Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? - Politics (18) - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Politics › Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? (61834 Views)
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| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by udeh3(m): 11:12pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
Tell me, what made the Niger Deltians lazy? How many persons are been paid compensations? For your information, Niger Deltians are strong and couragous people, despite the fact that they've been neglected for decades, they're still in charge of 'Real Agriculture...' Findout about the biggest oil palm's Farms in Nigeria and their locations. Even with the environmental decade, we still Farm, Fish... The best water melon and cocumba presently in Nigeria are cultivated in the Niger Delta. The Niger Deltians are also leading in terms of Rubber Plantations, Vegetables, etc... We are never lazy like the others... How many Niger Deltians Owns Oil blocks? Between the Niger Deltians and the others, who depends on the oil most? Take the statistics of those that even depends on the oil, they are even the northerners and the westerners. They're all there in Chevron, Shell, NNPC and the rest of them. Checkout the IGR of all the states, apart from Lagos, Rivers, Delta and Akwa Ibom are still the highest Point of correction, Niger Delta is not under-developed according to the trend... Niger Delta is the most developed region in Nigeria We are not lazy, we are hardworking, strong and couragous people... We are Niger Deltian! |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by uckennety(m): 11:21pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
TonyeBarcanista:Am frm emuoha am ibo idiot |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 11:27pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
kayfra:i believe that lagos can scale tru this crisis.every ingredient necessary is their and for all their faults,the have great leaders. lagos is a great asset to the southwest region.kano can scale tru by virtue of its unassailable position north but just bearly. ss states like akwa ibiom er great tourist sites the can achieve things but without big and small scale industrial clusters,the need to tighten up their belts.the south east states of anambra(onitsha ,nnewi etc) and abia(aba,obingwa,osisioma etc)has this adaptability also possessed by lagos. The would do just fine.Am based east and being igbo,my assessment might be partial but am open to valid corrections |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by udeh3(m): 11:30pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
ELGREF:Please findout very well... We are here to educate ourselves. Lagos will be the most affected state if oil drops. All the Hear Offices of these Oil Companies are located in Lagos, It's just the rigs that are located in the ND. Lagos IGR is massively from those oil firms and It will amaze you to note that no head offices of these oil companies are located in the ND |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 11:35pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
jstbeinhonest:structurally yes.it isn't open to debate but industrially NO |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 11:43pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
This should be retitled, " Now that crude oil is becoming worthless, what is next for Nigeria?" |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 11:50pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
omonnakoda:your statement is an injustice to ebony state.Quite true that every one hustles according to his own methods but brother their is a way to such methods.for instance,the yeroba man identified the essence of the internet to retailing hence,the advent of jumia & co. the igbo man realised his large and unspecialised maekets in aba and nnewi would one day fade off hence,the mall and specialised clusters revolution in those states -that my bro is effective hustling and that is what others should do. |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 11:50pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
omonnakoda:your statement is an injustice to ebony state.Quite true that every one hustles according to his own methods but brother their is a way to such methods.for instance,the yeroba man identified the essence of the internet to retailing hence,the advent of jumia & co. the igbo man realised his large and unspecialised maekets in aba and nnewi would one day fade off hence,the mall and specialised clusters revolution in those states -that my bro is effective hustling . |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by fizzy94(m): 11:50pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
MrAnalyst:I think you got his perspective wrong too. He's trying to say that: Before the discovery of oil, kano was fending for itself through agriculture, look up the massive groundnut pyramid that was set up there in the 60s and find out. |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by zuchyblink(m): 11:57pm On Dec 30, 2015 |
as a south easterner i have come to realise that south east wouldnt have much problem even oil sales completely seizes reason been that even at now Enugu and Ebonyi receive one of the lowest allocations yet both states fall within the first 10 states with the highest IGR as of 2014 report.. lets go this way going state by state: EBONYI:This state has a very large expanse of land for rice production....infact almost all LGAs in Ebonyi produce rice and there is now a machine for polishing,destoning and bagging of the rice. Also Ebonyi is richly blessed with solid minerals and precious stones and those who know Ebonyi well see quarry sites crushing the stones which many states come to buy which also generates one of the highest revenue also Ebonyi houses NKALAGU CEMENT factory which is the largest of its size in west Africa and by the time IBETO starts production u will know how things will turn out. ENUGU:Enugu is undoubtedly the most developed and best eastern city...its coal can be employed to generate electricity for the region...too it can also serve as tourist attraction for foreigners ANAMBRA:Anambra hosts the largest market in West Africa(in onitsha)..the business activity going on there and the number of industries is sufficient to turn things around NNEWI with its innoson motors now manufactures indigenous cars of which most of the refuse dump lorries used in Enugu metropolis are from innoson and several other distrubutions. ABIA:Of course the almighty ABA wi its SMEs are already dominating west African markets with its aba made shoes and bags and the region will be uplifted IMO:Imo been the seat of academics in southeast takes the lead as the Nigerian state with the highest number of federal civil servants..it also has gas reserves and deposits just like Abia and Anambra shalom! |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by MrAnalyst: 12:03am On Dec 31, 2015 |
fizzy94:Hmm. Groudnut pyramids again. Okay. Noted. |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by kayfra: 12:08am On Dec 31, 2015 |
eduj:Abia and Anambra have the population and industry to scale through for sure. Enugu will be shaky but definitely not as exposed as Osun. Lol. |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 12:12am On Dec 31, 2015 |
abduljabbar4:actually the southeastern states had come together to build facilities such as the imo airport which was promptly taken over by the millitary govt.if we are to provide this basic things for ourselves on what grounds then, does the federal govt stand on to ask those states to pay taxes? |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by intergral(m): 12:13am On Dec 31, 2015 |
CSTR2:are you realy upto tune? go back and check the contributions of the northeast to nigeria's economy.... even better than north central..... people from the Northeast are never lazy!!! |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by HXoritz(m): 12:14am On Dec 31, 2015 |
Let me sound this as a correction to who it may concern...as a NDeltan i have come to an understanding that the so-called oil revenue is not evenly ditributed amongst the NDeltans rather some states who have little or no source of revenue are being funded by the revenues derived from the oils in niger delta...moreover ND is still also rich in Farming(garri,akpo,egusi,flour e.t.c) fishing, tourist site and some big industries like petrochemical industry, water company and some other small scale businesses if some together can keep an average ND growing...it may surprise you to know that revenues can even be generated from other sources and we will never die of hunger...Lockup ND still get level till the end of the world...I greet all the Wafarians in the house...Wafcity is where I emerge...and now thats whats up |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 12:19am On Dec 31, 2015 |
omonnakoda:i assume you know that does gentlemen u referred to as an igbo mans ancestor where mostly from-oh wait !-delta north(niger delta)whom you claim are not igbo and accused us of grabbing their land?. i hope u knw that gowon not ojukwu broke the aburi accord? bro if ignorance was a crime,ur punishment would be capital |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 12:55am On Dec 31, 2015 |
kayfra:let me clear something here .The term aba is being abused.what most of you guys call aba are actually the better part of four lga in abia state namely aba north,aba south,osisioma and obingwa not to mention the ukwa axis where most of abia state oil wells are.their are mainly an indigenous industrial cluster at osisioma which specialise in metal work fabrication for tankers and industrial pipes,roofing sheets and aluminium products,plastics and rubber products in addition to other household accessories like soaps ,sandals etc .the most notable that i know of is udeagbara and son holdings along with tonimas which specialises in aviation and automobile fluids.osisioma also happens to host one of africas biggest mall in the ABA shopping mall and spa .obingwa host mostly multinationals like GZI,glass force,glass industries,aba malting plant etc with a wide array of locals like 7up.aba north and aba south holds its fair share such as PZ and the nigerian breweries.The also host two of west africas biggest markets in ariaria and ahia ohuru.their are smaller markets such as cemetry too.The also host one of west africas biggest collection of tailors and leather works workers.Lemme stop here The point is that even though the financial times called Ibadan "one of new cities to watch "Aba and its environs are already cities being watched and notated.By the way i would take it that you didnt mean what u said about education |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by mikolo80: 1:03am On Dec 31, 2015 |
Psylas:but did they give a duck about themselves (their man was there for 5 years plus) |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by mikolo80: 1:03am On Dec 31, 2015 |
Psylas:the water is polluted o |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 1:04am On Dec 31, 2015 |
Flyoruboy:iiste.org/Journals/index.php/.../8090 ogun in no way has naijas largest limestone deposit |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by mikolo80: 1:05am On Dec 31, 2015 |
CSTR2:tit for tat tinz |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by mikolo80: 1:08am On Dec 31, 2015 |
Tochaigh:more like sex slave |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Panter215: 1:17am On Dec 31, 2015 |
Bryan37:Tourism. With the type of coastline and the swamps, I see no reason why this region should lack after oil. The current problem is lack of vision from their leaders. |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Adminisher: 1:38am On Dec 31, 2015 |
udeh3:I agree with most of this post. Niger Deltans are the most creative people I know . The problem is Goodluck Jonathan who have the region a bad name through corruption explosion. |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by frehage: 2:03am On Dec 31, 2015 |
amtalkin:How do you want them to step up their game? What steps should they take? |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Nobody: 2:19am On Dec 31, 2015 |
A good question |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by allcomage: 4:57am On Dec 31, 2015 |
Litmus:TEARS SWELL IN MY EYES.THIS IS 100% CORRECT.I JUST CAME BACK FROM THE TWO COUNTRIES RECENTLY.IT IS MAGICAL TO SEE HOW THESE COUNTRIES HAVE BEEN TRANSFORMED WITHIN A DECADE DUE TO DEDICATED LEADERS AND LESS CORRUPTION.THE WORST THING ABOUT NIGERIA IS THAT WE HAVE NOT EVEN SCRATCHED THE SURFACE.THERE IS NO HOPE THE WAY THINGS ARE GOING. |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by BlackOnassis(m): 5:58am On Dec 31, 2015 |
TonyeBarcanista:don't mind them jare. some ppl just love gloating. |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by timilinda(f): 6:18am On Dec 31, 2015 |
Tochaigh:I'm nt one that types much on nairaland, bt this truth u just mentioned makes me just want to say a big "THANK YOU". I just hope that if/when oil prices boom again, d ND will be allowed full resource control then. |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by jascon1(m): 6:29am On Dec 31, 2015*. Modified: 6:48am On Dec 31, 2015 |
asorocker:very biased analysis. when I was 10, I was told my grandpa sold his goods in the Onitsha market. I visited back in 2009 and when I compared pictures of Onitsha in the 70ies to images I saw, I wept. Onitsha could have been China of Nigeria, rather China is imported to Onitsha. You called it a brainbox? What i saw was a box, then where is the brain? A federal university situated in Awka could have sprung development, but no. No tourist will spend his cash to visit Anambra. Investors are mainly indigenous people, and their manufacturing factories and head offices are in Lagos or China. So where is the brain? The market has no roads, no roofs nor standard built shops. What I saw was cubicles and litters all over the places. Don't cry for ND. Cry for yourself. ND has rubber which was one of our major exports, the oil will be in much need till the world ends, they have agriculture, they are on the coastline, they got fishing and a sea port. Way ahead of Anambra state. ND doesn't survive on oil, instead the oil pollutes their survival. The money don't get to the people, they hustle their way. Ever asked where the supplies Onitsha brings from China go? Before u cough, try dredging your river and try some development. Money to sustain Abuja? You did ask that? Is a capital and need I say more? Don't cry for Lagos, cos u depend on it to survive. Cry for yourself. Don't cry for kano, and other northern states cos before the oil, the north was lucrative. They hold your belly. They are very commercial in their crafts. My sorry is fory Igbo brothers who have built their empires away from home. Your investments have enriched others and raped your sustenance in the east. If u can't see it, then hear it |
| Re: Now That Crude Is Gradually Becoming Worthless, What Next For Niger Delta? by Ilovemystate: 6:39am On Dec 31, 2015 |
jascon1:pictures they say speaks loader than words. Onitsha markets
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