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Community School Picks Gold At National Science Fair…As RSUSTDSS Wins Quiz Grand Prize

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For their classic innovation, rare ingenuity, offbeat creativity and uncut courage, brilliant students of Community Secondary School, Aka Offot, Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, have picked the gold prize of the Sixth Nigerian Secondary Schools Science Project Exhibition.

Sponsored by the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) Joint Venture in collaboration with Intel Corporation, Initiative for Sustainable Education Development (ISED), Communication and Information Resource (CINFORES) and the Rivers State Government, the Niger Delta community school beat more than 13 other top winners from their zones across the country to clinch the grand prize and win a convincing lead to participate as Nigeria’s top flight contingent to the world acclaimed International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) in San Jose, California, United States of America in May.

With their Supreme Indicator, the amazingly high quality scientific marvel, the youthful but wonderful community students scored an aggregate of 73.6 per cent to emerge the best in the ground breaking 2010 National Festival of School Science Project Exhibition, held at the auditorium of amphi-theatre of the Rivers State University of Science and Technology (RSUST), Nkporlu, Port Harcourt, recently.

At the end of the two-day event held March 8 and 9, students of College of Education Demonstration Secondary School, Ekiti, Ekiti State, grabbed the silver medal and a chance to participate at the ISEF 2010 gathering of world amazing scientific whiz-kids in the USA.

The smart and bold students added an unusual cutting edge to their Making of Anti-Skin Infection Cream from Local Materials, and amassed a convincing 71.8 per cent to place second best.

However, a solo effort of a brilliant student of St. Joseph’s College, Ondo in the Design and Construction of a Cassava-Starch Processing Machine, won expert judges’ fascination to place third best with an aggregate score of 68.4 per cent.

The Tide gathered that all three exhibitors, adjudged best intriguing innovations by a panel of scientific scholars and field experts, including University of Benin-based professor of manufacturing engineering, and chairman, engineering fabrication and production committee, Akii Ibhadode, National Programme Coordinator, Curriculum Development, Federal Ministry of Education, Prof Michael Adikwu, Manager, Geo-Solution, SPDC, Nedo Osayande, A. Obaje and E.A. Ogujor, will enjoy full sponsorship by SPDC JV and Intel to the ISEF 2010 convergence of young talents, and rare thinkers, where they would compete to bring laurels and honour to Nigeria.

Similarly, two students of the Rivers State University of Science and Technology Demonstartion Secondary School, Nkporlu, Port Harcourt, have made the premier science and technology institution and Rivers State proud by emerging winners of the Sixth Nigerian Secondary School Science Quiz Competition, held in Port Harcourt.

The school scored a total of 42 points to beat a solo female student representative of Greater Tomorrow College, who garnered 37 points to emerge second best.

She mesmerized and puzzled the auditorium ahead of two student representatives of Government Science College, Ayede, Ekiti State, who scored a total of 36 points to place third in a keenly contested intellectual game that explored the principles and theories of the core science subjects of mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, agricultural science, among others.

These three schools upstaged two students of the school, which led Nigerian delegation to the 2009 ISEF in the USA, won a grand award and also produced one of the Top 10 Most Amazing Children in the World, Homat Private Schools, in Lagos State, to the fourth position, with 34 points.

In their separate speeches, Social Performance Manager, SPDC, Mr Emeka Obi, Corporate Affairs Manager, Intel West Africa, Mr Olubunmi Ekundare, Executive Director, ISED, Dr Jerry Orhue, Director, Higher Education, Rivers State Ministry of Education, Mrs M.O.Solomon, and Permanent Secretary, Bayelsa State Ministry of Education, Mrs Victoria Tekena, lauded the students for their creativity, innovative thinking and brilliant performances, and tasked those billed to participate at the 2010 ISEF in the USA to improve on their inventions, exhibit courage and boldness in order to win more laurels and honours for Nigeria at the global stage.

Highlights of the fair and quiz contest were a written test, project exhibition, dance/musical performance, and presentation of awards, certificates, plaques, classmate computers to all winning students/teams and schools, books to schools and dictionaries to teachers of winning students.

Representatives of Rivers and Bayelsa State ministries of education, Vice Chancellor, RSUST, Prof Barineme Fakae, and Prof Akii Ibhadode, and all 13 schools which participated in the grand finale of the competition received a fully-loaded classmate computer each, just as the best three project exhibitors got a nod of full sponsorship to the 2010 ISEF in the USA, courtesy of SPDC JV and Intel Corporation.

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Oil & Energy

FG Woos IOCs On Energy Growth

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The Federal Government has expressed optimism in attracting more investments by International Oil Companies (IOCs) into Nigeria to foster growth and sustainability in the energy sector.
This is as some IOCs, particularly Shell and TotalEnergies, had announced plans to divest some of their assets from the country.
Recall that Shell in January, 2024 had said it would sell the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) to Renaissance.
According to the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Heineken Lokpobiri, increasing investments by IOCs as well as boosting crude production to enhancing Nigeria’s position as a leading player in the global energy market, are the key objectives of the Government.
Lokpobiri emphasized the Ministry’s willingness to collaborate with State Governments, particularly Bayelsa State, in advancing energy sector transformation efforts.
The Minister, who stressed the importance of cooperation in achieving shared goals said, “we are open to partnerships with Bayelsa State Government for mutual progress”.
In response to Governor Douye Diri’s appeal for Ministry intervention in restoring the Atala Oil Field belonging to Bayelsa State, the Minister assured prompt attention to the matter.
He said, “We will look into the issue promptly and ensure fairness and equity in addressing state concerns”.
Lokpobiri explained that the Bayelsa State Governor, Douyi Diri’s visit reaffirmed the commitment of both the Federal and State Government’s readiness to work together towards a sustainable, inclusive, and prosperous energy future for Nigeria.
While speaking, Governor Diri commended the Minister for his remarkable performance in revitalisng the nation’s energy sector.

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Oil & Energy

Your Investment Is Safe, FG Tells Investors In Gas

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The Federal Government has assured investors in the nation’s gas sector of the security and safety of their investments.
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Gas), Ekperikpe Ekpo,  gave the assurance while hosting top officials of Shanghai Huayi Energy Chemical Company Group of China (HUAYI) and China Road and Bridge Corporation, who are strategic investors in Brass Methanol and Gas Hub Project in Bayelsa State.
The Minister in a statement stressed that Nigeria was open for investments and investors, insisting that present and prospective foreign investors have no need to entertain fear on the safety of their investment.
Describing the Brass project as one critical project of the President Bola Tinubu-led administration, Ekpo said.
“The Federal Government is committed to developing Nigeria’s gas reserves through projects such as the Brass Methanol project, which presents an opportunity for the diversification of Nigeria’s economy.
“It is for this and other reasons that the project has been accorded the significant concessions (or support) that it enjoys from the government.
“Let me, therefore, assure you of the strong commitment of our government to the security and safety of yours and other investments as we have continually done for similar Chinese investments in Nigeria through the years”, he added.
Ekpo further tasked investors and contractors working on the project to double their efforts, saying, “I want to see this project running for the good of Nigeria and its investors”.
Earlier in his speech, Leader of the Chinese delegation, Mr Zheng Bi Jun, said the visit to the country was to carry out feasibility studies for investments in methanol projects.
On his part, the Managing Director of Brass Fertiliser and Petrochemical Ltd, Mr Ben Okoye, expressed optimism in partnering with genuine investors on the project.

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Oil & Energy

Oil Prices Record Second Monthly Gain

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Crude oil prices recently logged their second monthly gain in a row as OPEC+ extended their supply curb deal until the end of Q2 2024.
The gains have been considerable, with WTI adding about $7 per barrel over the month of February.
Yet a lot of analysts remain bearish about the commodity’s prospects. In fact, they believe that there is enough oil supply globally to keep Brent around $81 this year and WTI at some $76.50, according to a Reuters poll.
Yet, like last year in U.S. shale showed, there is always the possibility of a major surprise.
According to the respondents in that poll, what’s keeping prices tame is, first, the fact that the Red Sea crisis has not yet affected oil shipments in the region, thanks to alternative routes.
The second reason cited by the analysts is OPEC+ spare capacity, which has increased, thanks to the cuts.
“Spare capacity has reached a multi-year high, which will keep overall market sentiment under pressure over the coming months”, senior analyst, Florian Grunberger, told Reuters.
The perception of ample spare capacity is definitely one factor keeping traders and analysts bearish as they assume this capacity would be put into operation as soon as the market needs it. This may well be an incorrect assumption.
Saudi Arabia and OPEC have given multiple signs that they would only release more production if prices are to their liking, and if cuts are getting extended, then current prices are not to OPEC’s liking yet.
There is more, too. The Saudis, which are cutting the most and have the greatest spare capacity at around 3 million barrels daily right now, are acutely aware that the moment they release additional supply, prices will plunge.
Therefore, the chance of Saudi cuts being reversed anytime soon is pretty slim.
Then there is the U.S. oil production factor. Last year, analysts expected modest output additions from the shale patch because the rig count remained consistently lower than what it was during the strongest shale boom years.
That assumption proved wrong as drillers made substantial gains in well productivity that pushed total production to yet another record.
Perhaps a bit oddly, analysts are once again making a bold assumption for this year: that the productivity gains will continue at the same rate this year as well.
The Energy Information Administration disagrees. In its latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, the authority estimated that U.S. oil output had reached a record high of 13.3 million barrels daily that in January fell to 12.6 million bpd due to harsh winter weather.
For the rest of the year, however, the EIA has forecast a production level remaining around the December record, which will only be broken in February 2025.
Oil demand, meanwhile, will be growing. Wood Mackenzie recently predicted 2024 demand growth at 1.9 million barrels daily.
OPEC sees this year’s demand growth at 2.25 million barrels daily. The IEA is, as usual, the most modest in its expectations, seeing 2024 demand for oil grow by 1.2 million bpd.
With OPEC+ keeping a lid on production and U.S. production remaining largely flat on 2023, if the EIA is correct, a tightening of the supply situation is only a matter of time. Indeed, some are predicting that already.
Natural resource-focused investors Goehring and Rozencwajg recently released their latest market outlook, in which they warned that the oil market may already be in a structural deficit, to manifest later this year.
They also noted a change in the methodology that the EIA uses to estimate oil production, which may well have led to a serious overestimation of production growth.
The discrepancy between actual and reported production, Goehring and Rozencwajg said, could be so significant that the EIA may be estimating growth where there’s a production decline.
So, on the one hand, some pretty important assumptions are being made about demand, namely, that it will grow more slowly this year than it did last year.
This assumption is based on another one, by the way, and this is the assumption that EV sales will rise as strongly as they did last year, when they failed to make a dent in oil demand growth, and kill some oil demand.
On the other hand, there is the assumption that U.S. drillers will keep drilling like they did last year. What would motivate such a development is unclear, besides the expectation that Europe will take in even more U.S. crude this year than it already is.
This is a much safer assumption than the one about demand, by the way. And yet, there are indications from the U.S. oil industry that there will be no pumping at will this year. There will be more production discipline.
Predicting oil prices accurately, even over the shortest of periods, is as safe as flipping a coin. With the number of variables at play at any moment, accurate predictions are usually little more than a fluke, especially when perceptions play such an outsized role in price movements.
One thing is for sure, though. There may be surprises this year in oil.

lrina Slav
Slav writes for Oilprice.com.

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