• Aliko Needs To Learn From Bart Nnaji – Independent Newspaper Nigeria

    Aliko needs to learn from bart nnaji independent newspaper nigeria - nigeria newspapers online
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    No patriotic Nigerian should be delighted at the grave challenges facing the 650,000 barrels per day Dangote Refinery in Lagos. The challenges make efficient opera­tions very difficult. Though Nigeria is a major oil exporter, the refinery inaugurated early last year is now compelled to import crude from Brazil. The Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) has accused it of producing substandard auto­motive gas oil (AGO), and, worse, of having no licence for operation.

    Frustrated at the turn of events, Aliko Dangote, founder and chair­man of the $19 billion industrial complex in Lekki comprising a re­finery, a petrochemical company and a fertilizer plant, has been reported to ask the Nigerian National Petro­leum Company Limited (NNPCL) to purchase the refinery so as to end the widely held belief that he wants a monopoly of the petroleum down­stream market in Nigeria.

    Dangote need not give up on the refinery. He should rather learn from Bart Nnaji, the erstwhile Minister of Power who waited for 20 years till February 26, 2024, to unveil the 188 megawatt Aba Independent Power Project, Abia State. If Nnaji could wait for two decades because of the obstacles by highly placed Federal Government officials between 2012 and 2015 to get the project on stream, Dangote, who has so far lost only one year, should brace up for more chal­lenges.

    Both the Aba Independent Power Project and the Dangote Refinery are what Jim Collins and Jerry I. Porras, two American globally renowned organizational leadership scholars, would describe as having big hairy audacious goals (BHAGs). A busi­ness with a BHAG is designed to make a dent in history, to paraphrase Steve Jobs, the late Apple co-founder and chairman. Considered unrealis­tic, if not an outrageous thought, at the beginning by most people, such a business frequently solves a prob­lem in a significant and innovative way to the applause and admiration of the same initial sceptics. This is what Jack Welch and his team at General Electric came to call in the 1990s stretch, a term that has since become famous in both the business literature and management schools worldwide.

    By the time Nnaji started the Aba project, there was no private sector involvement in the electric power sector in the country. Power was on the exclusive list. Not even state governments were permitted by the extant law to get involved in electric­ity generation, transmission, or dis­tribution. It was not until 2005 that the President Olusegun Obasanjo administration enacted the Elec­tric Power Sector Reform Act that ended Federal Government’s mo­nopoly. Still, Nnaji accepted the challenge from then-World Bank President James Wolfonsohn and then-Nigeria’s Minister of Finance Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala to build a gas-fired power plant in Aba to provide electricity to industries in the com­mercial city who were in desperate need of constant and quality power supply. The main challenge was not raising the funds from local and in­ternational sources or the bricks and mortars of building a power plant but upending the status quo in the power sector. The first mover disad­vantage can be paralyzing.

    The Dangote Refinery is a BHAG in its own right. By the time it was initiated, the biggest refinery in Ni­geria was the 150,000BPD New Port Harcourt Refinery, followed by the 125,000BPD Warri Refinery, and then the Kaduna 110BPD Refinery. The Old Port Harcourt Refinery, built in the 1960s, could process only 60,000 barrels per day. All are Federal Gov­ernment owned, and have for de­cades been in a mess due to official incompetence and corruption. Nige­rians keen on setting up refineries have always gone for modular ones, that is, small or mid-size refineries to produce a few petroleum products like petrol, aviation fuel, AGO, and low pour fuel oil, in contrast to the standard refineries owned by the Federal Government that can pro­duce a wide range of products and on a large scale. So, for Dangote to opt for a 650,000BPD refinery is truly au­dacious. It is a quintessential BHAG.

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    The refinery is creating employ­ment for thousands of Nigerian workers, suppliers, distributors, consultants and even street food vendors, in addition to generating money for the Federal Government and the Lagos State Government as well through tax revenue. Lands and properties around the location have been appreciating significantly in value. Therefore, it is in the public interest that the Dangote Refinery survives. The idea of selling it to the NNPCL should be perished immedi­ately because there is no assurance that it won’t go the way of the state-owned refineries.

    If Nnaji could endure all manner of things and still triumph, Dangote should be inspired by his example. In fact, all BHAGs face severe chal­lenges. In their famous book, Built to Last, Collins and Porras recall how the building of the wide-body 747 plane forced Boeing to downsize its workforce by 60%, among other challenges. Yet, it persevered, and Boeing 747 aircraft became a game changer in global aviation in every sense. There are many other exam­ples of grave challenges which were overcome by different businesses cit­ed in the book.

    In Nigeria, challenges in the path of BHAGs can be both ridiculous and personal, hurting the public good. At the combined 7th and 8th graduation of Alex Ekwueme Fed­eral University in Abakaliki, Ebo­nyi State, last June, Nnaji told the stunned audience how in an attempt to get at him the government aban­doned the 760KV Supergrid network the government approved when he was the power minister. The project was meant to provide energy secu­rity, apart from creating another transmission network for a nation of 200m and radically boosting power availability throughout our large na­tion. The country is today still stuck with the sole transmission network which is old, poorly maintained, fragile, and collapses once it is load­ed with up to 5,000MW, resulting in nationwide blackouts.

    Once Nnaji left office, the govern­ment announced the cancellation of the management contract between the Transmission Company of Nige­ria (TCN) and Manitoba Hydro Pow­er of Canada on suspicion that Nnaji owned this firm that was set up by the Canadian province of Manitoba in 1961 when he was only five years old. A person was dispatched to Manitoba to provide documentary evidence to nail him! The Presiden­tial Task Force on Power, of which Nnaji was the founding chairman, was abolished no sooner than he resigned without an alternative provided. The Roadmap for Power Sector Reform, a document for the development of the electricity sec­tor for the next 10 years that would see Nigeria produce 20,000MW from 5,000MW, was dumped shortly after he left office without an alternative provided. The nation is worse for it today. You can now imagine the frustration he was subjected to at the Aba power project. Still, he sur­vived all this. Dangote has to learn resilience from the former power minister.

    Despite his denial that he is a monopoly freak, the BUA Group, with which the Dangote Group has been in a fierce business fight, has in the last few days been asking Aliko Dangote to become more tolerant. A few years ago when I was carrying out a research on the cross-cultural challenges facing Nigerian inter­nationalizing firms and wanted to use the United Bank for Africa and Dangote Cement as a case study, I was surprised to learn that I had been blacklisted by the Dangote consortium for pointing out in 2013 the incorrectness of the claim by Dangote Cement agents that the major cause of building collapses in Nigeria was the cement brands used. Yet, when a senior professor at Howard University, the most respect­ed historically Black university in the United States, inquired from me in 2019 if Aliko Dangote was deserv­ing of an honorary doctorate from the institution, I not only supported it but provided a vital contact to the businessman.

    The Dangote Refinery needs sup­port this time.

    *Adinuba, Anambra State Commis­sioner for Information & Public En­lightenment (2018-2022), is a manage­ment researcher in Lagos

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