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Strategies For Empowerment Of Unemployed Graduates

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It is regrettable that after ten years of uninterrupted democracy and during which Nigeria earned enormous billions of dollars from oil export, the statistics issued from national and international agencies confirm that unemployment amongst youth and graduates in particular has been alarmingly on the increase. The present state of youth unemployment has given rise to increased crimes that now threaten the peace, socio-economic and political stability of the nation. Terrorist crimes are increasing across Nigeria.

The VEEP strategy was created specifically for Africa by the USA Project Team to assist “DUTY” – Determined-Unemployed Talented Youth with the USA-SBA model of entrepreneurship empowerment which focuses on training, mentoring, coaching, funding with SBDC’s – Small Business Development Centres and ICT VBI/4SM Virtual Business Incubator. The African Revolutionary Entrepreneurship Empowerment Project is specially designed for the socio-economic and cultural values of Nigerian youth to ensure maximisation of the talents of the unemployed.

The USA-SBA model Project Team will be led by a global leader in entrepreneurship. It will be presented at an International Forum to be attended by distinguished USA Entrepreneurship and Funding Consultants.

As an interim measure, the USA founder of the African Entrepreneurship Empowerment Institute, has also called for the Federal Government to urgently strategise with the National and States Assemblies, to enact laws introducing the payment of unemployment benefits in Nigeria.

The Innovative USA entrepreneurship empowerment system will feature the establishment of SBDCs – Small Business Development Centres across the country for beneficiaries of the special project. A total of over 50,000 DUTY members will be mobilised – motivated for talent maximisation from the 774 local government areas in the first phase.

The current state of high youth and graduate unemployment in Africa at large and in Nigeria in particular is indeed a symptomatic Time Bomb that must be strategically detonated before it derails our nascent democracy; To stem the tide of rising frustrations amongst over 25 million disgruntled and distressed youth and unemployed graduates, Nigerian government at all levels must declare urgently a state of emergency in youth and graduate unemployment with scientific programmes that will have immediate impact on the lives of millions of “Duty” Determined­Unemployed-Talented Youth. The tragedy that the nation must confront before the time bomb explodes is to rescue our youth from joblessness, as they now offer themselves in desperation, to ‘Drug Barons, Political godfathers and godmothers as thugs,  robbers and assassins, international traffickers in human beings for sex trade in several foreign countries. The latest sector that is recruiting these youth for socio-economic and political terrorism is the ‘kidnapl industry. The frustration of the millions of unemployed graduates and talented youth can be unleashed on the society in unpatriotic counter productive activities.

The rise in youth unemployment has a strong correlation to rising crimes, corruption and political, socio-economic terrorism in all segments of the society by youth.

In the Punch Editorial, Sunday May 2, P.10, 2010 the former Labour Minister, Adetokunbo Kayode, in February 2009, remarked that 40 million Nigerians were unemployed. Quoting World Bank figurel he said “80 per cent of the country/s graduates were unemployable lacking skills and basic-entrepreneurial abilities; The Guardian of November 3, 2009, P. 67 stated, “Bail out the poor, not the fact cats.” World Bank – Unemployment of 13-25, 70 per cent million youth, urremployed.

The CBN Governor, Mallam Lamido Sanusi at a forum recently in Lagos stated that over 49 per cent of Nigerian youth was unemployed. The terrible scourge of youth and graduate unemployment in Nigeria was the theme of a 2009 National Unemployment Summit by Nigerian government and ILO. The World Bank Chief Economist in Nigeri,a Volker Trekhel, authored the report that revealed that 4.5 million enter the overstretched job market including 300,000 graduates. Much more disgusting was the reports’ projection that there would be 13.5 million unemployed youth by 2011 aged between 15 and 44.

The critical problem of youth and graduate unemployment in Nigeria has necessitated the establishment of various youth empowerment projects by the states and federal government agencies NDE; NAPEP; SMEDA, etc. The private sector has also intensified efforts to create employment generation programmes. The universities have also been advised to incorporate entrepreneurship courses in their curricula so as to equip the undergraduates with skills and knowledge to face the world in an increasingly competitive environment requiring ingenuity and self motivation for success.

The Nigerian situation is particularly pathetic because of the rising crime wave over the past ten years, now terribly exacerbated by the economic crisis in the industrial, agricultural and banking sectors.

The inspiration to establish the African unemployment project was from the impact of SMEs in the U.S.A. economy. Entrepreneurs and leaders globally are concerned about the massive socio-economic and political quagmire in Africa due to decades of corruption and underdevelopment. As a result, Nigeria, a unique country enormously endowed with human and natural resources, has become one of the richest oil exporting nations in the world but ironically one of the poorest and most underdeveloped and corrupt with decayed infrastructure. The tragedy of decades of massive corruption and underdevelopment is the deindustrialisation leading to staggering unemployment, especially of youth and graduates. Contemporary statistics report that the unemployed graduates population is estimated at about 20 million and youth as much (49.9%) youth – CBN Governor.

The USA-SBA Entrepreneurship Model has transformed the most powerful economy in the world into the centre of entrepreneurial capitalism and excellence. The most successful global models of innovative entrepreneurs have their roots in the countries and cities of the sprawling USA with support from both local, state and federal agencies. 60 per cent of the US economy is powered by the ubiquitous SBEs – Small Business Entrepreneurs. In USA, millions of innovations are nurtured by talented youth in high schools, colleges and universities and private sectors.

The innovation received tremendous support in cash and kind to drive their dreams from grants, attractive loans and from millions of US philanthropists, foundations, religious and academic organisations and SBA consultants and agencies in the 50 USA states. The USA slogan I can – yes you can is true of business and in politics. Any wonder, USA is fondly referred to as God’s own country?

The Reeps initiatives – the USA-SBA-model project is conceived for Africa as a Revolutionary Entrepreneurship Empowerment for productivity, socio-economic security. Nigerian youth, as the ex­militants in the Niger-Delta, continue to forge, intensely lament that there has been too much talk and little impactive action to alleviate their agonies. Why, the youths ask in consternation, have all the billions of naira announced spent by Federal and states’ agencies in poverty alleviation not yielded any appreciable impact? Instead the more billions are spent year in year out the increase in youth unemployment, crimes; sophisticated armed robbers, fraud, 419, and now kidnapping!

Fejokwu is the founder of USA-based African Entrepreneurship Empowerment Institute.

 

Larry Fejokwu

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Two Federal Agencies Enter Pack On Expansion, Sustainable Electricity In Niger Delta

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The Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Rural Electrification Agency (REA) to expand access to reliable and sustainable electricity across the Niger Delta region.
The agreement, signed at the headquarters of the REA in Abuja, was targeted at strengthening institutional collaboration and accelerating development in underserved communities in the region.
A statement by the Director, Corporate Affairs of the NDDC, Seledi Thompson-Wakama, said the pact underscores renewed efforts by the two federal interventionist agencies to deepen cooperation and fast-track infrastructure delivery.
Speaking at the signing ceremony, the Managing Director of the NDDC, Dr Samuel Ogbuku, described the MoU as a strategic step towards realising the Commission’s vision to “light up the Niger Delta” in line with national priorities on distributed energy expansion.
Ogbuku said the agreement represents a shared institutional responsibility to deliver reliable energy solutions that will enhance livelihoods, stimulate local economies and create broader opportunities across the nine Niger Delta states.
According to him, electricity remains a critical enabler of national development, supporting job creation, healthcare delivery, education and inclusive economic growth.
He noted that the collaboration would help unlock the economic potential of rural communities while advancing broader national development objectives.
The NDDC boss added that the Commission has consistently adopted partnership-driven approaches in executing projects in the region and is prepared to support the implementation of the MoU by leveraging its community presence and infrastructure development capacity.
He reaffirmed the Commission’s commitment to working closely with the REA to ensure the timely and effective execution of the agreement.
The NDDC delegation at the event included the Executive Director, Projects, Dr Victor Antai; Executive Director, Corporate Services, Otunba Ifedayo Abegunde; Director, Legal Services, Mr Victor Arenyeka; Director, Finance and Supply, Mrs Kunemofa Asu; and Director, Liaison Office, Abuja, Mrs Mary Nwaeke.
In his remarks, the Managing Director of the REA, Dr Abba Abubakar Aliyu, described the MoU as a natural collaboration between two agencies with complementary mandates, reflecting a shared commitment to expanding access to sustainable electricity in rural communities.
Aliyu said the Niger Delta remains central to Nigeria’s economic fortunes and must be supported by infrastructure capable of driving productivity, enterprise and improved living standards, adding that the partnership signals readiness to deliver stable power to communities that have long awaited reliable electricity supply.
By: King Onunwor
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Why The AI Boom May Extend The Reign Of Natural Gas 

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Artificial intelligence is often viewed as a catalyst for electrification and subsequently decarbonization. Yet one of its most immediate effects may be the opposite of what many assume. The rapid buildout of AI infrastructure is increasing demand for reliable power, and that reality could strengthen the role of natural gas and other dispatchable energy sources for many years.
Investors focused on semiconductors and software valuations may be overlooking a key constraint. AI runs on electricity, and those electricity systems operate within physical and economic limits.
The energy sector has spent much of the past decade grappling with slow load growth. That is now changing, in a way that is reminiscent of the sharp rise in oil demand—and subsequently price—in the early 2000s.
Training large language models and operating advanced AI systems requires enormous computing resources. Hyperscale data centers are expanding rapidly, with developers requesting gigawatt-scale interconnections from utilities. In several regions, electricity demand forecasts have been revised upward after years of flat expectations.
This shift is significant because AI workloads create continuous, high-density demand rather than intermittent usage. Data centers cannot simply power down when the electricity supply becomes constrained. Reliability becomes paramount.
Wind and solar capacity continues to expand, but intermittent generation alone cannot meet the firm capacity needs of AI infrastructure without significant storage or backup generation.
Battery storage is improving, yet long-duration storage remains costly at scale. Nuclear projects face long development timelines and complex permitting hurdles. Transmission expansion also lags demand growth in many regions.
These constraints make dispatchable power sources critical. Natural gas plants can ramp quickly, operate continuously, and be deployed faster than many alternatives. As a result, gas-fired generation is increasingly viewed as a practical solution for supporting AI-driven load growth.
This does not undermine the role of renewables. In many markets, new renewable capacity is paired with gas generation to maintain grid stability. The key point is that AI-driven electrification is likely to increase fossil fuel usage in the near term.
Construction timelines favor gas-fired generation when demand rises quickly. Existing pipeline infrastructure reduces barriers to expansion. And for operators of data centers, reliability often outweighs ideological preferences. Downtime is simply too expensive.
Utilities are also revisiting resource plans as load forecasts rise. That shift may drive increased investment in transmission, grid modernization, and flexible generation assets.
The Decarbonization Story Is Complex
A common narrative holds that AI accelerates the transition away from fossil fuels because it increases electrification. The reality is more nuanced.
If electricity demand outpaces the buildout of low-carbon capacity, fossil generation may still increase in absolute terms even as renewables gain market share. Total emissions could rise, but the carbon intensity of the energy system may trend lower as cleaner sources make up a larger share of supply.
Ultimately, energy systems evolve based on engineering and economics, not just policy goals or market narratives.
Rising power demand could benefit utilities investing in transmission and generation capacity. Natural gas producers and midstream companies may see structural demand support from increased power-sector consumption. Equipment suppliers tied to grid reliability and gas turbines could also gain from the shift.
Longer term, advances in nuclear, storage, or efficiency may change the trajectory. For now, the immediate response to surging electricity demand is likely to rely on technologies that can be deployed quickly and reliably.
Artificial intelligence may reshape the economy in profound ways. One of the least appreciated consequences is that it may extend the relevance of natural gas as the world builds the energy backbone required to power the next generation of computing.
By: Robert Rapier
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Ogun To Join Oil-Producing States  ……..As NNPCL Kicks Off Commercial Oil Production At Eba

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Ogun State is set to join the comity of oil producing states in the country following the discovery and subsequent approval of commercial oil exploration activities in the Eba oil well, in Ogun Waterside Local Government Area of the state.
A technical team from the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has visited the area as preparations are in advanced stage for commencement of commercial drilling operations in the state.
The inspection followed President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s approval for commercial exploration, forming part of the federal government’s efforts to deploy the required technical capacity and infrastructure for production.
Officials of NNPCL carried out the exercise alongside representatives of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) and national security agencies to evaluate the site and confirm its readiness for drilling activities.
The delegation was led by Project Coordinator for Enserv, Hussein Aliyu, who headed the NNPCL Enserv technical team.
Other members included Wasiu Adeniyi, Onwugba Kelechi, Engr. Rabiu M. Audu, Ojonoka Braimah, Ahmad Usman, Akinbosola Oluwaseyi, Salisu Nuhu, James Amezhinim, Yusuf Abdul-Azeez, Amararu Isukul and Livinus J. Kigbu.
Speaking, Governor Dapo Abiodun, described the development as a landmark achievement for Ogun State, saying “the commencement of drilling at Eba would stimulate economic growth, create employment opportunities and attract increased federal presence to the state’s coastal communities.
Abiodun also expressed appreciation to President Tinubu for his support toward the development of frontier oil basins and the equitable spread of the nation’s energy resources.
Recall that geological reports had earlier confirmed the presence of hydrocarbons within the Ogun Waterside axis, leading to preliminary surveys and technical engagements by NNPCL.
The Ogun State Government also carried out an independent verification of the oil well’s coordinates, affirming the discovery is located within the state’s boundaries.
To secure the project, naval security personnel have been deployed to the site for over 18 months, with the support of the Ogun State Government, to protect the facility and its environs.
The Eba oil well is regarded as part of Nigeria’s strategic move to expand oil production beyond the Niger Delta region.
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