abuja.

According to Wikipedia, Calcium carbide is a chemical compound with the chemical formula of CaC₂.

Its main use industrially is in the production of acetylene and calcium cyanamide.

However, the chemical is being used to ripen fruits by some fruit vendors in Nigeria.

The medical expert warned that the fruits artificially ripened with calcium carbide are not good for consumption because such chemicals used in ripening the fruits contain radio-active elements.

According to Bature, people who are exposed to Silicon Carbide are likely to come up with lungs cancer.

He said a research was also conducted in a factory where workers are exposed to Silicon Carbide; the findings revealed that such workers come-up with lungs cancer after prolong exposure.

He said prolong exposure to both silicon and calcium carbide causes cancer.

Bature advised that fruits exposed to such chemicals should be washed with running water for about two to five minutes before consumption.

He added that fruits such as mango should be peel after washing before consumption.

Bature said government should design a national policy to stop artificial ripening of fruits and implement such policy when enacted properly.

Besides, he urged the National Orientation Agency and other key stakeholders to sensitise the public on the best ways to identify such fruits and health implications of consuming such fruits.

“We need a cancer free society; therefore, continued consumption of such fruit will make the prevalence of cancer in the society to be high.

“The little exposure to cancer from carbide may not allow Nigeria to have a cancer free society in a near future.

“It is important for the government to look into the artificial ripening of fruits and ensure that such practice is put under control,” said the expert.

He also advised local government council health officials to ensure that the fruits being sold are not ripen artificially to enable Nigeria have a cancer free society.

Meanwhile, a fruits dealer at the Zuba Fruits Market near Abuja, Malam Tanimu Abdullahi, told NAN that pawpaw, mango, plantain and banana are mostly artificially ripen using the chemical.

Abdullahi, who claimed ignorance of the health implications of consuming such fruits artificially ripen, added that artificially ripen fruits could be identified by consumers through black spots on the back of such fruits.

By Mustapha Yauri

Agency trains 207 staffers in biosafety management

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The Director-General, National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA), Dr Rufus Ebegba, has said that the organisation trained 207 staff members as part of effort to enhance their capacity in biosafety management.

NBMA
Director General/CEO of NBMA, Dr. Rufus Ebegba

Dr Ebegba made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday, December 25, 2017 in Abuja.

He said it was imperative to expose the agency’s staff to effective regulation of modern biotechnology in the country through constant training.

“In the area of capacity building and skills upgrade of the staff of the agency, we were able to train all the staff, about 207 staff both administrative and scientific staff.

“We trained them on the issues of biosafety and risks assessment, even the new recruited staff were also properly trained.

“And we were also able to send about 12 staff out of the country for international exposure on Biosafety management and matters,” he said.

He said that the skills acquisition and upgrade were meant to equip the staff with the relevant skills that would facilitate their efforts to discharge their duties effectively.

“This agency is a very sensitive one, as issues of modern biotechnology are very technical and require people who are up-to-date and knowledgeable to carry out biotechnology regulations in the country; hence the constant training of staff.”

He, however, underscored the need to expose the agency’s staff to the extant regulations on biotechnology to enable Nigeria free itself from being a dumping ground for unsafe genetically modified organic (GMO) products.

“The training is part of the Federal Government’s strategic efforts to build the capacity of staff to ensure effective regulation of modern biotechnology in the country.

“So, all these are to ensure that the practice and development of the products of GMO in the country are safe.”

He said that new technologies were emerging and dynamic, adding that even the old staff needed to upgrade their skills as well.

“We train them in the area of gene drive and synthetic biology to link them with conventional technology,” he added.

By Ebere Agozie

Nigeria can generate N540b yearly from sesame seed production, says group

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National President, National Sesame Seed Association of Nigeria (NSSAN), Alhaji Sherif Balogun, says that sesame seed production has the potential of generating about N180 billion in four months if fully tapped.

Sesame seeds
Sesame seeds

Balogun, who disclosed  this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Kaduna on Monday, December 25, 2017 said that sesame seed production could also provide employment to 900,000 youths annually.

He explained: “What is needed is between N60,000 and N70,000 to cultivate a hectare of sesame seed, with a guarantee of N200,000 returns on investment.”

According to him, the country has about 84 million hectares of arable land that could be used to produce the seed with promise of high returns on investment.

“If 30 states of the federation provide 30,000 hectares of land each, it will engage 900,000 youths, 30,000 per states with each cultivating a hectare of sesame seed at N70,000.

“Each of these youths is assured of making N200,000 within four months and when you add up, it will give you N180 billion.

“This is just one cropping season, the amount will double if cultivated twice a year.”

He said that the current annual production capacity of sesame seed in the country stood at 450,000 tonnes adding that  80 per cent of  was being exported.

Balogun added that the country can raise its production capacity to one million tonnes in four months if it so desire, given the available land and idled youths in the country.

He said that in 2016, Nigeria earned $123.3 million from the export of sesame seed, stressing that with value addition, it has the potential of earning between $500 million and $1 billion.

He said that sesame seed contains 50.5 per cent oil and 25 per cent protein, adding that it was in high demand by pharmaceuticals, soap and paint industries.

“The seed is also used in making cosmetics, shampoo, lubricant and cooking oil, among others,” he said.

He said that the seed is being cultivated in 22 states in the country with Jigawa, Benue Nassarawa and Taraba as leading producing states.

Sesame seeds are oilseed crop that are said to be extremely beneficial for health but often overlooked. They include the ability to prevent diabetes, lower blood pressure, prevent a wide variety of cancers, build strong bones, protect against radiation, and an improve the heart health. They also help to cure sleep disorders, improve digestion, reduce inflammation, boost respiratory health, and aid in dental care. The seeds also have the ability improve blood circulation, detoxify the body, and eliminate depression and chronic stress.

By Philip Yatai

Yobe targets 90% access to water, sanitation by 2025

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The Yobe State Government says it will achieve 90 per cent access to water supply and sanitation by 2025 in line with the water and sanitation reform policy.

Ibrahim Gaidam
Governor Ibrahim Gaidam of Yobe State

Alhaji Bukar Mohammed, the General Manager, Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agency (RUWASSA), disclosed this on Sunday, December 24, 2017 in an interview with newsmen in Damaturu, the state capital.

He said government has already achieved 90 per cent access to water and 85 per cent access to sanitation in Bade and Nguru local government areas under the joint partnership between the state and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

According to the manager, “some 450 hand pump boreholes, 30 solar powered boreholes and 120 toilet facilities were constructed in 346 communities reaching out to 227, 500 people in under the state and UNICEF partnership”.

He said the state government paid counterpart of N309 million representing 30 per cent, while UNICEF paid N750 million or 70 per cent of the project cost.

Mohammed said the State Task Group on sanitation had certified 130 communities in the two local government areas as Open Defecation Free communities.

He said in appreciation of the state’s performance, UNICEF approved extension of the programme to Bursari local government area with construction of 380 hand pump boreholes, 40 solar boreholes and 60 toilets in 336 communities.

“UNICEF would pay N649 million while the state and local governments are to pay a counterpart of N374 million for execution of the projects against May 2018 date line,” said the general manager.

He expressed confidence that the state and local governments would meet their financial obligations to pay the counterpart fund “for us to be on the same page with UNICEF’’ and ensure completion.

“When this is completed, there will be 90 per cent access to water and sanitation in the three local government areas of Bade, Nguru and Bursari in 2018,” he said.

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