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The Silent Industrial Revolution - Politics - Nairaland

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The Silent Industrial Revolution by Holaneeyee: 10:19am On Sep 16, 2014
The Silent Industrial Revolution

By Yusuph Olaniyonu

In an interview published in the August 30, 2014 edition of some national newspapers, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, Governor of Ogun State, spoke about the danger that the growing army of unemployed youths pose to the country. The Governor should know. While superintending over a state like Ogun with 22 public and private tertiary institutions, and many more still under construction, Senator Amosun estimated that there must be about half a million unemployed graduates presently living in the state.

The natural follow-up question is what the Governor is doing in the area of job creation. While the Amosun administration has directly and indirectly created over 50,000 jobs through employment in the public service, helping small scale entrepreneurs with soft loans to develop, sponsoring skill acquisition programme for youths, empowering traders to gain access to cheap funds and creating opportunities in agriculture for young graduates, it has also pursued with vigour one of its five cardinal programmes, which is Increased Agricultural Production leading to Industrialisation.

In achieving the objective behind the industrialization programme, the Amosun administration deliberately set out to profit from the state’s contiguity to Lagos, the commercial capital of the country and the border it shares with Republic of Benin, which by inference made it a gateway to the over 300 million-population in the West African sub-region. The strategy therefore is to attract multi-national industries, both those already existing in the country but have expansion plans and those that are just coming into the country afresh. The state has abundant land resources, 16,432 square kilometers, available for industrial, commercial, agricultural and property development. This is a key factor that an investor will actually consider in deciding on a location for his new industry. More than that, the state government has equally liberalized the process of acquiring land, particularly for industrial, commercial and agricultural purposes.

Add this to the fact that though industries located in Ogun State have easy access to the air and sea ports in Lagos, the state also boasts of having 84 percent of the strategic Lagos-Ibadan Expressway which is a link between Lagos and the rest of Nigeria, located within its territory.

The numerous tertiary institutions in the state also provide a ready pool of skilled workers to industrialists. All these advantages have been harnessed by the Amosun Administration to create a bi-annual Investors’ Forum through which it shifts the focus of investors from across the world to investment potentials in the state and the benefits the state government offer.

In addition, the state government has invested heavily in upgrading the infrastructure in the state. The emerging road network in Ogun State is comparable to the ones in many developed countries. The security system is so good that it is reassuring that one’s investment is secured in this environment, despite the challenge that its multi-border nature ought to pose.

The result is that in the last three years, the state has become the industrial hub of Nigeria. The popular question in the investment community about Nigeria now is not ‘who is in Ogun State’ but ‘who is not in Ogun State’. With 47 multi-national industries having opened shop in the state in the last three years, Ogun State is now the industrial capital of Nigeria. According to Otunba Abimbola Ashiru, who handles the Commerce and Industry portfolio in the state, the new industries have altogether invested in excess of $8 billion in the state.

The new manufacturing plants that have commenced production in Ogun State belong to the biggest industrial concerns in the world. These include May & Baker, Lafarge Wapco, Nestle, Procter and Gamble, Dangote Cement, among others. In the next few weeks, ten new industries, including Olams and Apple & Pears, will also join the train, as they are set to commission their industries. In fact, in the last three years, President Goodluck Jonathan had visited Ogun State three times to commission big industries. Today, Ogun state is the cement capital of Africa. With an annual total of 13 million metric tons of cement produced by Lafarge Wapco and Dangote Cement from their plants located in the state, (same as the total national production figure for South Africa), the state can rightly claim that appellation. 

While commissioning the Procter & Gamble Industry in Agbara, the largest American investment in Nigeria outside the oil sector, President Jonathan declared Ogun State as the most industrialized state in the country. Also, while commissioning the WEMPCO Steel Company Limited in Ibafo, the President praised the Amosun administration for creating the enabling atmosphere for industries to be trooping into the state. He added that in the nearest future, there will not be a single person who is willing to work but cannot get a job in Ogun State.

The President’s testimony brings us back to the plan of the Amosun administration to systematically tackle the problem of unemployment among the youths, thereby laying a solid foundation for the socio-economic development of the state.       

Olaniyonu is Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Ogun state

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Re: The Silent Industrial Revolution by Jakpon: 10:29am On Sep 16, 2014
The urban renewal and industrial drive of the Governor Ibikunle Amosun administration has made Ogun to become the state with highest number Universities and Industries in Nigeria - TRUE

... But the Governor still has to do more. Most of the inner-city roads in the industrial areas of Sango-Otta needs attention
Re: The Silent Industrial Revolution by jideomowunmi(f): 10:35am On Sep 16, 2014
Lemme guess...trying to appease d gods of olabisi onabanjo university undecided undecided...d issues of unemployment has been going on since like forever...he shud stop trying to paint d picture of a 'saviours' role indirectly.....he shud tell his fellow governors instead of issuing a press release statement....shior...
Re: The Silent Industrial Revolution by Jakpon: 10:49am On Sep 16, 2014
jideomowunmi: Lemme guess...trying to appease d gods of olabisi onabanjo university undecided undecided....
Where were you when Otunba Gbenga Daniels astronomicallly increased the tutition fee of Olabisi Onabanjo University?

Governor Ibikunle Amosun reduced it and all what you ungrateful juveniles could do was to go on meaningless protest.

Ema lo gbe iwe yin o
Re: The Silent Industrial Revolution by BlackTechnology: 10:52am On Sep 16, 2014
jideomowunmi: Lemme guess...trying to appease d gods of olabisi onabanjo university undecided undecided...d issues of unemployment has been going on since like forever...he shud stop trying to paint d picture of a 'saviours' role indirectly.....he shud tell his fellow governors instead of issuing a press release statement....shior...

Make a positive contribution just like him below

Jakpon: The urban renewal and industrial drive of the Governor Ibikunle Amosun administration has made Ogun to become the state with highest number Universities and Industries in Nigeria - TRUE
... But the Governor still has to do more. Most of the inner-city roads in the industrial areas of Sango-Otta needs attention
Re: The Silent Industrial Revolution by BlackTechnology: 10:54am On Sep 16, 2014
Jakpon: Where were you when Otunba Gbenga Daniels astronomicallly increased the tutition fee of Olabisi Onabanjo University?

Governor Ibikunle Amosun reduced it and all what you ungrateful juveniles could do was to go on meaningless protest.

Ema lo gbe iwe yin o


I like your contribution

At least the governor will know areas to concentrate on

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