Government’s assets that failed past privatization attempts will be given a new window
More of Nigeria’s failed corporations, including the former national
telecoms carrier, Nigerian Telecommunications Limited (NITEL), and
refineries, have been scheduled for a fresh round of privatization,
Nigeria’s Bureau of Public Enterprises, BPE, said on Monday.
The director general of the privatization agency, Benjamin Dikki, who
spoke at “The Nigeria Investors’ Summit” in New York, United States of
America, identified the telecommunications, transportation, housing,
banking, tourism and petroleum as sectors where the next tranche of
investment opportunities have already been identified.
Top on the list of key government institutions to be privatized, Mr
Diki said, is NITEL, which would be sold to interested private investors
along with its frequencies through a guided liquidation process.
Several previous attempts by government to privatise NITEL failed, as
the bid exercises were often manipulated by their managers to satisfy
vested interests.
In the transport sector, he said several investment opportunities
would become available with the implementation of the provisions of the
Railway Bill, National Inland Waterways Bill, Ports and Harbour Bill,
and National Transport Commission Bill, the drafts of which were ready
and would soon be sent to the National Assembly for consideration and
passage into law.
He noted the ongoing reforms in the housing sector, which have
reached advanced stages, adding that with over 18 million housing
deficit in the country, more investment opportunities would open up,
particularly as the Federal Government had made the development of that
sector a priority in its development agenda.
Mr Dikki said the privatization agency was currently collaborating
with the relevant parties to review the policies, legal and regulatory
frameworks in the housing sector to make it attractive to interested
private investors.
The BPE director told the prospective investors who attended the
event that the next line of investment opportunities would come from the
Abuja Commodities and Stock Exchange, where government has concluded
plans to harness the warehouses and silos across the country and link
them to the various trading platforms for Warehouse Receipt Trading
system.
“Once we make prices and buyers predictable through the activities of
the trading platforms, we would have a mega boom in the making in that
sector,” he said.
Mr Dikki said the planned reform in the Development Finance
Institutions, DFIs, would soon commence with the privatization of the
Bank of Industry, BOI, and Bank of Agriculture, BOA, adding that the
reforms in the tourism sector have already begun with the review of the
policy, legal and regulatory frameworks to help attract private capital
into the sector.
He urged investors interested in the oil and gas sector to be
prepared to take advantage of the investment opportunities that would
open up when the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB),
which is currently before the National Assembly, is passed. He said
there would be several opportunities with the planned privatization of
the refineries, and the concession of the network of oil and gas
pipelines systems across the country.
On the recent privatization of the 18 Power Holding Company of Nigeria
(PHCN) successor companies, he said the over $3billion, which will
accrue to the Federal Government as proceeds from the various
transactions, is biggest ever in global privatization transaction
history.
“The Federal Government has been consistent in its policy to open up
its economy and create the enabling environment for the private sector
to thrive,” he noted.www.premiumtimesng.com
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