Saturday, September 28

Rivers State on Track Towards More Sustainable Non-Oil Economy

-Text of an address delivered by Rivers State Governor Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi during his appearance at

Chatam House, London, United Kingdom on Wednesday, July 24, 2013.

 

AS you are most probably aware, Nigeria is a federation, made up of the centre and thirty-six (36) federating units – States. There is also a third level of government – the local governments. Based on the constitutional configuration of Nigeria and our political structure, the States play significant role with respect to the development of the country. The role spans the implementation of reforms, development of infrastructure and the provisions of services.

Rivers State, where I am Governor, is one of the 36 States in Nigeria. Like the other 35 States, it has enormous responsibility with respect to the security and welfare of the residents of the geographical territory. The magnitude of the responsibility, relative to the resources available in the light of the prevailing social and economic conditions, demands a lot from the officials of the Government of the State.

Today, I will highlight, with brief illustrations, the measures taken by the Government of Rivers State under my administration to deal with the competing needs in the face of limited resources including our efforts at improving governance through the practice of accountability and transparency.

Let me begin my Speech by sharing with you an email I received two days ago from a Nigerian from Rivers State who is now based in London.

Your Excellency, Rt.Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi,

I am a lawyer and one of the beneficiaries of your PhD scholarship program for Rivers State students in the U.K. I write to thank you for uplifting my life forever. In appreciation for what you have done for me, I want to use my new position as a law lecturer in the United Kingdom to help by providing free training on legislative drafting and law reform skills for lawyers at the Rivers State Ministry of Justice and Rivers State House of Assembly.

With the kind approval of your Excellency, My plan is to bring experts from the U.K. who are professors of law to train these categories of staff on how to draft laws.

Your kind reply is anticipated.

Respectful regards,

Tonye Clinton Jaja

This email came barely a week after five students from Rivers State graduated from the Nottingham Trent University with first class honours degrees. One of the graduates is a physically challenged person and a beneficiary of our administration’s special intervention programme in education. He graduated first class in Law.

Three key ideas or concepts run through my Speech. These include reform, resource, and governance. It may be necessary to explain them as used in this Speech. To reform implies to improve or amend something that is unsatisfactory or wrong. It may also mean to fine-tune without altering the fundamentals of the thing in question. To this extent, reform is different from revolution.

Resource generally refers to everything present in our environment that can be used to satisfy human needs as long as it is accessible technologically, feasible economically and culturally accepted. The concept of resource applies to different areas of life. There are economic resources, natural resources, biological resources, human resources and even computer resources. Every resource is connected to the notions of competition, conservation, sustainability and stewardship. A resource has three principal attributes – utility, limited availability (scarcity) and potential for depletion.

Governance relates to processes and systems that define expectations, grant of power or verification of performance. It is the act of governing. For purposes of definition, the World Bank defines governance as the manner in which power is exercised in the management of a country’s economic and social resources for development. [World Bank, Managing Development –The Governance Dimension, Washington, D.C, 1991, p.1]. A preferred definition is one put forward by Stephen Bell, that governance is the use of institutions, structures of authority and even collaboration to allocate resources and coordinate or control activity in society or the economy. [Economic Governance and Institutional Dynamics Melbourne, Australia: Oxford University Press, 2002.]

Governance issues, reforms and the management of resources have gone beyond global mantras. They have become the indices for assessing how governments and leadership are viewed and trusted. This is more so the case with countries that have depended on natural resources especially the extractive industries to drive their economies. Nigeria, my country, happens to fall quite squarely in the middle of all of this.

Nigeria and Britain have historical relationship that developed primarily from the quest for resources, and culminated in colonialism and later independence. The laws, mores and ethos that define government and politics in Nigeria still have strong leanings on the British system. This is despite the fact that we practice the presidential system of government with the attendant incursions of the American political culture.

The above background is to help situate some of the assumptions that underpin my Speech. Naturally, my discourse will centre on Rivers State where I am the Governor and which, as you already know, is the second largest economy in Nigeria and accounts for a significant amount of its oil and gas earnings.

Discussing reforms is quite topical, some may even say urgent, especially as my country prepares for general elections scheduled for 2015. Most second term Governors, like myself, are approaching the end of their tenures. Our democracy, for the first time, will have gone on unbroken for sixteen (16) years by 2015. Clearly, this is a good time for assessments and evaluations.

At the heart of the matter, therefore, as we draw the curtains on our tenure is how well have we utilized the resources in our care? Remember that I had indicated that the concept of resource is linked with the notion of stewardship. How much better are the lives of our citizens today? What legacies would we be leaving behind? Have we arrived at our Eldorado? If not, are we getting anywhere close?

When I assumed office as Governor, my team and I made a pledge to “render transparent and accountable stewardship anchored on good governance and integrity.” This was a goal we set as we had watched our nation suffer from the effects of a mono-economy. Worse still coming from a State that is the centre of the oil and gas industry but whose populace, suffer the negative impact of oil exploration, it was important that we created new opportunities for our people not just to survive but to excel as well.

POVERTY AND UNDER-DEVELOPMENT

Our administration’s opportunity to govern Rivers State did not come easy. Therefore, it was imperative that we addressed the issues of under-development and poverty. In these respects, we set out to tackle the issue of poor service delivery caused by weak governance structures and leadership, which had left the populace wary of government and its promises. Our administration therefore focussed on re-building confidence in government by focusing on fast tracking development. We drew up an agenda geared towards rebuilding our State from the very foundations. This required addressing the basic issues of education, healthcare and physical security.

Education

At the base of the educational agenda is the tripod: literacy, numeracy and life skills. Our education agenda seeks to provide the proper education beginning from scratch. We identified that th
e problems of our young people began from a destroyed foundation. The educational system was in a very bad state but worse off was primary education. Owing widespread poverty many children could not stay in school and, even when they did have the right quality of education, as their parents could not afford the price for good quality education. We have 500 primary schools at various stages of construction and will begin commissioning 250 by October. All the children in our primary schools have free uniforms, free school sandals, free school bags and free textbooks.

Beyond, primary education, the administration is building 24 Modern Secondary Schools equipped to prepare students for life in the 21st Century. One of the Schools had commenced operations. We also plan to renovate and upgrade existing Secondary Schools. 8 Schools from different parts of the State are in the first phase of this programme.

Finally, plans are at advance stage to build a new campus of the State University within an environment conducive to learning and research.

Health Care

We are also addressing issues regarding healthcare delivery, beginning with the provision of primary healthcare facilities. Our aim is to provide a facility within every ward to make for accessibility and thus improve health care delivery. My administration has completed and commissioned sixty facilities. Another seventy facilities are due for commissioning in the last quarter of this year. In addition to the primary care facilities, we have built referral facilities in Port Harcourt – Prof. Kelsey Harrison Hospital and Dental-Maxillo Facial Hospital. Subject to completion of the processes under the Public Procurement regime, construction works will commence on another referral facility in Port Harcourt – A. K. Hart Memorial Hospital. We plan four of such facilities in four major towns in the State – Ahoada, Bori, Degema and Okehi.

In addition to the construction and equipping of health care facilities, we also interested in the development of capacity for this facility. With support from the Federal Government under the Millennium Development Goals Scheme, we are constructing a modern School of Nursing in Port Harcourt. The administration has also proposed specialist training programmes for medical personnel in the State Civil Service.

Agriculture

The administration is also involved in agriculture, tackling the twin problems of food security and employment generation. We collaborated with the founder of the Songhai initiative to develop a facility suitable for agro-tourism as well as training of farmers in Bunu Tai, Rivers State. We are developing modern fish farms in four local government areas of the State. The pilot farm with a capacity for 1000 tonnes per annum located in Buguma is nearing completion.

Infrastructure

We engaged in massive infrastructural development to encourage businesses. This administration is conscious of the loss of time and other resource occasioned by traffic congestion and following professional advice has undertaken the construction of major roads, highways and bridges across the State. Road projects commenced by the previous administration are continuing toward completion.

We have also invested in power generation in the State. In the last 18 months, we have embarked aggressive intervention with respect to distribution to ensure that residents and businesses in the State enjoy the benefits of the investment in power generation. However, the activities of vandals have continued to undermine efforts in these respects.

Frameworks for Sustainability

However, all the infrastructure and provision of amenities appear like dealing with the symptoms rather than the problem itself. For any society to transit from poverty, developments relating to wealth creation, poverty alleviation and robust economy must be sustained. For this to happen, strong institutions, and the appropriate legal and regulatory frameworks need to be put in place. This is when reform begins to make sense and have far- reaching implications. Realising this, therefore, we are putting in place appropriate frameworks that will guarantee the sustenance of the work we are doing, encourage investment and expand the economy of our State.

Rivers State Sustainable Development Strategy

Under the Strategy, this administration has set up the Rivers State Sustainable Development Agency through which interventions in the areas of capacity building and agriculture are implemented. Additionally, initiatives on the Wealth Creation and Poverty Reduction through measures such as the micro-finance and venture capital and private equity financing are being pursued. On July 17-18, 2013, we held a Summit on Wealth Creation & Poverty Reduction. The Executive Bill for the Law to establish the Framework for the venture financing is ready.

Public Procurement Reforms

In line with our goal to render transparent and accountable stewardship of the resources of the State, in 2008, the State enacted a Public Procurement Law as part of the boarder governance reforms and a subset of the public finance management reforms. We had stated that weak governance structures predated our administration. One way of improving governance was the enactment and implementation of legislation aimed at improving outcomes from public expenditures, particularly in the face of limited resources and competing demands.

Our public procurement reforms seek to improve the return on investment or the public value of public expenditure by insisting on planning prior to every expenditure such that the purpose of the expenditure must be clarified and the potential impacts – economic, social and environment, clearly identified. The reforms revolve around the fundamental issues of accountability, transparency, equity, timeliness, economy, efficiency, fitness for purpose and value for money. The reforms have introduced the need for evaluation of every expenditure to ascertain whether the purpose was met and whether the benefits to the people of the State justified the expenditure. With the reforms, the dangers of bloated costs of projects and abandoned projects are being checked.

One challenge from the reforms is that operators have been slow in embracing the demands with the result that there is delay – which is not good for time bound administration in the face of pressing needs of the State.

Public-Private Partnership

In the face of limited resources, the administration has chosen to revive businesses and put to use wasting assets belonging to the State through the engagement of the private sector. This has led to the revitalization of the Risonpalm Oil Palm Estate with the incidental job creation opportunities. We have leased a major Shopping Complex belonging to the State a proven operator. Extensive renovations are going on preparatory to the commencement of operations by the end of the year. Similarly, the State had collaborated with a Mexican firm to commence a banana plantation with capacity to provide direct employment for over 2000 persons. We also in partnership with the LR Group from Israel in connection with an integrated farm. All of these are pointers to our determination to reduce unemployment, and encourage economic growth.

Security

The importance of security to our developmental agenda is self-evident. Without security, it will be difficult to undertake developmental projects. Security is critical. The administration has provided support to the security agencies in the areas of logistics and equipment as well as training to enhance their capacity to provide security for residents. In collaboration with the Federal Government, the State had acquired equipment to provide aerial surveillances and protection for the State and the economic activities within the State, particularly the oil production activities. Our focus on security is inevitable as that is the first re
sponsibility of the state – to guarantee the lives and properties of its citizens (individuals and corporates)

CONCLUSION

The key thrust of our reform and governance intervention is to prepare our citizens to depend less on oil, a non-renewable resource. We need an educated and healthy population and appropriate institutions insulated with the right legislations against the vagaries of political reversal. To achieve this we need to build a cleaner way of applying oil revenue through new ways of doing government business guided by openness and transparency so that our people can get value for money. In Rivers State we can say that by the end of our tenure, we would have laid the foundations for a take-off of a more sustainable non-oil economy and hopefully have fulfilled our mission to guarantee our people’s future.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *