- a paper presented at the 19th National Students' Convention and General Assembly of the NSChE National Students Chapter, LAUTECH 2016 -
Introduction
The story was told of how in 1948, a projection was made
of countries that had potentials of becoming World Superpowers and Nigeria
appeared on the list ahead of Japan. Today, Japan has lived out that potential
but our dear country is in a dire strait.
It became imperative for me to honour this invitation as
it is a platform that congregates two critical elements of national development
that must play vital roles in the quest to lift Nigeria out of the woods,
namely the Academia and Engineering and such an opportunity to speak to the
conscience of actors in these two critical sectors cannot be passed by.
The choice of this topic is commendable as
forward-thinking and it is undoubtedly an inevitable engagement we must have as
a people. As a nation that is heavily-dependent on petroleum resource both as
an income earner and the main driver of the key sectors of our national life,
namely power, transportation & industry, the imminent "World Oil
Crisis" has far reaching implications that could compound our current poor
state of national well-being. It indeed calls for an extensive brainstorming.
Nations with foresight are beginning to device mitigation
efforts and develop feasible alternatives to deal with the impacts of the
approaching new reality, and as such, are taking positions to remain viable
States, going into the future.
Synopsis of viability in nation-states
Viability comes
from the Latin root vita, meaning "life." So the noun viability also
refers to something's capacity to live and grow, that is, the capacity for
sustainability. Viability is an indicative article of future-proofing, being capable of realizing intended purpose(s).
It is the purpose of nation-states to protect the safety and well-being of its citizens
and have its citizens ultimately happy, thriving, realized and
fulfilled. Viable States have positive indicators that derive from enabling and
supportive infrastructure and systems, which lead up to sustainable States that
has got the capacity to realize the given purpose of a State. Non-viable states
however are low on these sustainability indices, being without the required
enablers to engender the capacity to fulfil the mission of States and are only
symptomatic of a descent to a failed state.
These enabling indicators are mostly captured in the Human Development Index (HDI). This can be
supported with the Gross National
Wellness Index (GNW Index). One of such defining indices as copied out below
captures the undesirable state of the Nigerian-State, "The World Bank’s Doing Business Index of 2012
ranked Nigeria as 133rd out of 183 countries on the basis of the constraints
encountered in starting a business, dealing with construction permits and
registration of property and enforcement of contracts. It also identified
differences in state regulations and in the enforcement of national regulations
that can enhance or constrain local business activity."
The world Petroleum
crisis: now and the future
The immediate petroleum crisis is the great plunge in the
international market price of crude oil. In the past three decades, according
to World Bank records, there are have been five other periods of similar
declines in oil prices and the current plunge is only the third largest drop,
surpassed by those of 1985-86 and 2008. The current plunge has been partly
occasioned by oil exporting countries' supplies exceeding global demands as
some heavy users of oil, that are of course non-members of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), have expanded oil supply from both
conventional and unconventional sources.
OPEC members' shift in policy has exacerbated the oil
glut and the effect has been totally unenviable for a country like Nigeria.
This effect is not unexpected as what the country is currently experiencing
perfectly fits the below quoted projections of experts, "While falling oil prices would support activity and reduce
inflation globally, some oil-exporting countries may come under stress as
falling oil-related revenues put fiscal balances under pressure and exchange
rates depreciate on deteriorating growth prospects." This is the
effect of being a crude oil exporting but finished products heavily-importing
country. The impacts of the current plunge is indeed acute, whereas it is not
the real oil crisis.
The actual "World Oil Crisis" is embedded in M. King Hubbert's "Peak Oil"
theory, which is "the point in time when the maximum rate of global petroleum extraction
is reached, after which the rate of oil production enters terminal
decline." Several scholastic works have confirmed the
fact that global conventional oil production has indeed peaked and is now on a
terminal decline. A clear definition of this new reality is that "contrary to conventional
wisdom, which many embraced during back-to-back oil crises in the 1970s, oil is
not running out. It is, instead, changing form - geographically, geologically,
chemically, and economically, approaching the end of easily accessible,
relatively homogeneous oil."
The impacts of this
phenomenon are as dynamic as they are far-reaching, two of them essentially
suffice here. One, as oil peaks and production decreases, global economies,
particularly those most dependent on oil will be adversely affected. Two, the
feasible alternatives, unconventional
oils, "are nature’s own carbon-capture and storage device, so when they
are tapped, we risk breaking open this natural carbon-fixing system. And as
output ramps up to meet increasing global demand for high-value petroleum
products, unconventional oils will likely deliver a higher volume of heavier
hydrocarbons, require more intensive processing and additives, and yield more
by-products that contain large amounts of carbon." The new reality comes
with serious challenges of higher costs, advanced technologies and larger
carbon footprint.
The Nigerian conundrum
Nigeria has enjoyed decades of oil boom and unimaginable oil
revenues but remains a non-viable State. It is where students graduate not to
have jobs, it is where students go through schools and do not know. It is where
electric power is a daunting challenge with very low generation capacity,
comatose transmission infrastructure and derelict distribution network, yet
Electrical Engineering graduates roam the streets without jobs. It is where good road networks remain pipe
dreams but Civil Engineering graduates cannot secure job placements. It is
where trees grow naturally in abundance but there are no process plants to
convert trees to paper, not even tooth pick. It is where public service holders
cannot send their children and wards to the public schools over which they
superintend. Nigeria is blessed, yet remains in desecration.
The critical challenge now, in view of the imminent oil
crisis, is that if Nigeria could not build viability with years of abundance
and if the minor volatility in oil prices has shaken the country to its very
foundations, it is left to be seen if Nigeria is at all in readiness for the
new reality and the impact of the major oil crisis on the country is
unimaginable.
Building a viable Nigeria, notwithstanding
Even though the situation is totally dispiriting, it is
our duty to still build a viable Nigeria where the future is secured for the
next generations and an enabling environment is created for anybody's dream to
become a reality, supported with required systems and structures.
This onerous task would require both intangible and
tangible demands from us. We must rise to the occasion to build a nation that
is indeed desirable to live in. 'We' would mean the Nigerian people,
particularly the academia, the industry, and the government; more particularly
the engineers, in this case, the Nigerian Society of Chemical Engineers (NSChE)
and most particularly, you & I.
First, we must think differently. We must think service,
think delayed gratification, think creation rather than consumption; we must
become selfless, we must be willing. We must take responsibility!
We
must then innovate, plugging into how the future market develops. No doubt we
must diversify but we must engage diversification with dedicated reinvention as
a learning economy, that is to develop adequate technological competence. And
the learning comes from nations that have taken the leap before us, such as
Taiwan as captured in the following lines, "In
the early 1960s, the country’s main export was mushrooms, of which it was a
world leader. The prospects of industrial learning were quite limited when
dealing with a high-volume, low-value and perishable export commodity. It
transitioned to becoming a semiconductor powerhouse by redefining itself as a
learning economy. Taiwan’s premier research
centre, the Industrial Technology Research Institute that spawned many of
its leading semiconductor firms, was created by consolidating four dilapidated
research centres left behind by Japanese occupiers. The institute was not
created to add value to mushrooms but was part of the country’s policy
reinvention as a learning economy. The case of Taiwan illustrates the fact that
economic diversification results from the initial use of existing technologies
that can be readily combined to generate increasingly diverse products."
That
reinforces first, the need to reinvent Nigeria's education framework, as the
depth of educational foundation determines the height of national development;
and second, the important need for the academia and the industry to establish
solid frameworks for collaboration through the research institutes, for us to
turn the corner of viable national development. This is the particular step
that would guarantee us as a formidable player in the new reality of oil-peak
mitigation and post-oil-peak eras, in the development of unconventional oils
while also having the competence to address the attendant larger carbon
footprint and more grievous environmental degradation.
Our
students, particularly Chemical Engineering students must evolve the reorientation
of becoming creators of values and not job seekers, using various platforms
including that of industrial training (SIWES) to identify products and
processes for which they can collaborate and save their little stipends at
SIWES & NYSC (delayed gratification) to create and grow start-ups.
It
goes without saying that we must redefine governance and politics, being the
bedrock of policy formulations that significantly impact other areas of our
national life. The academia & the industry (professionals) must creatively
engage politics to take back the driving seat of our national destiny from so
many of the current political office holders who have no clue about national
development. This would take us back to the era of conscientious and dutiful
implementation of national development plans that we have stopped since the
truncation of the 4th National Development Plan up to the current dispensations
that we now have 'visions' without plans.
We either build or waste
It is Professor Wole Soyinka who is said to have referred to his generation as a wasted generation,
having enjoyed quality education but ended up taking quality out of our
education, ended up taking water out of our taps and ended up taking health out
of our hospitals. Our generation must rise up and be counted on a positive
note.
It was a generation that fought for the independence of
our nation and yet another generation fought to install democracy, putting us
on firmer track towards development. Our generation must define its mission and
pursue its realization. We are the generation upon which the task of learning
from past mistakes of not maximising the regime of massive oil economy and
taking up the challenge of building a viable nation through the impending major
oil crisis has fallen.
Conclusion
Notwithstanding the aberration of our inability to have built
a viable nation with the enormously incredible revenues that accrued to Nigeria
in the range of trillions of Naira from the decades of oil boom, IT IS POSSIBLE
to still seize the moment in the face of the emerging World Oil Crisis to build
a viable nation where the citizens are empowered to realize their potentials, where
enabling systems are built to support national development and that can therefore
adequately respond to the impending crisis.
This will chiefly rest on the willingness of the academia
to collaborate with the industry in revitalizing the nation's research
institutes towards developing innovative capacities and technological
competences as required for a learning economy to transform and be ready for
the new reality of unconventional oils regime while other enabling machineries
are put in place to consolidate the academia-industry collaboration.
The plan for this must start now! A plan of action to
midwife this renewed collaboration must be created, possibly with the academia
taking the bull by the horn from this very convention. If we plan nothing, we
get nowhere.
REFERENCES
1. http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/10/nigeria-worlds-next-economic-giant/
2. Deborah Gordon -
Understanding Unconventional Oil; The Carnegie Papers (2012).
3. World Oil
Crisis: Driving forces, Impact and Effects via
http://www.world-crisis.net/oil-crisis.html
4. John Baffes, M. Ayhan Kose,
Franziska Ohnsorge, and Marc Stocker - The Great Plunge in Oil Prices: Causes, Consequences, and Policy
Responses; World Bank Group Policy Research Note (2015).
5. Calestous Juma - Time for Africa to
transition from extractive to learning economies via http://theconversation.com/
About Engr 'Tosin Ogunmola
Engr Olutosin Ogunmola is the current General Secretary, Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), Ikeja Branch and the Treasurer, National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE), Lagos Technical Professional (LTP) chapter. He is an
Electrical Engineer registered with the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN),
with over 12 years of high-flying industry experience. He has held positions in
Maintenance & Technical Service in Multi-nationals such as Peugeot
Automobile, PZ Cussons & LafargeHolcim. As a highly resourceful
personality, he has presented papers in Engineering conferences. He is imbued with
an enduring entrepreneurial disposition and currently promotes Nigeria's first comprehensive
e-commerce platform for maintenance and repair services, www.OnlineRepairNG.com.
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