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AfDB, AIMS To Transform Industry-Led Research In Africa

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The African Development Bank (AfDB) and the African Institute of Mathematics and Sciences (AIMS) are now in a landmark relationship to build a research institution in the league of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
The bank said this in a statement by its Communications Officer, Mr Emeka Anuforo, on Wednesday in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire.
He said former President Olusegun Obasanjo led a delegation of the High-Level Advisory Council of AIMS to a meeting with the bank in Abidjan.
At the meeting, a 10-year partnership proposal was made to build mathematical and scientific capacity in Africa, strengthen industry linkages and create a competitive industrial and innovative space.
He said that Obasanjo was the Patron of the council for AIMS’ Next Einstein Initiative, while former Ghanaian President, Mr John Kufuor was Vice-Chair.
Obasanjo described the visit as a huge opportunity for the bank and aims to forge an extraordinary partnership to support African countries in the expansion of mathematical science education, training and research.
He commended the AfDB President, Dr Akinwumi Adesina, for championing Africa’s development and assured that the proposed partnership was critical for the continent’s future.
“If we are going to make substantial progress in industrialisation within the next decades the continent must produce well motivated and well trained young innovators,” he said.
Adesina emphasised the need for Africa to develop with pride and pledged the bank’s commitment to build a partnership with AIMS that would allow the continent to compete with the rest of the world.
“We must recognize that the world is moving fast. Consequently, how can Africa position itself in a rapidly changing world so that it does not become disadvantaged?”
“We are a knowledge-driven bank and think our partnership will help us build quantum knowledge for growth.
“We are excited about the focus on young people and we also like the regional integration dimension of the work that AIMS does.”
Adesina also promised to convene a meeting of donors to discuss AIMS’ funding request, anf the need for greater participation by the private sector.
Of particulay interest are key industries that benefit from the institution’s research and work in science, technology and innovation.
He described the involvement of industry-led research as the driving force of the Silicon Valley and made a case for venture capital and private equity funds to support research outputs from the continent.
Neil Turok, founder of AIMS, described the bank as a leading institution in Africa, adding that the institute was excited about the prospect of a partnership.
He said AIMS’ research and industry-led capacity development aligned with the bank’s High 5s, including its regional integration targets.
“I was trained to believe in Africa. I can tell you AIMS is the most exciting and dynamic science and educational institution in the world and what has driven the institution are the young students from Africa.
“What we are doing at AIMS is to transform Africa by giving opportunities to the youth.
“AIMS is African-owned, African-run, African-operated, but it hosts the best scientists in the world to give African young scientists the stuff they need.
“Our goal is to be the MIT for Africa. We know the impact MIT has on U.S. industry and we want to create the same for Africa, but we struggle with sustainable funding.
“We want to work with AfDB to develop sustainable funding,” he said.
The aim of the partnership programme is to ensure that each of the 54 African countries has an additional 100-250 world-class specialists in mathematical sciences by 2020 to lead research and innovation in various fields.
The cost of the partnership is projected at 54.6 million dollars.

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$5bn Train 7 Project 80% Complete -NCDMB 

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The Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) has said the Nigeria Liquified Natural Gas (NLNG) Train 7 project has reached 80 percent completion.
The Board stated this in a statement released by its Corporate Communications Directorate to newsmen, recently, during the inauguration of 140 trainees for the Train 7 Project.
The trainees had undergone the Nigerian Content Human Capacity Development (NC-HCD) programme it organised in partnership with the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Limited in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.
The Tide gathered that the training programme was an intensive three-month Advanced NC-HCD Programme for the US$5 billion NLNG Train 7 Project on Bonny Island, Rivers State.
The trainees, The Tide further learnt are graduates in different academic disciplines who have completed a 12-month Basic Training Programme in diverse oil-and-gas-industry-related skill sets and are now set for an on-the-job phase which includes active hands-on participation in operational areas such as Turn Around Maintenance (TAM), Commissioning, and Desktop Programmes.
The Corporate Communications Directorate of the NCDMB told The Tide that in November 2024, a set of 331 trainees under Batch A of the NLNG T7 HCD Training Programme began capacity development in facility management, engineering, Information and Communication Technology (ICT), Health Safety and Environment (HSE), Quality Assurance and Quality Control, as well as welding and fabrication.
According to the Board, additional 77 trainees under Batch B of the same Training Programme began capacity development in data analytics and supply chain management among several other fields relevant to the operations of the oil and gas industry.
While addressing the trainees and trainers who were drawn from the Oil and Gas Trainers Association of Nigeria (OGTAN), Management Personnel of the NCDMB and NLNG, the Executive Secretary of NCDMB, Engr Felix Omatsola Ogbe, said the Advanced NC-HCD training is more than a milestone.
“The NC-HCD training programme is an expression of the collective commitment of the Board and the NLNG to nurturing world-class Nigerian professionals who will shape the future of our oil and gas industry.
“The Board has remained steadfast in its conviction that Human Capital Development is a critical investment in the sustainability and competitiveness of Nigeria’s oil and gas value chain”, the NCDMB boss said.
Ariwera Ibibo-Howells, Yenagoa
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Ageing Aviation Workforce: Minister Urges Youth Grooming For Replacement 

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Worried by the ageing workforce in the country’s air transport sector, the minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, has urged the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) and other stakeholders in the sector to groom youths.
He said the situation has resulted in widened knowledge gaps and operational challenges.
As a globally regulated sector, he said it was important that stakeholders put measures in place to attract the talents required to move the industry forward.
Keyamo, therefore, called on stakeholders in the industry to be deliberate in identifying, encouraging, nurturing and harvesting young talents to ensure a sustainable supply of manpower to the aviation sector.
Director of Public Affairs and Consumer Protection of the FAAN, Mrs Obiageli Orah, in a release made available to aviation correspondents, noted that the Minister deemed it necessary to attract the right quality of human resources required to move the sector forward.
“As a globally regulated sector, it is important that stakeholders put measures in place to continually attract the right quality and quantity of human resources required to move the industry forward.
“It is important to note that organising training programmes are avenues through which we can breed, nurture, and harvest such human resources.
“One of the critical challenges facing the industry is the ageing and retiring workforce, leading to widened knowledge gaps and operational issues.
“Training programmes, I believe, is among other things designed to make aviation appealing to the younger generation, while encouraging them to develop interest in taking up a career in the industry”, the statement stated.
Meanwhile, some aviation stakeholders have expressed concerns of countless young Nigerians who seek to make their mark in aviation, tourism, and the wider transport ecosystem but often face steep barriers to entry.
According to them, lack of access, limited mentorship, financial constraints, skill mismatches, and systemic gaps, among others, have posed some constraints to them.
Corlins Walter
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Ogbe Gets Appo Board Appointment 

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The Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), Engr Felix Omatsola Ogbe, has been appointed into the Executive Board of the African Petroleum Producers’ Organisation (APPO).
The Tide gathered that by the appointment, Ogbe becomes Nigeria’s representative on the Board of the 18-member continental body, which has its headquarters at Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo.
Ogbe was picked for this role by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, who doubles as the Chairman of the NCDMB Governing Council.
The notice of the Executive Secretary’s appointment was conveyed in a congratulatory letter signed by the Director of Support Services, APPO, Mrs. Philomena Ikoko, on behalf of the Secretary-General of the organisation, Dr. Omar Farouk Ibrahim.
She applauded the NCDMB boss on the confidence reposed in him by the Minister, expressing her belief that he would make immense contributions to the development of the African oil and gas industry.
Mrs Ikoko stated that Ogbe was joining the Executive Board of APPO at a challenging time for the oil and gas industry, especially in Africa.
“Your appointment is a major call to duty for Nigeria and the continent. The secretariat will give you the support you will need to make a success of your assignment”, she said.
According to a statement by the Directorate of Corporate Communications and Zonal Coordination, the NCDMB played key roles in catalysing the operations of APPO and the development of local content in Africa.
The statement added that the board was providing institutional support and mentorship to several oil producing countries in their formulation of local content policies.
“The NCDMB initiated the African Local Content Roundtable (ALCR) and hosted the inaugural edition in Yenagoa, Bayelsa state, in June 2021, and the event was attended by key officials of APPO and other oil industry players.
“The idea for the Africa Energy Bank (AEB) was mooted by NCDMB’s officials at the event, as one of the strategies that would accelerate the growth of the African oil and gas industry and deepen local content.
“The Board also collaborated with APPO to host subsequent editions of the African Local Content Roundtable (ALCR), including the 2023 edition held at Abuja.
“The Africa Energy Bank, which APPO is setting up at Abuja, is aimed at pooling financial resources needed to fund big-ticket oil and gas projects across the continent, and bridge funding challenges currently impeding the development of the sector”, the NCDMB’S said.
Meanwhile, the APPO Secretary-General has said the Africa Energy Bank seeks to fund oil and gas projects across economies in Africa and help to plug critical financing gaps that exist through the continent’s over reliance on financiers from the West.
He added that each APPO member country is expected to raise $83 million with an objective of raising $5 billion capital for the establishment of the Bank.
The Tide learnt that recently Nigeria, Angola and Ghana have contributed their share capital for the African Energy Bank, which represents 44 percent of the trio’s contributions to the minimum capital that is required from oil producing countries in the continent.
It would be recalled that at the Nigerian Oil and Gas Opportunity Fair (NOGOF) held recently, the NCDMB’s Scribe confirmed that the agency was part of key institutions that pooled resources for the formation of the Africa Energy Bank.
Ogbe announced that the Bank will open for business before the end of the 2nd quarter of this year, 2025, expressing hope that it will create more funding availability for local oil and gas projects and companies.
Similarly, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, had stated at the Offshore Technology Conference that Afrexim Bank has already raised $19billion for the take-off of the Africa Energy Bank.
According to him, $14 billion out of the funds represents the bank’s financial exposure on African oil and gas projects, with the additional $5 billion as take-off capital.
Ariwera Ibibo-Howells, Yenagoa
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