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Home Blog Page 6269

Nigeria’s Electricity Loop and Darkness of a Nation

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It seems easy on paper: privatize the electricity authority (NEPA) which belonged to the commonwealth and give it to private companies to operate. If you do that, the companies will improve efficiency and provide 24/7 electricity to companies and citizens. Unfortunately, that has not happened. Sure, we can blame the electricity companies. But if you look deeper, things are not that easy. Just like in water rates which have not been increased since 1997, in some states in Nigeria, electricity rates in Nigeria are out of sync with inflation, currency devaluation and every element of market systems. Simply, to serve the citizens at the current rates would be charity for distribution companies (Discos). Of course, they would not – and the government has been coming onboard, helping to fix  many broken elements.

The problem is this: when the government transferred the assets from NEPA to the new companies, it had expected that it could relax while the new private firms provide power. But with all the paralyses, the government has been looped into the mess and has been spending like before, mass producing darkness at scale.

This season was supposed to help break that loop, through a planned increase in electricity tariff. Easier said than done. You know what? That has been frozen because Nigeria is not ready for any hike. Blame Covid-19. Blame our attitude. As usual, the new rates will come next year, and next year will become one after next, and we will continue to suspend hard decisions. I get it: provide us Harvard-level education (our rights) but we can only pay $400 even when you know that Harvard costs an excess of $55,,000 per session

Electricity distribution companies in Nigeria (DisCos) have agreed to suspend the planned increase in electricity tariff after a meeting with the National Assembly leadership, an official has said.

The DisCos reportedly agreed to suspend the increase till the first quarter of next year while the leadership of the National Assembly has promised to meet with President Muhammadu Buhari on the issue.

[…]

“The agreement here is that there is not going to be any increase in the tariffs on July 1st. The Speaker and I, we are going to take appropriate action and meet with the president.

“We are in agreement here that there is no question on the justification of the increase but the time is simply not right and appropriate measures need to be put in place. So between now and the first quarter of next year, our task will be to work together with you to ensure that we put those blocks in place to support the eventual increase in tariffs,” Mr Lawan was quoted as saying.

While he noted that the planned increase in the tariff was of concern to the lawmakers, he said the government has been doing a lot as part of its obligations to provide some form of intervention.

Of course, I get it: do not increase rates until you can give me 24/7 electricity. Unfortunately, no one can give you that until you pay. The only workable option has been: allow me to increase rates, and I will have better margin to invest to provide you better services. As it stands now, no investor will invest in Discos because their numbers do not make sense at the current electricity rates. As that happens, be sure of darkness. In my office in Owerri, we use two generators -and the national grid is our second backup!

A Global Expert To Speak During Tekedia Career Week

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He has been an Adviser to the British Government on developing international education policies under the National Student Forum, On-call Education Partnership Consultant for British Council, and Business Development Consultant for the Grow Creative Scheme under the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF). He is a business consultant with deep experiences on education, manpower development.

Dr. Akanimo Odon, a Tekedia Mini-MBA Faculty, will present during Tekedia Career Week which comes Nov 2-6, 2020. With a sub-theme Nurturing Innovators, Dr Odon will examine how we can plan our careers and build resilience during this age of disruption. Yes, as technology changes the rules of markets and post-covid-19 becoming the new normal, we need insights on how to run that personal career playbook. The Week is not about helping our members to find jobs. Rather, we hope the insights would help them have great careers.

Everyone has a career aspiration: I have been working on joining a Board of a public company. Unfortunately, two insurers which presented opportunities did not pass my tests. So, I am still working on that – and will get there. Join us on this journey.

Tekedia Career Week “Nurturing Innovators” Will Hold Nov 2-6 2020

Understand the Ecommerce Sector in Africa

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Next week in our program , we will focus on “Business Model & Transformation”.  I begin with “Modern Business Models and Growth”, looking at Aggregation Construct, Double Play, etc while Omowunmi Adenuga-Taiwo examines “Effective Organizational Change Management”. So, as technology and markets drive organization changes, triggering potential new business models, Omowunmi helps us on protocols to ensure that CHANGE is done effectively. Every business needs to attend her class – it is a beauty of what has to happen during this post-pandemic era.

Then, Femi Aiki, CEO of digital grocery startup, Foodlocker, did a masterpiece in his 90-minute video, using ecommerce as a case study. Yes, he explains a sector-transformation in action. Femi ran balance sheets, growth drivers and dropped his outlooks.

Experience positive CHANGE at Tekedia Institute.

Become An INNOVATOR: Register for Tekedia Mini-MBA Today

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First, I apologize for the delay in setting up accounts. Today is salary day and many members joined. My team has started sending the logins as I write. In 30 minutes, you will get your logins. (Use self-registration to avoid delay.) More so, while the Institute has tried to avoid getting involved in WhatsApp & Slack groups to allow members to do their things, we have a new policy: if your WhatsApp group is full, put a note that you cannot accept more members due to capacity.

Tekedia Mini-MBA continues to welcome new members for the second edition. Come and master the mechanics of business systems. We have independent co-learning groups which are run by Managing Partners and CEOs of great companies who are mentoring and helping our young people.

There is nothing like what is happening in those groups. Once the lectures go live, a social media group is set up and the discussions begin. A business canvas developed from our Challenge #1 has received funding. The member wrote: “I have been sending business plans with no success, but I tried this canvas and we got funding in Lagos”.

Join us today and be part of the FUTURE, register.

https://www.tekedia.com/mini-mba-2/

Nigerian Lifts Inter-state Lockdown, Reopens Some Schools

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The Federal Government of Nigerian has announced the lifting of the inter-state lockdown. The announcement was made by the Secretary to the State Government (SGF), Boss Mustafa, after president Buhari was briefed by the Presidential Task Force (PTF), on the progress the country has made in its fight against COVID-19 so far. The new directive will take effect from July 1st, 2020, in accordance with the curfew restrictions.

The SGF also said that the eased lockdown has been extended by another four weeks, which will take effect from June 30 through July 27, 2020.

Also, the directive gives schools the permission to carry out skeletal function for graduating students of primary and secondary schools. The students given the permission to resume school activities are primary 6 students who are to write Common Entrance Examination, Junior Secondary School 3 and Senior Secondary School 3 students.

Mustapha said that schools will open only on the condition that every cautionary protocol, including wearing of masks and social distancing will be followed.

The National Coordinator of Presidential Task Force, Sani Aliyu, added that all other school activities in Nigeria remain closed until further notice.

“For educational activities, all daycares and primary schools to remain closed till further evaluation.

“Schools are encouraged to continue with e-learning and visual teachings, but pupils may proceed to take the National Common Entrance as soon as it’s feasible, provided there is compliance with issued non-pharmaceutical interventions.

“For secondary and tertiary institutions, all schools to remain closed till further evaluation.

“Arrangement is to be made for exiting graduation students in JSS3 and SSS3 to resume at both boarding and day schools as soon as possible for intensive revision exercises.

“All educational establishments are to conduct exhaustive reviews to ensure compliance with the issued guidelines on COVID-19 before they open up for this purpose. Just to clarify, they will open up only for the purpose of exiting students.

“Arrangement is to be made for students taking part in the NABTEB exam, WAEC, exam, NECO exam respectively. All schools must comply with the six recommended steps to be issued by the Federal Ministry of Education before an institution is reopened in the timeline to be provided,” he said.

However, many said that reopening of schools in any kind of way now is premature, and are worried it would expose students to the virus as most of the schools fall short of the needed facilities that will ensure safety.

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) said on Monday that the federal government’s plan to reopen the schools is suicidal. ASUU National President, Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, said the government needs to provide the ideal environment and meet the conditions spelt out by the Nigeria Center for Disease Control (NCDC) before schools could be reopened across the country.

“The Federal Government must lead and show the ways by meeting the conditions for reopening of schools before any school can be allowed to open because COVID-19 pandemic is a health challenge.

“When it comes to public health, it is something that should not be left in the hands of individuals but the Federal Government must take the lead,” he said.

The conditions for reopening schools include the provision of materials for regular hand washing, provision of facemasks, isolation spaces, hand sanitizers and PPEs. According to the ASUU president, most government owned schools lack the capacity to provide these materials, making it difficult for the schools to make safety measures practical.

It could be recalled that lack of PPEs in the hospitals for frontline medical workers, was among the reasons Nigerian doctors went on strike earlier in the month. Many believe that if the government finds it difficult to provide protective equipment for frontline workers, students will not be an exception.

Prof. Ogunyemi said: “It is suicidal to reopen schools now if the Federal Government itself could not meet the conditions spelt out by the NCDC and the World Health Organization. The nation will expose innocent children to avoidable risks.”

Schools in Nigeria have been closed since March, and the federal government’s eagerness to get students back to school has been frontal. But the risk involved is alarming as the number of cases in Nigeria has continued to increase.

As of June 30, 2020, Nigeria has recorded 25,133 confirmed cases resulting in 573 deaths. Given the low testing capacity of the NCDC, it is believed that there are more infected people than are recorded, and opening of schools now, however, will be disastrous.