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NARSDA Recommends Satellite Technology For African Countries

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The Director-General, National Space Research and Development Agency (NARSDA), Dr. Seidu Mohammed, said last Thursday that the use of satellite technology by African countries could help them solve their common problems.

Mohammed said this at the 6th Governing Board Meeting of African Regional Centre for Science and Technology Education in English (ARCSTE-E) in Abuja.

He said that such close collaboration amongst African countries could help them solve common problems such as desertification, flooding, erosion and food insecurity.

He added, “We to need to remind ourselves that desertification is a common problem all over Africa. We need to remind ourselves that coastal erosion is a common problem; flooding is loose, staring at us.

“With the climate changes all over the world, Nigeria went through enormous flooding problem in 2012 that have never been so. We have never recorded this in the last 50 years. And that shows, we the need to talk about space science as technology as a special tool to enable Africa solve its problems.

”It also reminds us of the enormous task we need to do in achieving the Millennium Development Goals.’’

Mohammed also urged ARCSTE-E member countries to contribute their quotas, especially in the areas of finance and development of human capability towards solving the common problem of the region.

He said unless the region started talking together and taking responsibilities will not make the desired progress.

He said, “When it belongs to nobody, nobody takes responsibility and there wouldn’t be progress; but if it ours, the onus is on us to make firm commitment and we cannot do this if we don’t contribute financially.

”No matter how little and this is the only way that we can be said to have started. We believe that about 50 per cent of world food aids come to Africa yet about less than the world population.

“We have enormous resources all over Africa and we deserve to have information on some of these things through resources inventory and several other projects we are normally done using space science and technology.

“We need to have more and more capabilities in terms of predicting our weather, looking at how we can improve food security in Africa and all these are within the purview of space science and technology. If we continue to complain, people will not take us seriously.’’

Stakeholders in space technology from English- speaking African countries were present at the event.

The countries include Ethiopia, Sudan, Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania, Gambia, Namibia, Kenya, Sierra Leone, and Cameroun.

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Mile 2-Jetty Toxic Leakage: SEREC Worries Over Environmental Pollution 

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The Sea Empowerment and Research Center (SEREC) has raised alarm over the environmental pollution at Mile 2 Jetty following a sunken barge which cargo is leaking.
SEREC noted that the sunken barge has led to chemical pollution at the Mile 2 Jetty adding that the continued rainfall has worsened toxic leakage into the waterways, threatening marine life and public health.
In a Press Statement, the Head of Research, SEREC, Dr. Eugene Nweke, said the incident calls for immediate institutional reform of Nigeria’s barge operations.
According to him, independent findings showed that industrial chemicals stacked at a “shipping terminal and nearby bridge locations have been seeping into surrounding waters, with minimal visible regulatory response”.
He said the development was a wake-up call to strengthen the governance and administrative architecture of Nigeria’s barge operations adding that they are currently weakly coordinated across multiple agencies.
This, he said, has left gaps in safety enforcement, vessel standards, environmental control as well as emergency response.
In direct response to this and similar recurring incidents, SEREC strongly advocates the creation of a Directorate of Barge Operations and Logistics Services (DBOLS) within the Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy to be headed by a Director and operationally driven by a Deputy Director of Barge Operations and Logistics Services.
This specialized Directorate would, “Enforce mandatory registration, inspection and certification of all commercial barges and tugs operating along Nigerian inland and coastal routes.
“Institute safety, loading, and environmental standards for barge construction, cargo handling and waste management.
“Develop digital traffic monitoring systems (AIS/GPS) for barge movements to prevent congestion and accidents”, Nweke said
By: Nkpemenyie Mcdominic, Lagos
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“FCCPC Approves Sale Of Chivita|Hollandia To UAC Nigeria PLC 

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UAC of Nigeria PLC (UAC) has announced the completion of it’s in a press release on October 3, 2025, that it has completed the acquisition of Chivita|Hollandia (CHI Limited), following approval from the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC).
Revealing this in a Press Release, at the Weekend, UAC said the transaction, first disclosed on July 30, 2025, involved the transfer of ownership of CHI Limited, a leading Nigerian food and beverage company best known for its market-dominant Chivita juice and Hollandia dairy brands, to UAC.
Commenting on the development, the Managing Director, CHI Limited, Eelco Weber, expressed optimism in the company’s future under UAC’s ownership.
“We are pleased to have received regulatory approval for this transaction. We look forward to a smooth transition and to seeing Chivita|Hollandia thrive under UAC’s ownership,” he said.
Group Managing Director of UAC, Fola Aiyesimoju, highlighted the strategic importance of the acquisition saying “We are excited to officially welcome the Chivita|Hollandia team and brands into the UAC family, and we are eager to work together to build on their strong legacy and market leadership”.
The acquisition is expected to strengthen UAC’s position in Nigeria’s fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector, expanding its footprint into the growing juice and dairy markets.
UAC further said that the acquisition aligned with its growth agenda by adding two market-leading brands and a well-established distribution network to its por.
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PenCom Reintroduces Gratuity For Federal Civil Servants

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The National Pension Commission has said it has deployed a framework to restore gratuity for Federal Civil Service under the Contributory Pension Scheme.
Director-General of PenCom, Omolola Oloworaran, disclosed this at a Stakeholders’ Conference on the Workings of the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) for Employees and Pensioners of Federal Government Treasury-Funded Ministries, Departments and Agencies, in Abuja, last Thursday.
Represented by the Acting Commissioner, Technical, PenCom, Hon. Hafiz Kawu Ibrahim, Oloworaran said, “Working with the office of the Head of the Civil Service, a framework has been developed to restore gratuity benefits for federal workers under CPS, in line with Section 4(4) of the PRA 2014.”
The PenCom DG added that “PenCom has enhanced pensions for over 241,000 retirees, representing 80% of those under Programmed Withdrawal. Monthly pensions rose from N12.157 billion to N14.837 billion, effective June 2025.
“Also, since July 2025, no retiree waits to access their pensions. Payments are now immediate, aligned with monthly salary releases from the Federal Ministry of Finance”.
Also speaking, the Chairman of the National Salaries, Income and Wages Commission, Ekpo Nta, stated that the Commission would partner PenCom to examine the current rate of retirement benefits and recommend appropriate mechanisms for periodic reviews of retirement benefits.
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