Business
Don Tasks FG On Economic Diversification Programme
A university teacher, Prof. Timothy Nubi, has urged the Federal Government to strengthen its economic diversification programme in the country.
Nubi, who is the Dean, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, University of Lagos, gave the advice while speaking with newsmen in Lagos.
He said once the diversification programme was strengthened, more activities should suffice in the economic sector.
The programme envisages that by 2020, Nigeria would have made significant progress toward achieving structural economic change with a more diversified and inclusive economy.
Overall, the plan is expected to deliver on five key broad outcomes, namely: a stable macroeconomic environment, agricultural transformation and food security, sufficiency in energy (power and petroleum products), improved transportation infrastructure and industrialization focusing on small and medium scale enterprises.
He added that an improved diversification programme would help explore the potentials in other sectors and enhance productivity particularly now that the economy “is in recession”.
The don said the diversification programme would also enable the country to revitalise other sectors in view of the fact that the potentialities in the sector alone could be used to grow and sustain the economy if well harnessed.
According to him, over-dependence on a particular sector is not healthy for a developing country such as Nigeria.
He stated that the country had depended on the oil sector for too long.
Nubi said the neglect of other sectors was the cause of the country’s economic problem.
“Nigeria’s over-dependence on oil revenues for most of its economic needs and budgets makes the country highly susceptible to oil price volatility.
“It is time the country looked into other sectors of the economy to discover, explore and develop the potentialities therein to enhance economic situation of the country.
“The oil sector contributes about 40 per cent to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
“So, let the government pump money into other sectors to ensure they produce finished products that will be exported to augment the revenue from the oil sector,’’ he said.
He said the role of the oil sector in accelerating Nigeria’s development should be to provide the needed financial resources for strategic diversification investments.
“Though, the dividend of the diversification will be felt by the economy in the long-run, but let the government specify its position to make significant investments,’’ he added.
Nubi further urged the government to invest in construction sector by creating more construction activities, saying that construction work engages the services of greater category of people in the economy.
“When a construction work is going on, the brick-layers, artisans, drivers, dry cleaners and even food sellers (restaurants) will be gainfully engaged,’’ he said.
He also identified the agriculture, manufacturing and textile sectors as some of the sectors that could be overhauled.
Business
Nigeria’s Gold, Other Solid Minerals Being Stolen – NEC
The National Economic Council has expanded the mandate of its Ad-hoc Committee on Crude Oil Theft Prevention and Control to cover illegal mining.
This is just as the council raised the alarm that the nation’s solid minerals, including gold, are being mined and stolen.
Imo State Governor, Hope Uzodimma, who chairs the committee, disclosed this while briefing State House correspondents after the 153rd NEC meeting chaired by Vice President Kashim Shettima at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, yesterday.
Uzodimma said the expanded mandate is part of the government’s efforts to curb resource theft and increase revenue from Nigeria’s solid minerals sector.
“The National Economic Council Ad-hoc Committee on Crude Oil Theft Prevention and Control, which I chair, presented an interim report today to the Council.
“NEC received our report with satisfaction and expanded our Terms of Reference to now also take interest in solid minerals, because our solid minerals are being mined and stolen and not adding to national revenue,” said Uzodma.
He noted that the expanded role would enable the committee to coordinate with the Ministry of Solid Minerals Development and other federal and subnational institutions to combat widespread illegal gold mining and other forms of mineral smuggling that have deprived the country of much-needed foreign exchange.
“Going forward, our committee, working with other government agencies, will look at how to ensure that the revenue of the country arising from solid minerals like gold and other forms of solid minerals are not allowed to be stolen,” the governor added.
NEC’s Ad-hoc Committee on Crude Oil Theft Prevention and Control was first established under former President Muhammadu Buhari in August 2022.
It was reconstituted under President Bola Tinubu in December 2023 with Uzodinma as chairman.
The committee was initially mandated to address the challenge of crude oil theft and pipeline vandalism.
Its creation followed rising oil theft that had crippled national production and forced international oil companies to shut down key pipelines.
At the time, oil production had crashed to around 700,000–800,000 barrels per day, far below Nigeria’s OPEC quota, costing the government billions of dollars in lost export revenue.
Uzodimma explained that through what he called a “collaborative approach” involving regulators, operators, and the security forces, the committee had helped raise daily crude oil production to over 1.7 million barrels per day in the past 22 months.
The governor stated, “Before May 29, 2023, when President Bola Tinubu was sworn in, our crude oil production was around 700,000 to 800,000 barrels a day.
“Working with stakeholders, the regulators, operators in the industry, and the Navy, we were able to involve all the governors of crude oil-producing states and raise different security organisations.
“You would agree with me that as I speak, daily production is now in excess of 1.7 million barrels a day, and cases of pipeline vandalism and vandalisation of oil assets have also been on the decline.”
The council, he said, was satisfied with the progress and decided to deploy the same model of intergovernmental coordination, private-sector partnership, and multi-agency surveillance to the mining sector, plagued by resource theft.
“We are determined to ensure that crude oil production and gas are properly preserved for the benefit of our citizens.
“Now, with this new directive, we will also protect our gold and solid mineral assets,” Uzodinma added.
Nigeria’s illegal mining economy, particularly in gold, lithium, and other high-value minerals, has grown into a multibillion-naira shadow industry.
According to data from the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, the country loses an estimated $9bn annually to illegal mineral extraction and smuggling.
The Federal Government has linked several unlicensed mining operations to armed groups in the North-West and North-Central regions, where gold has become a source of illicit financing for bandits.
A 2023 NEITI audit also showed that over 80 per cent of mining activities in Nigeria were conducted informally, without licenses or environmental oversight.
In September 2024, the Ministry of Solid Minerals Development revoked over 900 dormant licences and announced plans for a national gold reserve policy. But enforcement remains difficult, with weak surveillance, limited manpower, and overlapping regulatory mandates.
According to Uzodimma, the expanded mandate aims to integrate the fight against illegal mining into the broader national resource protection framework previously used in the oil sector.
“We have done well,” he claimed, adding, “Among other things, we recommended that NNPC, working with security agencies and their consultants, should strengthen security in all the creeks and extend coverage to offshore regions. That will help in curtailing and supervising illegal entries and exits of vessels into our export terminals. This same spirit will now guide our solid minerals sector.”
The committee is expected to submit its first progress report on the expanded mandate at the next NEC meeting in November.
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