The
improvement recorded by cement producers has helped increase the
manufacturing sector’s contribution to Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) from about four per cent to approximately nine per cent, the Group
Executive Director of Dangote Group, Mr. Edwin Devakumar, has said. Devakumar
disclosed this at the weekend in Abuja when he made a presentation titled:
‘the Nigerian Cement Sub-Sector: A Success Story in Solid Minerals
Utilisation, at the 46th annual general meeting, Conference and Exhibition of
the Nigerian Society of Chemical Engineers (NSChE). He
explained that the rebirth of local manufacturing of cement in Nigeria had
led to a massive boost in mining operations across the country. According to
him, about 33 metric tonnes per annum of quarried materials were estimated to
have been required to meet cement production in 2015. He also said local
cement production had created thousands of direct and indirect jobs and has
displaced foreign exchange demand for cement importation, which would by now
have grown to about $2 billion annually. “It has increased revenue to
government in form of taxes, not just from the cement manufacturers but also
from other participants in the value chain. “Cement scarcity is now a thing
of the past as local production capacity outstrips demand. There is now
prospects of forex earnings from cement exports to neighbouring countries. It
is also a healthy addition to the stock exchange and distribution of wealth
to the stockholders,” Devakumar said. According to him, Nigeria’s solid
minerals have at least 44 known minerals scattered across the length and
breadth of the country and which include precious metals, base metals, bulk
and rare earth minerals. He said: “Although mining activities
in Nigeria started over a hundred years ago, the mining industry in Nigeria
has remained largely underdeveloped and its contribution to GDP, export
earnings and employment are at present insignificant.” He however stated that
the resuscitation of cement manufacturing and its positive impact on mining
activities in Nigeria had been a few bright spots in the mining industry,
adding that the underlying fundamentals for cement demand was good and robust
growth was expected over the medium term in future. Similarly, in his
address, the National President, NSChE, Prof. Emenike Wami, explained that no
nation can claim to have developed if it engaged in mere trading activities. Source: Thisday
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Monday, November 21, 2016
Higher Cement Production Has Helped Manufacturing Sector’s GDP
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