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Home Blog Page 5825

Ndubuisi Ekekwe, PhD To Keynote 2021 Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) YP Symposium

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They run the best technical conferences in Africa. I mean the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) is amazing. In one which I attended a few years ago, they started without waiting for a minister who was arriving about 20  minutes late. I could not believe that I was in Nigeria. Simply, the oil  & gas industry delivers global standards, across core domains, as the high priests of Nigeria’s economy. 

Good People, I want to invite you to SPE  Young Professionals Symposium. I will do the keynote for this year, and my topic is “Harnessing Nigeria’s Mix – Opportunities for Young Professionals”. Many years ago, as an intern, I worked in Owaza ( Abia state) in Nigerian Gas Company (NNPC) working on the gas flow station supplying gas to Aba Ceramics, etc.

I later moved to Moscow Rd Port Harcourt in NNPC, learning on gas installations in Benin. Later, while in Shell on internship, I lived in Kolo Creek flow station (Bayelsa), piping hydrocarbons with extremely nice world-class engineers in Shell. Then, I took a boat from Ogoni to Ikot Abasi for the gas projects in ALSCON. In those, two things were evident:  carbon and hydrogen.

But today, things are changing and the industry is being redesigned. Besides those hydrocarbons, we now have new domains. What are the opportunities for young people? Interestingly, there are many. During my talk, I will share because the future looks promising.

Please go here and register and join the young SPE members. They are extremely brilliant young people and great young people to connect with: https://2021-spe-ph-yp-symposium.netlify.app/

Zenvus Yield To Canada

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We received a big deal from Canada this week and the engine which we built for Zenvus Yield is being licensed to power a product for a Canadian firm. When we engineered the Zenvus Yield, we used the most minimalist componentment and firmware to build something at the least cost possible while improving our computational model. It was built originally for agriculture but applications are expanding to other industries.

The gradient descent algorithm was the core of a patent I filed as part of my PhD. With that algorithm, I sought for first-order iterative optimization to determine a local minimum of a differentiable function, and in the process improve the system. You can see the camera here.

That camera was created from scratch and it works in poor light with processing capabilities that do better than some expensive phones.

Tekedia Faculty, Jerome Okoro PhD, Co-founds a Law Practice, Tetralex

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Good People, join me to congratulate our Tax and Energy Law faculty, Jerome Okoro PhD, who just co-founded a law practice with his business partner, Dr Uchenna J. Orji, a professor of Law with the American University in Nigeria.

Dr. Okoro, a law graduate of University of Nigeria Nsukka, LLM from University of Lagos and PhD Law from University of Ibadan is the Managing Partner of Tetralex.

Dr. Okoro possesses a wealth of experience in diverse areas of law practice, with remarkable expertise in Tax, Energy Law and Litigation. He is a member of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (UK), International Fiscal Association, International Bar Association, and the Nigerian Bar Association.

From all of us at Tekedia Institute, we wish Tetralex open markets and territories. To learn more about Tetralex, visit https://tetralex.com/

Business Relationship Management & Negotiation Skills At Tekedia Institute

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He is a workplace transformer and he makes companies better. Tekedia Mini-MBA Faculty, Charles Okeibunor, is a Workplace Relationship Management Expert who developed a model for Workplace Transformation called IRMP, forming IRMP Consulting. He is currently the Principal Consultant on Organisational Behavioural Change to Nigerian Agip Oil Company, Nigerian Agip Exploration and Agip Energy and Natural Resources.

We sought for his help when we noticed that during our live sessions, some of the challenges members were having could be captured within poor business relationship management and lack of depth on negotiation skills.

Now, the learned gentleman (lawyer) has prepared a course, and it is in the Board. How do you manage that customer? How do you manage that supplier? How do you manage that supervisor? Learn from the best school here.

Crisis Looms AS Nigerian Judicial Workers, Polytechnic Staff Union Join Doctors on Strike

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Days after The National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) embarked on indefinite strike, the Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) started a protest strike action over the non-implementation of financial autonomy for the judiciary.

Across the country, court activities are increasingly getting paralyzed as the strike action takes effect.

From Lagos to Kano, judicial workers have been forced to halt court processes, and the Supreme Court has been shut down.

The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) said the planned strike by JUSUN, which is as a result of the judicial arm of government literally begging for what belongs to it, will have a devastating effect on the country’s judicial process, and also interfere with the independence of the judiciary.

NBA President, Mr Olumide Akpata, said despite the clear constitutional provisions which consecrates the autonomy of the Judiciary, the executive arm of government, particularly at the state level, has customarily refused to comply with the provisions of the Constitution

‘‘The NBA is deeply worried that despite the clear provisions of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as altered) which consecrate the autonomy of the Judiciary, the Executive arm of Government, particularly at the State level, has customarily refused to comply with the provisions of the Constitution, which are targeted at safeguarding the independence of the Judiciary.

‘‘The NBA is aware of the judgment of the Federal High Court of 13th January 2014 which unequivocally confirmed the autonomy of the Judiciary in line with the spirit and letters of the Constitution. While that judgment was followed by a Memorandum of Understanding between JUSUN and relevant stakeholders under which parties agreed to conscientiously give effect to the judgement of the Court, that has not been the case for seven years after the landmark judgment. This situation does not augur well for our constitutional democracy, as it suggests that members of the Executive arm of Government, who swore to uphold the principles of the Constitution, can flout it, with impunity.

‘’The Judiciary is an equal arm of Government relative to the Executive and the Legislature, and its independence is fundamental to the effective discharge of its mandate under the Constitution. A situation where the Judiciary literally begs for its resources from the Executive arm, as is currently the case across several States, cannot guarantee its independence, and constitutes an affront to the Constitution and the Rule of Law,’’ Akpata said.

But that’s just part of a system that the most populous black nation in the world has become famous for. In Nigeria, industrial action is a common feature that the government does not want to reckon with, and at the same time, would not take the necessary steps to stop from frequently happening.

It was in December that the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) called off its ‘sequel’ industrial action that paralyzed academic activities in the universities for nine months. Last month, the academic body threatened to resume where it stopped due to non-payment of salaries and alleged victimization of its members.

On Tuesday, Anderson Ezeibe, president of the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) announced that the union has commenced an indefinite strike.

ASUP said part of the reasons for the strike is the non-implementation of NEEDS Assessment report of 2014 in the sector nor release of any revitalization fund to the sector despite assurances since 2017.

And there is also non-reconstitution of governing councils in Federal Polytechnics and many state-owned institutions which has led to the disruption of governance and administrative processes in the institutions since May 2020.

These, according to the union, undermined the renegotiation of the union’s 2010 agreement with the government as such was unilaterally suspended by the government for over 2 years.

Over the years, Nigerians have come in terms with strike actions in the health and educational sectors. Therefore, most are not surprised that doctors embarked on strike in the face of the global health crisis, but there is a different sentiment with JUSUN strike.

Although there had been cases of some state judiciary workers going on strike in the past, it had never been on par with academic and health sectors’, which happen always at the national level with devastating impacts.

Nigerian patients are left to die in various hospitals as medical professionals down tools, students spend more years in schools as academic activities get put on hold periodically.

NARD president, Uyilawa Okhuaihesuyi, said on Tuesday that the government has only met one out of its 13 demands, and the association has not had any invite from the ministry of labor, that means, the strike continues.

With president Buhari in London on medical vacation, it is believed that the striking doctors will have to watch more Nigerians with medical needs die.

Okhuaihesuyi said “as a leader of the national association of residents doctors, a mandate has been given to me to continue the strike until the 13 demands are met. So the strike continues as it stands.”

The Minister for Labor, Dr. Chris Ngige said the government may implement “no-work no-pay” labor rule to force the doctors to return to work.

It is a faceoff, and like always, those who have been, without choice trapped in the system, will bear the brunt.

Patients will die, students will watch their academic future waste away. And as for the judiciary, Akpata said there will be serious consequences.

‘’Across the country, the Courts are trying to play catch-up for lost time, and it would be catastrophic for the administration of justice for the Courts to be shut down again. This is not to mention the adverse economic consequences for families and lawyers alike, who earn a living in one way or the other, by providing various support services to the Court system’’, he said.