NEWS
Nigeria Wants To Build Nuclear Power Plants
President Olusegun Obasanjo has established the Nigeria Atomic Energy Commission (NAEC) in order to acquire civilian nuclear technology for peaceful applications. Hopefully Nigeria will pursue an aggressive program of building commercial fission plants to produce electricity throughout the country. President Obasanjo has stated that Nigeria is committed to the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty. There is only one nuclear power plant on the entire continent of Africa and it is located in South Africa.
AAEA has been promoting fission power for African countries, particularly for Nigeria. We have been discussing the feasibility of establishing the equivalent of a Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) in different African countries to facilitate fission plant commercialization. The announcement by President Obasanjo is a good sign that the Nigerian government is prepared to engage fission power.
CNN.com: Gasoline pipeline blast kills up to 200 in Nigeria
Nigeria and the Republic of Congo Working For Peace In Darfur
Two African leaders are helping negotiate a peace pact to end the violent conflict in Sudan's Darfur region: 1) Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has hosted the long talks on Darfur and 2) Republic of Congo President Denis Sassou-Nguesso and current head of the 53-nation African Union.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan wants Sudan to grant visas to a U.N. assessment team so it can visit Darfur and start planning for a U.N. peacekeeping force to take over from the African Union troops. Sudan has refused to allow the team to visit. The U.S. supports the transition for peace keeping from the African Union (7,000 monitors) to a United Nations peace keeping unit. It could take six or more months for the U.N. to get a peace keeping force placed in the region.
An agreement has been signed between the government and the main rebel group, the Sudan Liberation Army; two smaller rebel groups refused to sign.
Estimates range from about 200,000 to 300,000 people being killed and an additional 2 million left homeless in a genocidal war.
President Bush Meets With President Obasnajo
Nigerian Democracy Discussed
http://chippla.blogspot.com/2006/03/as-nigerian-democracy-dies.html
Nigeria is the fifth largest oil exporter to the U.S. after:
1) Mexico, 2) Venezuela, 3) Canada and 4) Saudi Arabia.
Nearly half of Nigeria's oil exports go to the U.S.
Nigeria Oil Site Becomes Battleground - - Wash Times
China Buys South African Owned Oil Field in Nigeria
January 9, 2006 - - The Chinese state-controlled energy company Cnooc Ltd is buying a 45% stake in an offshore oil field in Nigeria for $2.27 billion from the South African Petroleum Company. Cnooc tried to purchase the American firm Unocal Corp. in 2005.
The deal would give Cnooc partial control over a field that could produce as much as 175,000 barrels a day by 2008, which would make it larger than any single field the company operates today in China. If that production comes to fruition, Cnooc's 45 percent stake would boost by about one-fifth the company's total production of about 427,414 barrels a day.
The Nigerian oil field has estimated proven reserves of more than 620 million barrels of oil and about 3.75 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Cnooc would be able to record at least 45 percent of those reserves as its own.
China imports about 40 percent of its crude oil, with more than half coming from countries in the Middle East. China needs oil and feels too dependent on Middle East oil. China National Petroleum is the single largest partner in a consortium that is extracting oil with the government of Sudan, a regime that has been accused of perpetrating genocide in its western region of Darfur.
Blood Flows With Oil in Poor Nigerian Villages--NY Times
Airliner Crash Grounds Fleet
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has grounded Sosoliso Airlines in the wake of a Dec 10, 2005 crash that killed 108 people. One person survived the crash. The Sosoliso McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32 crashed Saturday while landing at Port Harcourt. Sosoliso Airlines was established in 1994 and began domestic flights to six cities in 2000. There are no reports of previous crashes involving the airline.
Obasanjo also grounded a second Nigerian airline, Chanchangi -- Nigeria's largest -- apparently because of a recent report on Nigeria's ailing airline industry citing the airline as unsafe.
A Nigerian Success Story As Chronicled In The Washington Post
By Krissah Williams
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, December 26, 2005; D01
Emmanuel O. Irono started his business by cleaning houses -- vacuuming, washing windows and scrubbing alongside two employees -- even though he had an MBA and training as a budget analyst.
"I stored the smelly buckets in my apartment," he said. "I suffered in silence and stayed focused."
Fourteen years later, Motir Services Inc. has 500 employees, $12 million a year in revenue and three divisions that provide cleaning, construction and medical staffing to government agencies.
The Nigerian immigrant's company is representative of many in the Washington area, a hub for minority-owned firms, including many owned by immigrants. Most are one-person enterprises with no paid employees and modest revenue. Some grow and prosper, especially if, like Irono's, they thrive on government contracts.
On a recent morning, the president of Motir Services was running late for an appointment. He had a good excuse, his assistant said: The previous day, Irono was in Nigeria working with a children's foundation he supports.
Despite the nine-hour flight, Irono showed no signs of jet lag when he arrived at the Capitol Heights industrial park that serves as his company's command center.
He settled into his office, which reflects his life and business. A file cabinet behind his desk is decorated with a picture of Irono and District Mayor Anthony A. Williams (D) wearing hard hats at the construction site of the Anacostia Gateway, where Irono's company won part of a major construction contract. Beside the photo is a scratched wooden mask that was hand-carved by an African artisan and discovered by Irono among his late grandmother's belongings in Nigeria.
Irono came to the United States as a foreign exchange student and planned to return to Nigeria after college to work for his father's construction company. But when both of his parents died within two years, he decided against returning and began paying his tuition by working as a school janitor.
After graduating, Irono took a job working as a budget analyst for a federal contractor. But he wanted to start his own firm, and he bought out a small janitorial service company's supplies for $10,000. He renamed the company Motir, an amalgam of his parents' initials.
Now his office has a black leather couch and a slick silver digital business-card holder that flashes the words "Emmanuel Irono, Motir Services, President."
Irono, 42, traces the company's growth to a $100,000 contract he won during Mayor Marion Barry's administration to clean the D.C. National Guard Armory. That eventually led to cleaning, maintenance and staffing contracts with the National Institutes of Health, the Army Corps of Engineers, the Washington Convention Center and the District of Columbia Public School system.
Irono won those contracts, in part, because he qualifies for District government contracts that are set aside for local small, minority and disadvantaged businesses. Motir is also a Small Business Administration 8(a) company, which allows him to apply for contracts that the federal government has targeted at businesses owned by minorities.
Next year, Motir will focus on expanding its construction and medical staffing divisions. This summer, he won a $14 million joint contract with Forrester Construction Co. to build the Anacostia Gateway office building, an anchor of the redevelopment project in Southeast Washington.
Still, Irono said he keeps in mind the smelly buckets and mops upon which Motir was founded.
"There was a bumpy road in the start," he said. "It was very humbling for me."
© 2005 The Washington Post Company