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Femi Otedola Ascends With First Bank; Nigeria Should Pause NYSC Until Land Is Safe

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Femi Otedola has emerged as a key shareholder of First Bank Holdings, the holding firm of First Bank Nigeria, after acquiring a 5.07% equity stake: “that Mr Otedola Olufemi Peter and his nominee, Calvados Global Services Limited have acquired a total of 1,818, 551,625 units of shares from the Company’s issued share capital of 35,895,292791. Based on the foregoing, the equity stake of Mr Otedola Olufemi Peter and his nominee in the company is now 5.07%”.

The Nigerian billionaire, Femi Otedola, has emerged a major shareholder of First Bank Holdings, owners of First Bank Nigeria, after acquiring a 5.07 per cent equity stake, the company confirmed Saturday.

The holding firm had earlier denied knowledge of the takeover saying it had not received a notification of a significant holding by Mr Otedola.

In a follow-up communication to the Nigerian Exchange Limited Saturday, the firm said it received notification from APT Securities and Funds Limited that its client, “that Mr Otedola Olufemi Peter and his nominee, Calvados Global Services Limited have acquired a total of 1,818, 551,625 units of shares from the Company’s issued share capital of 35,895,292791.”

“Based on the foregoing, the equity stake of Mr Otedola Olufemi Peter and his nominee in the company is now 5.07%,” the notice signed by Seye Kosoko, company secretary, said.

First Bank is a prime target due to its history but over the next five years, assets will exchange hands in Nigeria. I am hoping that dews will fall in Nigeria from June 2023 and a nation will begin to rise again. More deals will happen. The news of kidnapping NYSC members today stresses me because I see no reason why these graduates should be exposed to these risks in places where soldiers are not even safe!

Pause NYSC until the land is safe! Meanwhile, congrats Otedola. Please let us keep and preserve the First.

Panic has set in among prospective corps members in Zamfara State following the abduction of some of their colleagues on their way to their orientation camp in Tsafe Local Government Area of the state.

Although the police confirmed the abduction of two prospective corps members along the Sheme-Tsafe highway in the state, witnesses said about six others were missing from the incident that occurred on Tuesday.

The Tsafe hosts the National Youth Service (NYSC) orientation camp in Zamfara.

#believe with a plan because the future is full of abundance.

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Good People, thanks for the kind words and congratulations. Most times, I write to inspire and encourage young people. While things are certainly tougher, specifically in Africa, I continue to challenge young people to look at areas which are opening up. You may not believe it  there are many opportunities young graduates have today that many of us did not experience many years ago.

Sure, we got jobs easily – but there was no investor writing a cheque of $50,000 to develop ideas. So, your season is different and I encourage you to live in your time. And get it from me – this is the best time to be a young person in Africa.

#believe with a plan. You will rise because the future is full of abundance.

EndSARS was not a protest, it was a …. movement

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One year on, I am still reminiscing on the protest that happened this time last year. It was quite different from the various protests that the country had ever witnessed. It started slowly and quickly ramped up. It went from Lagos to Abuja and from there on every city caught up in the euphoria. Yes, it was euphoria: youths were happy and excited to speak their minds. The nation was going through bad times, but the youths were not bothered– initially. Many youths were already oriented that survival was an individual thing–OYO (On Your Own). But, Police Brutality was a bane. And, many who were not beneficiaries of police brutality, but witnessed the brutality gladly joined. It became a movement.

The movement seems to have been written in the stars. Organizations, companies, religious bodies were wowed by the maturity of the protesters though. Despite having no leader; no harm, no robbery or thievery, and no accidents were witnessed nor recorded. No doubt, many heroes arose at different points in time, yet the crowd rejected them. Yes, they were heroes; some had started the fight before the protest started at all, while others worked behind the scene: some worked pro-bono, others sponsored with cash and other necessities, and others were organizers in different capacities. Yet, the crowd decided no one person will own the glory alone–an amazing situation that puzzled many detractors.

New leaders were born, new talents arose. Someone exclaimed in the crowd–this protest is unbelievable. He became a fan, yet he was an unbeliever– of protests. The older generations have never believed there could be a new thing, their old idea reigned supreme, and it was evident. They could not react quickly, their thoughts were we have done it before, they will soon get tired. The fire burned till it reached a higher elevation. They were stunned! I was too. The Elders, who truly believed in One Nigeria came in to support the movement. Something told them Nigeria is about to become better in their times. Some encouraged their kids to join. Many adults who had never seen their parents encourage such were shocked.

According to CNN, an international media company, a 32 year old man left his two kids –14 and 9 years respectively– to protest. He never came back alive. Why? Some decided enough was enough. They decided to crush it. Their egos were already bruised. People, who were hungry, got food during the movement. People termed hooligans became holy fans during the movement. People who were locked up unjustly for protesting had lawyers fighting to release them. Some got new legs. There was joy, something some people could not fathom. Threats were made, but people did not deter, people were committed. Then, they struck! People fell by the way, but became martyrs. The 32 year old man was one, many were too, even if many were unknown.

I have seen things, but I have never witnessed such. I woke up to watch TV, after a stressful day sorting out some issues, it was 6pm. People held Nigerian flags; they were pictured singing the Nigerian anthem, some holding hands. I thought there was going to be rapture. I quickly held my bible and moved closer to ascertain what the problem was. Calls started coming in, my phone was vibrating with messages, I was alarmed. The messages were the same. Just a question, did you hear what the rumours were? I quickly checked the media. I waited patiently to ascertain if the rumours were true. That night was an impromptu vigil.

Social media was agog. A well-known DJ was used to playing recorded songs for her teeming fans; little did she know her job for the night was to stream chaos–live. The night was full of chaos and blood. The rest will be left to history. Many claimed the protesters looted, some claimed they were destroyed; others said there was no death at all. Posterity will decide. One thing remained constant: EndSARS was not a protest, it was a movement.

Facebook’s Name Change – A Solution Far From Its Problems

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Since 2004 when it was founded, Facebook has grown from a campus network app to a formidable behemoth, holding a huge influence on the lives of billions of its users around the world. The social media app, which originally was built to help people stay connected, has grown eventually to become a giant of many faces – but that has come with a mammoth of problems.

Facebook has become a parent to many rival social media companies. It purchased Instagram for $1 billion in 2012, and WhatsApp, for $19 billion in 2014. There have been other standalone companies like Oculus and Messenger that have become part of Facebook’s growing conglomerate. While each of them has contributed in making Facebook a multi-billion dollar company it has become, they have as well, added to its problems.

Since the past five years, Facebook has been in the news for many wrong reasons that have not only stirred the anger of a large section of users, but also have attracted antitrust scrutiny from the authorities around the world – and in most cases, heavy penalties followed.

“Facebook is the world’s foremost social media network, it has extraordinary reach and influence, and it impacts billions of consumers worldwide. It is therefore held to a higher public standard, and opinions, expectations and reactions are so much greater than for other enterprise or consumer companies,” said Kirsten Wolberg, chief technology and operations officer at DocuSign.

For a behemoth with the goldfish status, Facebook has been spotlighted at every corner for moral and technical shortfalls. In 2019 alone, Facebook paid about $6 billion in fines for various antitrust offenses, with the record $5 billion Cambridge Analytica data breach penalty being the highest in its history.

It is 2021, and the story has not changed. It has continued in the same setting and narrative style, with the latest leak of Facebook’s internal research findings by the platform’s former product manager, Frances Haugen, being the latest. Haugen had alleged that Facebook knows about the harm its platforms cause, especially for young people, but chooses profit over public safety.

As the issues around Facebook and its products compound over the years, CEO Mark Zuckerberg, has been on a wild-goose chase to whitewash his darling company and what it stands for. But as each effort fails, new ideas are developed. So it was not surprising, when in July, Zuckerberg announced the formation of a metaverse product group, as part of an effort to rebrand Facebook and build something brilliantly new and different from what everyone used to know.

Earlier in the week, The Verge reported that Zuckerberg is expected to announce a new name for Facebook. But the identity baptism that is expected to wash all Facebook’s sins clean has prompted some questions about where the solution to the social media’s many problems lies.

In June, US Congress had touted breaking up Facebook as a way to tame the wildling monster that has apparently slipped out of control. But Haugen, in her testimony to Congress, argued that a breakup wouldn’t eliminate the concerns, and instead, she recommended regulation.

“I’m actually against the breaking up of Facebook. Right now Facebook is the internet for lots of the world,” she said.

After 16 years, 90 acquisitions, and billions of dollars – Facebook has become one of the most popular names in the world. While the name over the years has been characterized by ‘misinformation, ‘misuse of private data’, ‘promotion of hate’ antitrust inquiries and heavy fines; branding experts believe that changing it wouldn’t make all that go away.

“Everyone knows what Facebook is,” says Jim Heininger, founder of Rebranding Experts, a firm that focuses solely on rebranding organizations. “The most effective way for Facebook to address the challenges that have tainted its brand recently is through corrective actions, not trying to change its name or installing a new brand architecture.”

Facebook is expected to announce its new name next week, amidst concern of its would-be impact on the vast majority of the platform users, who overtime, have fallen in love with the name. However, the real challenge lies on the other side of the concern – the components that make up the dirt on the name are in the algorithm, powered by decisions made in Facebook offices. Therefore, for many, the name Facebook is not what the US Congress and antitrust regulators around the world are after – and it should be left alone.

“A new name might give the company a facelift. But a name change is not a rebrand,” says Anaezi Modu, the founder and CEO of Rebrand, which advises companies on brand transformations. Branding comes from a company’s mission, culture, and capabilities, more than just its name, logo, or marketing. “Unless Facebook has serious plans to address at least some of its many issues, just changing a name is pointless. In fact, it can worsen matters.” Renaming a company can create more mistrust if it comes off as distancing itself from its reputation, he added.

On The Nigeria’s Gas Flaring Quagmire

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Gas flaring has over past decades remained an environmental phenomenon of tremendous concern and worry within the shores of the oil-producing areas in Nigeria.

A gas flare, alternatively known as a flare stack, is a gas combustion device used in industrial plants such as petroleum refineries, chemical plants, natural gas processing plants as well as at oil/gas production.    

Gas flaring is the burning of natural gas that is associated with crude oil when it is pumped up from the ground. In petroleum-producing areas where insufficient investment was made in infrastructure to utilize natural gas, flaring is employed to dispose of this associated gas.    

Flares are important safety devices used in refineries and petrochemical facilities. They safely burn excess hydrocarbon gases which cannot be recovered or recycled. During flaring, excess gases are combined with steam and/or air, and burnt off in the flare system to produce water vapour and carbon dioxide.

A flare system comprises a flare stack and pipes that feed gas to the stack. Because natural gas is valuable, companies would rather capture than flare it. However, there are several reasons it may be necessary to flare gas during drilling, production or processing.

In industrial plants, flare stacks are primarily used for burning off flammable gas released by pressure relief valves unplanned over-pressuring of plant equipment. However, during plant or partial plant startups and shutdowns, flare stacks are equally utilized for the planned combustion of gases over relatively short periods.

The fact is that gas flaring at several oil and gas production sites protects against the dangers inherent in over-pressuring industrial plant equipment. This is the reason the practice has seemingly become inevitable to the various oil firms operating within the shores of countries like Nigeria.

A good example of the consequences of failure to flare escaping gas was evident in the Bhopal disaster on 3rd December 1984 in India when a flare tower was broken and couldn’t flare escaping Methyl isocyanate gas. The gas in question had reportedly been in an over-pressurized tank and released by a safety valve, which resulted in its release into the surrounding area.

When petroleum crude oil is extracted and produced from oil wells, raw natural gas associated with the oil is brought to the surface, especially in areas of the world that are lacking pipelines and other gas transportation infrastructure. Vast amounts of such associated gas are commonly flared as waste or unusable gas.

It’s noteworthy that the flaring of associated gas may occur at the top of a vertical flare stack or it might occur in a ground-level flare in an earthen pit. Preferably, associated gas is often re-injected into the reservoir, which saves it for future use while maintaining higher well pressure and crude oil production.

When industrial plant equipment items are over-pressured, the pressure relief valve is invariably an essential safety device that automatically releases gases and sometimes liquids. These pressure relief valves are usually needed by industrial design codes and standards as well as by law.

The released gases and liquids are then routed through large piping systems known as flare headers to a vertical elevated flare. They are thereby burned as they exit the flare stacks. The size and brightness of the resulting flame depends solely upon the flammable materials’ flow rate.

To keep the flare system functional, a small amount of gas is continuously burnt, like a pilot light, so that the system is ceaselessly ready for its basic purpose as an overpressure safety system.

It’s worth noting that flaring can affect wildlife – likewise other living creatures – by attracting them such as birds and insects, among others to the flare. Survey indicated that about 7,500 migrating songbirds were attracted to and killed by the flare at the liquefied natural gas terminal in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada on September 13, 2013. Similar incidents have taken place at flares on offshore oil and gas installations in some other countries.

Two years back, the then Nigeria’s Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu informed the general public that some pertinent committees had been set up by the Federal Government (FG) led by President Muhammadu Buhari towards tactically addressing the scourge of gas flaring currently experienced in the country’s Niger-Delta region.

This development, according to the honourable minister, was necessitated by the FG’s bid to fully implement the National Gas Policy as approved by the Federal Executive Council (FEC) in June, 2017. He posited that gas flaring was unacceptable and condemnable, hence must be completely phased out.

Dr. Kachikwu made this known at an International Press Briefing held on 11th April 2019 at the Petroleum Trust Development Fund (PTDF) Tower, Abuja, which focused on the theme “The journey so far and the next line of action for the Nigerian Gas Flare Commercialization Programme (NGFCP)”.

He further described the recent enactment and approval of the Flare Gas Regulations, 2008 and its endorsement by the president on 5th July 2018, as “key accomplishment, historic and record breaking”.

The boss stated that two of the bodies inaugurated, namely the NGFCP Ministerial Steering Committee and the Programme Management Office (PMO), were directed to activate the NGFCP Community, Awareness and Sensitization/Participation Plan (CASP) to ensure widespread awareness and full participation of key stakeholders in the Niger Delta areas.

The minister, who assured that docility and apathy wouldn’t be tolerated from anyone involved, equally notified the gathering that a Proposal Evaluation Committee (PEC) was also set up by the Buhari-led government to receive applications and aptly consider applicants who are ably qualified to handle the contracts by painstakingly scrutinizing their respective qualifications. He therefore used the occasion to declare the submission of qualifications open.

It’s indeed appalling and saddening that over two years of initiating the said lofty policy, the Nigeria’s government is yet to make any tangible move towards considering the clauses enshrined therein, let alone implementing them.

The bitter truth is that the ongoing practice of gas flaring, in which the natural gas associated with petroleum extraction is burned off in the atmosphere rather than being removed by alternative means such as subterranean re-injection or confinement to storage tanks for eventual sale, is particularly controversial to assert the least.

Gas flaring immensely contributes to climate change by emitting carbon dioxide – the main greenhouse gas – which has serious implications for both Nigeria’s environment and the rest of the world.

More so, the unending industrial practice causes the surrounding communities to suffer from increased severe health risks to include respiratory illnesses and other related diseases, thereby leading to premature deaths.

Gas flares have potentially-harmful effects on the health and livelihood of the people in the affected areas, as they release poisonous chemicals. This is why it is high time the governments at all levels expedited action with a view to bringing the societal menace to a full stop.

Apart from the dwellers who died owing to hardship occasioned by gas flaring, it’s worth noting that several environmental activists had lost their precious lives – or been reportedly killed – while fighting for a better life for the people of the Niger Delta. A good example of members of this group is the Late Ken Saro-Wiwa who fought doggedly till he was executed by the military regime.

In spite of all the countless bad omens and ordeals that transpired in the past as a result of gas flaring, the government is ostensibly yet to learn a lesson, or be moved by the untold sufferings of the Nigerian people whose lands have hitherto been the major – if not sole – surviving point of the entire country.

Aside from the health and environmental effects of gas flaring, reports show that Nigeria invariably loses about N197bn to the practice in just nine months. It was reliably revealed that oil and gas firms operating in the country flared approximately a total of 215.9 billion standard cubic feet of natural gas in the first nine months of 2018 alone, amounting to a potential loss of the aforementioned sum of money.

For Nigeria to get it right, a strict and genuine tech-driven measure is earnestly required from the concerned authorities. Hence, the constituted committees, which apparently went into moribund on arrival, must endeavour to embrace all the needed technicalities towards aptly delivering on the mandate given to them.

Most importantly, for all the regulations and extant laws forbidding gas flaring to be fully adhered to, the government is expected to wear the required political will like clothing. This is a step we must see as a priority and inevitable.

We can’t continue to dwell on a retrogressive approach at a time we are yearning for progressive one.