Business
Gov Wants Intervention Funds For Cash Crop Farmers
Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu of Ondo State last Friday appealed to Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to extend intervention funds to cash crop farmers.
Akeredolu made the call at the inauguration of Bambi Farms, a factory that produces vegetable oil from palm kernel, at Okeigbo in Odigbo/Okeigbo Local Government Area of the state.
The governor said that if the Federal Government could extend the funds to the sub-sector and fund it well, Nigeria would earn reasonable foreign exchange.
Akeredolu pledged that the state government would support the factory.
According to him, the factory will create jobs for the unemployed and serve as available market for farmers in the area, hereby generating income.
” We want to look at usefulness of this industry; It needs the support of all because it would grow in no time.
“From records available to me, it can produce 120 tonnes of soya beans and palm kernel oil per day.”
He added that his administration had revived the moribund Okitipupa Oil Mill, saying that the private sector would be engaged in its sustenance.
Earlier, the Chairman of Bambi Farms, Mr Ade Ayoola, said that he planned to increase the capacity of the factory.
” Our dream is big and it is only God that can achieve it for us.
“In the next few years, we hope to have filled the land with oil mills, refinery; we are targetting 1,000 workers per shift.
“We cannot achieve this without the support of government because our desire is to change the narrative.”
He, therefore, thanked Mr Akin Olootu, the Special Adviser on Agriculture and Agri-Business to the governor, for his assistance.
Also speaking, the royal father of the day, Ooni of Ife, Oba Enitan Ogunwusi, thanked the state government for its immense support toward the realisation of the factory.
He applauded the chairman for locating the factory in his home town and appealed to other indigenes of the state to always remember their source for development.
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Business
Nigeria Risks Talents Exodus In Oil And Gas Sector – PENGASSAN
The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) says Nigeria risks massive brain drain in the oil and gas sector due to poor remuneration.
Mr Festus Osifo, President of PENGASSAN, said this while briefing newsmen at the end of the National Executive Council (NEC) meeting of the union on Thursday in Abuja.
He said the sector was facing challenges arising from Naira devaluation and inflation, noting that, oil and gas skills remained globally competitive.
“A drilling engineer in Nigeria does the same job as one in the U.S. or Abu Dhabi,” he said.
Osifo said the union must take steps to bridge the wage gap to prevent members from leaving the country for better opportunities abroad.
“If we don’t act, the brain drain seen in other sectors will be child’s play,” he said.
He said PENGASSAN had recorded significant gains through collective bargaining across oil and gas branches.
“We signed numerous agreements across government agencies, IOCs, service and marketing sectors,” he said.
He said the agreements brought relief to members facing rising costs of living, adding that, the association’s duty is to protect members’ jobs and enhance their pay.
Osifo urged companies delaying salary reviews and those foot-dragging as a result of the prevailing economic realities, to do the needful.
He said the industry employed some of the nation’s best talents, making competitive pay critical to retaining skilled workers.
“This industry recruits the best. Companies must provide the best conditions,” he said.
On insecurity, Osifo urged government to take decisive action against terrorism and kidnappings across the country.
“We are tired of condemnations. government must expose sponsors and protect citizens,” he said.
He urged government at all levels to prioritise tackling insecurity through better funding and equipment for security agencies.
Osifo said PENGASSAN supported calls for state police to improve local security response, adding that decentralising policing will protect citizens better than rhetoric.
He also said economic indicators meant little, if food prices remained high and farmers could not return to farms due to insecurity.
“Nigerians want to see food on the table, not macroeconomic figures,” he said.
He urged government to coordinate fiscal and monetary policies to ensure economic gains reach households.
“Translate macro results to food on the table,” he said.
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