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NNPC Drives Down Cost of Producing Crude Oil per Barrel to $20

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has brought down the cost of producing a barrel of crude oil to $20, even as it now targets producing the black gold at $15 per barrel.

NNPC Group Managing Director, Dr. Maikanti Baru, who disclosed this Monday in Abuja during the NNPC Day at the ongoing Technology and Innovation Expo 2018, attributed the feat to the impact of science, technology and efficient work processes, saying the mileage would enable more revenue generation to the Federal Government.

The Expo 2018 has the theme: Fast Tracking Sustainable Development of Nigeria Through Science and Technology in Abuja.

Represented by the Chief Operating Officer (COO), Gas and Power, Engr. Saidu Mohammed, the GMD noted that the NNPC had been innovative and efficient in its various operations to drive down the cost of production of crude oil and gas.

Dr. Baru said the NNPC was not only participating in the Science Fair but was also in full support of the ideals behind the event, stressing that science and technology is the bedrock of the Oil and Gas Industry.

The GMD stated that the corporation had succeeded in domesticating engineering, procurement, construction and most of the major activities of the Oil and Gas Industry, adding that heading to London to prepare mere tender documents for engineering, procurement and construction belonged to the distant past.

“Today we have fully domesticated the engineering, procurement and construction aspect of the Oil and Gas Industry and we are working hand-in-hand with the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) to get Nigerians who are willing to invest and innovative to propel this country going forward to go into the ventures of fabrication where we spend the big chunk of the money in the industry. In other words, we have gone far to domesticate procurement,” Dr. Baru stated.

He explained that today, there were fabrications going on in the areas of valves, line pipes, stressing that Nigeria has also gone into fabrication of vessels.

Dr. Baru disclosed that NNPC would continue to support all sorts of innovations in the upstream, midstream and downstream sector.

Commenting on the Ajaokuta-Kaduna and Kano pipeline project, popularly referred to as AKK pipeline project, the GMD stated that the pipelines of the project were fully domesticated in line with the local content policy of the Federal Government, saying for the other areas of services required, Nigerians would do all the pre-commissioning and commissioning services of the project.

On the refinery revamp, the GMD disclosed that already the NNPC was training some Nigerians that would be fully engaged in the refineries revamp, stressing that tremendous amount of jobs and services that would be required would all be provided by Nigerians.

The GMD stated that the NNPC was committed to promotion of efficient consumption of energy in the mold of biofuels, adding that already the corporation has signed four Memoranda of Understanding (MoU) with different State Governments and investors to actualize the introduction of more environmentally friendly fuel.

Lies are not part of the virtues of a Governor – Dakuku Peterside.

Director General of the Nigerian Maritime and Safety Agency, Dakuku Peterside, has come hard on the Rivers State Governor, Ezebunwo Nyesom Wike, and accused the governor of relying on propaganda and lies to achieve political points.

In a series of tweets, the NIMASA boss said that the Governor is distorting facts by his accusation that he did not carry out any project for his constituency during his reign as Commissioner for Works during the Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi’s administration.

The Special Assistant to the Governor on Media, Simeon Nwakaudu, had on Monday written a widely circulated piece titled “Dakuku’s Comedy And Lack Of Conscience” where he accused the DG of not constructing the road that led to his own town.

However, the DG explained that by the time they left office, the road was already at 70 percent competition and required just two more bridges to be completed.

The tweets read: “Gov Wike’s penchant for lies may destroy him because rather than complete the road Wike has embarked on “lies, distortion of facts and politicization of a major project like the Ogoni-Andoni-Opobo/Nkoro Road.

” Governor Wike’s claim that while I served as Commissioner of Works during the @ChibuikeAmaechi administration, I couldn’t construct a road to my LGA is nothing but a mere act to extort facts from reality.

” Wike functions with indignity and constantly romancing with half-truths to deceive Rivers people who are daily seeing through his lies.
Going down the memory lane, I can briefly narrate how the road came into being and determined efforts by the Amaechi-led administration to see to the completion of the road.

“I served as comm4works at a time one of the pillars of the admin’ was infrastructural development. Dr. Odili’s admin’ through the instrumentality of then Deputy Gov, Sir Toby, initiated the Ogoni-Andoni-Opobo unity road, a total of 37km road with 10 bridges & several culverts.

“Unfortunately, the administration was winding up so could only do two bridges and got the road to Iwoama Asarama achieving 26% of total job scope.

” This is the point we met the road. At the insistence of the Amanyanabo of Opobo and the people of Nkoro, we did a new alignment to Nkoro, taking it to Kalaibiama and from there to Opobo town, thus introducing the Nkoro-Kalaibiama-Opobo town alignment of 11.5km & 4 nos bridges.

“With the change in alignment, the Unity road became a 44.09km as against 37.7km awarded by the Odili admin’ in 2005. In all 6 bridges were completed under my watch & 2 bridges (No9&10) were at 70%&50% completion respectively at the end of the Amaechi’s administration in 2015.

“We started driving to Nkoro town and I drove down to Kalaibiama town in Opobo to campaign in 2015.

” This is the true situation of things which every Rivers man know, especially those from Andoni and Opobo. Similarly, those from Ikuru town could drive home, I did that with the then Deputy Governor, Engr Tele Ikuru many times.

” It is unfortunate that Governor Wike has neglected the completion of this important road with only two bridges to go, one on the Andoni axis and the other, on the Opobo axis.
Suffice it to add that the abutment and beams of both bridges were ready before we left government. By our estimates, we needed less than N7bn naira to complete both axes of the road as at May 2015.

“I am proud to be an Opobo son, an Ijaw son and a Rivers son and that whenever I have the opportunity, I have always and will always add value to the developmental aspiration of my people and humanity.

” For some time now Wike has laboured hard enough without result to convince Rivers people that he is making effort to develop infrastructure and particularly play a role in the completion of Ogoni -Andoni-Opobo unity road.

” His effort can at best be described as pouring water on the back of a duck as Rivers people know him very well for who he is.
The only crime Andoni-Opobo/Nkoro people committed is that they have a son who ran for governor of Rivers state. This is the only reason why Governor Wike has completely removed them from the development equation as he has done to all communities in Rivers state.
Wike instead of spending multiple billions on propaganda can spend a fraction of that in the development of the state.

“I have restrained myself from joining issues with Governor Wike for obvious reasons; when you see anybody dance naked in the marketplace you don’t need to convince onlookers that he has gone mad.
I am particularly ashamed that a man who by hook or crook found himself in the office of governor should be decent enough to keep the dignity of the office. Lies are not part of the virtues of the office of a governor”

Is this possible in Africa? Over 500 Canadian doctors protest raises, say they’re being paid too much (yes, too much)

In Canada, more than 500 doctors and residents, as well as over 150 medical students, have signed a public letter protesting their own pay raises.

“We, Quebec doctors who believe in a strong public system, oppose the recent salary increases negotiated by our medical federations,” the letter says.

The group say they are offended that they would receive raises when nurses and patients are struggling.

“These increases are all the more shocking because our nurses, clerks and other professionals face very difficult working conditions, while our patients live with the lack of access to required services because of the drastic cuts in recent years and the centralization of power in the Ministry of Health,” reads the letter, which was published February 25.

“The only thing that seems to be immune to the cuts is our remuneration,” the letter says.

Canada has a public health system which provides “universal coverage for medically necessary health care services provided on the basis of need, rather than the ability to pay,” the government’s website says.

The 213 general practitioners, 184 specialists, 149 resident medical doctors and 162 medical students want the money used for their raises to be returned to the system instead.

“We believe that there is a way to redistribute the resources of the Quebec health system to promote the health of the population and meet the needs of patients without pushing workers to the end,” the letter says.

“We, Quebec doctors, are asking that the salary increases granted to physicians be canceled and that the resources of the system be better distributed for the good of the health care workers and to provide health services worthy to the people of Quebec.”

A physician in Canada is paid $260,924 ($339,000 Canadian) for clinical services by the government’s Ministry of Health per year on average, according to a report from the Canadian Institute for Health Information published in September 2017. On average, a family physician is paid $211,717 ($275,000 Canadian) for clinical services and a surgical specialist is paid $354,915 ($461,000 Canadian), according to the same report.

This is total gross pay, however, and does not take into account overhead each doctor pays to operate, as the Canadian Institute for Health Information is careful to point out.

In May 2016, one physician publicly broke down the cost of running his family practice, and though he brought in $231,033 ($300,000 Canadian), he was left with $136,906 ($177,876 Canadian) after subtracting his business expenses — but before taxes and employment benefits are taken out.

The cost of medical school in Canada is subsidized by provincial governments, according to The Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada. The cost varies depending on whether a student is a Canadian citizen, permanent resident or foreign student and the particular school. For Canadian citizens or permanent residents, tuition for the first year of medical school ranges from $2567 ($3,334 Canadian) to $20,064 ($26,056 Canadian), according to The Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada’s website.

The same group, the Médecins Québécois pour le Régime Public (MQRP), that published the aforementioned public letter, also published a letter on February 17 opposing $500 million worth of pay increases for specialist doctors. The group called the pay increase “indecent.”

And on February 1, the MQRP published a letterdenouncing working conditions of nurses. “The nurses are exhausted by a heavy workload. They argue that the chronic lack of staff and the fatigue caused by repeated overtime, sometimes mandatory, for lack of replacement of the team, have an impact on the safety of patient care,” the letter says.

China bans George Orwell’s Animal Farm.

The Chinese government has banned George Orwell’s dystopian satirical novella Animal Farmand the letter ‘N’ in a wide-ranging online censorship crackdown.

Experts believe the increased levels of suppression – which come just days after the Chinese Communist Party announced presidential term limits would be abolished – are a sign Xi Jinping hopes to become a dictator for life.

The China Digital Times, a California-based site covering China, reports a list of terms excised from Chinese websites by government censors includes the letter ‘N’, Orwell’s novels Animal Farm and 1984, and the phrase ‘Xi Zedong’.

The latter is a combination of President Xi and former chairman Mao Zedong’s names.

Search terms blocked on Sino Weibo, a microblogging site which is China’s equivalent of Twitter, include “disagree”, “personality cult”, “lifelong”, “immortality”, “emigrate”, and “shameless”.

It was not immediately obvious why the ostensibly harmless letter ‘N’ had been banned, but some speculated it may either be being used or interpreted as a sign of dissent.

The move to lift limits on the length of time leaders can stay in post has been met with global condemnation and a widespread backlash in China since it was announced on Sunday on the eve of an annual political congress in Beijing.

The proposed amendments to China’s constitution are expected to be rubber-stamped by the country’s parliament, the National People’s Congress, which begins its annual meeting on Sunday.

China has a stringent policy of internet censorship because authorities view foreign websites and social media as a threat to national security.

This censorship is fortified by the Great Firewall of China – a term which refers to the combined force of technological and legislative measures which tightly control the internet on the mainland.

Facebook, Twitter and YouTube have long been blocked in the country and even Winnie the Pooh recently found himself subject to China’s latest internet crackdown.

In July, references to the cartoon bear on Sina Weibo were removed after his image was compared to President Xi.

Exclusive: Rector Captain Elechi Amadi Polytechnic, Port Harcourt, Dr Sam Kalagbor speaks to TPCN on his administration’s progress so far

The Rector of the Port Harcourt Polytechnic, Dr Sam Kalagbor, spoke to Theportcitynews.com correspondent , John Diidi, in an exclusive interview on Tuesday, about his administration’s progress so far, after the successful completion of the 2nd edition of the Rector’s Cup, on Monday, 5th march 2018.

Enjoy…

TPCN: Good afternoon sir, congratulations on the successful completion of the 2018 Rectors Cup of the Captain Elechi Amadi, Polytechnic. What’s your view about the competition?

Rector: “The football competition among both male and female, is intended primarily to keep them busy, in terms of extra curricular activities. We also use it to promote sporting activities in the polytechnic, and to select teams for the PUGA and other games in the polytechnic sector.

TPCN: This is your second year, since your school became a polytechnic. What has been the achievement of your administration so far?.

Rector: “Well, We have attained Polytechnic status since 2006, the name of the institution was basically changed by the his Excellency, the Governor of Rivers State, Barrister Nyesom Wike, to reflect the name Polytechnic. In terms of academics, we have been able to introduce four new HND programs.

“Currently we are preparing for the presentation of about 20 programs to the National Board of Technical Education, for resources inspection and accreditation.

“In terms of academic structure, we have been able to streamline the academic structure in consonance with NPD standards, in respect of polytechnic systems in Nigeria.

“We have also been able to provide furniture for our students. We have been able to renovate some of the dilapidated structures on campus, and provide equipment and other facilities, both our library, our studios and workshop.

“It might also interest you to know that, for the first time, we’ve gone online.

“Results are pasted online, and application forms for those who want to gain admission to the institution are also done online. Payment of fees, registration of courses, so we have transited from the analogue manual system of conducting our administrative activities to the online system.

“There are other things we have done. We have also been able to provide a development master plan for the institution, which will guide both academic and physical development of the institution.

“As part of TETFUND requirement, for purposes of getting the intervention funds, this institution has never had academic brief, we’ve been able to do that.

“Time will fail us to talk about everything, but by the grace of God we have achieved quite enough, and will continue to do that.

“You would recall that over the period, particularly since I resumed office as the Rector of the institution, we have an uninterrupted academic calendar, all using my skill and relationship as an administrator.

TPCN: How has the support of the State Government towards the institution been so far, since the administration of Governor Nyesom Wike?

Rector: “The state government has been very interested in the growth and development of the Captain Elechi Amadi Polytechnic. You would recall that for over 15 years, before the assumption of office of the Governor, Chief Barrister Nyesom Wike, we have been yearning for a change of name to reflect the polytechnic status.

“In 2016, precisely on the 4th of July, the name of the Institution was changed to Port Harcourt Polytechnic and recently the name of the institution was also changed to Captain Elechi Amadi Polytechnic. Those are indications that the state Government is interested in the growth and development of the Polytechnic.

“But beyond that, the state Governor has approved and released the sum of #200m to the polytechnic for the purposes of accreditation and cross inspection of our courses for 2018.

“Preparations are at an advance stage, to ensure that we present this courses to NBTE for accesment, and we believe that we would succeed.

“Beyond that, it also important to place on record that for the first time, the state Government appropriated about #500m for tertiary institutions in the state, including Captain Elechi Amadi Polytechnic for purposes of infrastructural development.

“Those are indications, for now to show the level of support we have received and are likely to receive from the state Government.

TPCN: Lastly, in the aspect of infrastructural development, what is the plan of your administration to reflect the current state of a Polytechnic. Because now you have more students coming in, you need more classes, more libraries, and laboratories. So what’s the plan?

Rector: “We already have a ten years development plan, of how we want to development the institution for the next ten years. We believe that we would kick start it, so that successive administrations will follow the development plan in order to enhance the infrastructural and constructional of the institution.

TPCN: Thank you for your time sir.

Rector: God bless you.

The UPTH corpses Crisis: Hospital says it will take measures in two months time.

Management of University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital has said that the hospital will take drastic measures at decongesting the over 800 corpses abandoned in the hospital’s morgue within a stipulated time.

Speaking to a TPCN correspondent, the Public Relations Officer of the teaching hospital, Mr. Kem, said that the press statement by the Chief Medical Director of the hospital on Monday is solely to sensitize and inform the public and those involved into taking action.

He said that some of the corpses have been domiciled at the hospital for four years with no one coming to claim them.

Mr. Kem, said that it is obvious that some of the corpses might be victims of hit and run, those of mad persons who died on the streets and those of criminals brought by the police or of unknown persons.

He, however, maintained that some families abandoned some of their dead relatives due to financial constraint but maintained that the decongestion policy of the hospital will be in their favour as they will not be mandated to pay for the services.

He said that the hospital will carry out mass burial of the corpses if families fail to claim their dead relatives within the stipulated time frame of two months.

Mr. Kem also said that the hospital is taking adequate measures to prevent a future occurrence.

He expressed optimism, saying that they are hopeful that families will comply within the stipulated timeframe.

World Bank grants PHEDC $.250million for energy bulbs

The World Bank says it has made available a grant of $250,000 to support the Port Harcourt Electricity Distribution Company, PHEDC, in her ongoing energy efficiency programme.

This was disclosed by the leader of the World Bank delegation to PHEDC, Mr. Jinping Zhao, during a visit to the Disco’s corporate headquarters in Moscow Road, Port Harcourt, to assess the progress of the pilot programme of the free energy bulb distribution.

Mr. Zhao also stated that the Federal Government had requested a credit facility of $500,000 to help in enhancing the network of power distribution companies, with a view to improving the power sector in the country.

The World Bank Representative further explained that before the credit facility could be given to any Disco in Nigeria, the World Bank would ascertain the status and requirements of such distribution company, and ensure that all requirements are met.

He said the World Bank would also partner the Disco in the area of technical support, by procuring, distributing and installing of energy bulbs in order to ensure improvement in its sustainability, and charged the management of PHED to train and re-train her personnel so as to encourage professionalism and better service delivery in the sector.

According to him, “On the first technical support, we are happy to inform you that the World Bank has given a small grant of $250,000 to support PHEDC in procuring and distributing of energy saving bulbs.

“Currently, the Federal Government of Nigeria has requested the World Bank to support Distribution Companies in the country with a facility of about $500,000 credit, but we are going to look at the status and requirements of each Disco,” Zhao said.

Earlier, the Acting Chief Executive Officer, PHED, Mr. Syed Taha, said the company was committed to ensuring sustainable power distribution system in its area of operation and appealed to the World Bank to support the company in carrying out its statutory responsibility to the customers.

Taha explained that the company had already commenced a community-based energy management program designed to assist communities in paying lower amount for their consumption, through the giving out of energy saving bulbs free of charge, adding that two communities in Bayelsa and Akwa Ibom, have already benefited from the bulb exchange programe.

He added that with the World Bank’s financial support, other communities in the Niger Delta would benefit from the energy efficiency programme of company.

“We believe energy efficiency is the way to go in other to reduce our losses and especially that of our customers.

“We have already started the pilot programme on how energy efficiency can benefit our customers and Nigeria as a whole,”Taha said

Safety Tips: How to manage electric shocks and ways to avoid them.

Important information

Electricity is important in our daily lives but when used improperly can
be very dangerous. Here is critical information on what to do in
the event of an electric shocks.

This is what you must do if you think someone has had an electric shock

  1. Approach them cautiously. It’s not always clear if someone has had an electric shock, so take care.
  2. Do NOT touch them with your hands, or feet, or any other part of your body, as this can put you in you in danger too.
  3. If they have been using electrical equipment, turn this off by unplugging the appliance, or switching off the electricity supply at the fuse box (consumer unit).
  4. If you cannot do this, push the item away from the victim using a length of wood, or something that is insulated. Never use something metal or anything that conducts electricity.
  5. After following the guidelines above, if the person is unconscious and you know first aid, treat them, and call for medical help.
  6. Even if someone says they are OK, they may still need medical help.

To stop electric shocks from happening

  1. Make sure that the electrical equipment you are using is in good condition. Be very careful if any wires are exposed.
  2. If the electrical equipment you are using begins to spark, or smell, or smoke, stop using it immediately.
  3. Make sure that only someone who is competent and qualified carries out electrical repairs or installations.
  4. If you see someone tampering with, or vandalizing electrical equipment, please let us know as soon as possible, as they are putting themselves and others in danger by their actions.

Sources: PHED policy brochure

774 million daily subsidy: All Progressives Congress (APC)-controlled Federal Government is covering  huge fraud in Nigeria – PDP

The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, has described the statement by the Group Managing Director of Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation, Dr. Mainkanti Bello, that the NNPC spends 774 million daily on fuel subsidy as a work of fiction.

PDP described the figures and called the purported proliferation of fuel stations used as an alibi for the claimed sudden jump in subsidy pay-out, as fictitious and cleverly fabricated to retire the already exposed stealing of trillions of Naira by the alleged cabal and APC interests in secret oil deals.

The PDP National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbondiyan, in a statement on Monday, said that it was duplicitous for the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to claim a sudden surge in fuel purchase expenses at the same time that the nation faced the harshest fuel shortage across the country with Nigerians paying exorbitantly for the product.

The PDP said, “The APC-led Presidency is drawing its deceptive proclivity and concealment of fraud too far; and to think that such is hatched in a sector that is under the direct supervision of President Muhammadu Buhari as Minister of Petroleum Affairs is most disheartening”.

The party wondered if this is the same presidency that claimed to have abolished fuel subsidy payments and even accused the immediate past administration of alleged corruption in its subsidy management.

“It is therefore strange that the same government can pull out unimaginable figures and claim it is the cost of subsidy enjoyed by Nigerians.”

The statement sought to know how come with such subsidy payments, Nigerians are still paying as high as 250 Naira to 300 Naira per liter on fuel in various parts of the country.

The PDP charged the Buhari-led presidency to come out clear with the truth on the administration of subsidy under its watch.

The statement said Nigerians need to know who in the presidency approved the spending of the said 774 million Naiar per day as fuel subsidy and who the benefiting companies are.

“Is the subsidy captured in any appropriation instrument of the National Assembly? What is the cost of landing imported fuel to the depots and at what exchange rate? Where are the details of the subsidy pay-out and the negotiating options and contracts?”

The statement further explained that in reeling out its figures, the Presidency has forgotten that Nigerians are still waiting for its explanations on the leaked memo showing alleged corrupt oil contract at the NNPC to the tune of nine trillion Naira (25 billion Dollars).

A GOOD JOB DOES NOT GIVE LIFE A MEANING

People would be a lot happier with the job they had if they were happier with themselves outside of their job. We have seen steady decline in job satisfaction, no matter if the employment rate is very high or very low, and even when most people have control over their time and their workload, they still report that they are unhappy in their jobs, according to the Harvard Business Review.

People do not like work because they don’t like their personal life. And the key to being happy at work is not so much finding the perfect career as it is finding yourself. The more self-knowledge you have the happier you will be. So stop looking at your job to solve your problems and instead look inside yourself. Make friends with yourself and with other people, and your job, whatever it is, might start looking better because you’re not asking so much from it.

If you are looking to your job for the meaning of life, forget it. Even people who feed starving children with the Peace Corps have crisis of meaning. (For example, What is the point of feeding one child when six will die?) The meaning of life is elusive and you must put in a lot of time and energy to find meaning in your life.

The job hunt is separate. The job is something you have to do to support yourself. Since you’re going to be doing it for a good portion of your life, you should look for some basics: People who respect you and your personal life. A company that is honest. A job that uses your skills and experience. A job that challenges your abilities without overwhelming you.

Work does not need to give your life a grand purpose in order to be a good experience. The most pleasurable work provides a perfect balance between too much and too little — in terms of both amount and difficulty, according to Diane Fassel, the chief executive of workplace survey firm Newmeasures and author of the book Working Ourselves to Death.

A career is like a mate. The relationship is limited by what you bring to the table. If you are not happy with yourself, you won’t be happy with the match-up. Here’s an analogy a friend once told me: You have to have the cake, and then the relationship is the icing. It doesn’t matter how good the icing is if there’s no cake to put it on. Who eats icing by itself? Gross.

The part about you is the most important. What do you do when you’re alone? How do you feel about yourself? What are your core values and do you lead your life according to them each day? Do you numb yourself with food or TV or alcohol? It’s very hard to be honest about this stuff. Yet amazingly, people spend lots of time on locating a job and a mate and very little time locating themselves.

“Employees should not demand that companies imbue their lives with meaning,” writes E.L. Kersten in the Harvard Business Review. “Employers and employees have something the other needs. One of the keys to a mutually beneficial relationship is a realistic understanding of what that something is.” A job is not a life.

In fact, online dating is not a bad model for evaluating a job. For one thing, you should never write that you want a mate to make you feel fulfilled — that’s asking much too much from a single person. Yet we complain all the time that our jobs are not fulfilling.

Dating services ask that you be as specific as possible in your desires. So try that for a job. Here’s what I would ask for in a job, and it’s the same thing I looked for in a spouse:

Fair

Fun

Mind-expanding

Interesting

Consistent with my values

Leaves space for the other parts of my life

And here’s another thing about those lists: You are probably going to have to be your list to get your list. That’s why interesting people are at interesting companies. So be who you want to be instead of looking for a mate or a company to make you who you wish you were

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