Business
Eleme Youths Kick Against New Fertilizer Plant
Youths of Eleme Community in Eleme Local Government Area of Rivers State have protested against the proposed new fertilizer plant that will be built in the area by the Indorama Eleme Petrochemical Company Limited.
The youth who went on protest last Thursday said the new fertilizer plant which is a urea fertilizer plant to be built by the Indorama Company will have adverse effect on the environment and as such will not allow such harm to be done to the environment where they reside.
Speaking to Journalists during the protest, the Eleme Youth Council Chairman, Isaac Obe, said that the youth in Eleme will not fold their hands and watch the harm the Indorama group wants to cause to the environment as they will oppose such intention.
He said that the Urea fertilizer plant is not friendly to the environment and maintained that the company must undertake a wider consultation with relevant bodies and if given a clean bill of health, they can proceed to build such new fertilizer plant.
According to the youth chairman, “an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) must be carried out on this issue and the report will now tell if such plant can be built or not and without that report, we will oppose the building of such plant”.
Meanwhile, the Chairman of Eleme Local Government Council, Mr Oji Ngofa has said that the council will not allow anything that will damage or bring an environmental harm to the people of the area and urged the Indorama company to undertake wider consultation.
The council chairman said that his council will oppose the plan to set up the fertilizer plant, if the EIA report is not favourable.
It would be recalled that Indorama Group has secured a loan of $800 million to build what it describes as the largest fertilizer plant in the whole of Africa.
Corlins Walter
Business
Wealth Creation: GCPBS Convenes Strategic Investment Workshop In PH
Banking/ Finance
Ripple Survey Reveals Appetite for Digital Assets
Cornerstone of Financial Services
A survey of more than 1 000 global finance leaders undertaken by digital payment network Ripple shows that 72% of respondents believe they need to offer a digital asset solution to remain competitive.
According to Ripple, leaders from the banking, fintech, corporate and asset management sector have made it clear that the “digital asset revolution is happening now”.
“Digital assets are quickly becoming a cornerstone of financial services, underpinned by progressive regulation, growing interest from Tier-1 banks, a steady consumer shift from banks to fintech providers, and booming stablecoin adoption,” Ripple says.
The survey was conducted in early 2026 and the findings released in March.
Stablecoin Boon or Bane?
Ripple has experienced significant success in the stablecoin sector since launching its Ripple USD (RLUSD) stablecoin in 2024.
With a market cap of $1.56 billion, it is considered a major regulated player in the market.
No doubt the platform was pleased to learn through its own survey that financial leaders were most bullish about stablecoins.
Roughly three-quarters of respondents believed they could boost cash-flow efficiency and unlock trapped working capital.
Ripple noted that finance leaders were thinking about stablecoins as more than “just a new way to execute payments”; instead, they viewed them as effective tools for treasury management.
In March 2026, Ripple began testing a new trade finance model built around RLUSD in a bid to increase the speed of cross-border payments.
The pilot initiative, developed alongside supply chain finance company Unloq [https://unloq.com], is running on the XRP Ledger inside a testing framework developed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore.
The Asian city-state is one of the platform’s biggest growth markets.
The idea behind the project is to see whether stablecoin-based settlement can streamline trade finance, too often hampered by reliance on intermediaries and slow reconciliation.
The only potential drawback is that if the initiative takes off, the Ripple to USD price could be negatively affected.
Ripple has always championed its native XRP token as a bridge asset, the “middleman” in the process of a financial institution turning dollars in the US into pounds in the UK, for example.
Ripple converts dollars into XRP and then back into pounds.
If RLUSD can do exactly the same thing, questions will be asked about XRP’s relevance.
That is a bridge Ripple will have to cross if it gets to that point.
Tokenisation Partners
Another interesting finding from Ripple’s survey is that most banks and asset managers are seeking tokenisation partners to help execute their strategies.
Some 89% of respondents said digital asset storage and custody were top priority. “Token servicing/lifecycle management also ranks highly for banks at 82%, while asset managers place greater emphasis on primary distribution at 80%,” Ripple found.
The survey also revealed that just more than half of fintechs and financial institutions want an infrastructure provider that can offer a “one-stop-shop solution”. This rose to 71% among corporate financial leaders.
Ripple attributes this to institutions and firms wanting uncomplicated, cohesive systems.
Infrastructure Rules
In its final analysis, Ripple says companies across the board are looking for partners and solutions that are “secure, compliant, battle-tested and that enable growth and execution”.
“The message is clear: infrastructure decisions made today will shape competitive positioning tomorrow.”
No surprise that this is precisely where Ripple is placing much of its focus.
