By Kalu Aja
No Nigerian can visit Ajaokuta Steel Company (ASC), see investments of more than $8 billion rotting in the African sun, and not cry. I went there, I cried. What exactly is the problem? I have written several articles on this topic, but today, let me write a comprehensive post.
Ajaokuta Steel Company is
massive; she has a 68km road network and 24 housing estates on the project.
Some estates have over 1,000 homes, a seaport, and a 110mw power generation
plant; there are 43 separate plants in Ajaokuta alone. It is estimated that if
Ajaokuta becomes operational, it will create 500,000 jobs.
There is no industrialised
nation on earth that does not have a steel sector. It’s that simple. A Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN) report shows that Nigeria currently imports steel,
aluminium products, and associated derivatives of approximately 25 metric
tonnes per annum, estimated at $4.5 billion. This figure will continue to rise,
and the Nigerian economy will continue to expand. Ajaokuta is an integrated steel
company; it was designed by the Russians to be self-sufficient, get all its
input from Nigeria, and make steel. Ajaokuta's strength is its weakness;
Ajaokuta can only work with all available inputs.
This will be a slightly
technical post, but please try and follow.
Steel is an alloy of iron and
carbon, amongst other things; iron is the base metal in steel, and to make
steel, you need Iron Ore, Coke from Coal, and Limestone as the main components.
These components are mixed in a blast furnace to produce liquid steel, which
can be long steel for rail lines, flat steel for automobile making, etc.
For example, look at steel as
making jollof rice, iron ore as the rice, limestone and coke as the pepper and
salt, and the pot as the blast furnace. The blast furnace is ONLY turned on at
a steel plane when the company is ready to make steel. Blast furnaces operate
continuously and are never shut down. The raw material fed into the furnace is
divided into several small charges introduced at 10 to 15-minute intervals.
This means everything must be in place BEFORE the blast furnace is turned on:
the iron ore, the coal, the limestone, everything; why? You do not switch off a
blast furnace for another ten years, no matter how long it's campaign life.
Nigeria is blessed with all the
primary raw materials needed to produce steel, including iron ore in Kogi,
coal, and limestone in Enugu.
Nigerian iron has a deficient
iron concentration. Agbaja has the largest iron ore deposit in Nigeria, with
about 2 billion tonnes, but the Agbaja iron ore has a high phosphate content.
Phosphate can cause brittleness in steel, making it fracture. Thus, Agbaja was
abandoned for Itakpe. Itakpe iron ore has no issues with phosphate but has low
iron content; therefore, to make steel with Nigeria iron ore, a process called
“beneficiation” has to be done to process the Itakpe ores to raise its iron
content to meet the required standard for steel production.
Coal? Most of the coal found in
Nigeria is non-coking and, thus, unsuitable for steel production. Coal deposits
in Enugu have no impurities but are non-coking. The good news? Nigeria has an
abundant deposit of limestone, and we have natural gas to provide power
So, back to Ajaokuta, what
happened? Why can Nigeria not make steel anytime soon? Let’s link up the
elements.
Policy Failure: The Ajaokuta
contract was signed between the Nigerian government and the Soviet state-owned
company, Tiajpromexport (TPE), and the company was scheduled for completion in
1986. In 2012, the Federal Government launched its backward integration policy.
Going forward, import licenses for steel products were only granted to
companies producing steel locally. TPE, to ensure they could import steel parts
for Ajaokuta, went ahead and built the rolling mills in Ajaokuta before the
actual steel plant was completed; they imported billet from Ukraine to
accomplish this. Thus, Ajaokuta was
producing steel before the actual steel plant was started. Therefore,
amazingly, Ajaokuta has functional rolling mills but no operational blast
furnace; Ajaokuta cannot produce steel from primary iron ore found in Nigeria
in her blast furnace.…this is the definition of the cart before the horse.
NIOMCO Factor: The iron ore in
Nigeria, earmarked for Ajaokuta, is from Itakpe; it has low iron content. Thus,
the FG built the National Iron Ore Mining Company (NIOMCO), a 2.15 metric
tonnes beneficiation plant designed to process the low-quality iron ore from
Itakpe to iron ore suitable for Ajaokuta Steel. If NIOMCO does not operate,
Ajaokuta CANNOT operate (unless Ajaokuta uses imported iron ore). As of today,
NIOMCO is not operational.
Railway: 15 million tonnes of
iron ore cannot be moved by road, which will destroy the roads. Thus, a railway
was built from Itakpe to Ajaokuta to take iron ore from the beneficiation plant
in Itakpe to the Ajaokuta. Itakpe to Ajaokuta by rail is just 52km. The rail
line was to be delivered by March 2019. Still, the Minister of Transportation,
Rotimi Amaechi, revised the delivery date to June 2018 and converted the purely
commercial railway to carry human passengers. These changes meant the cost of
the project and delivery dates had to change as passenger wagons and train
stations had to be built. To achieve this, 12 new passenger stations and 12
access roads must be designed and built. The Itakpe to Ajaokuta (IA) has two
stations. As of June 2018, the IA1 station – Eganyi to Itakpe, is still under
design. Station AW1 – Ajaokuta (standard station), zero per cent of work done.
Thus, the railways are not functional.
Blast Furnace: The furnace in
Ajaokuta is the heart of Ajaokuta; it is the pot where the jollof rice will be
cooked; however, it has never been turned on; why? Because there has never been
any time Ajaokuta has had raw materials available to ensure continuous day-to-day
production for five years. Why have there never been materials? Because there
is no railway to take iron ore from Itakpe to Ajaokuta. Why is there no railway
from Itakpe to Ajaokuta? Because NIOMCO in Itakpe is moribund and not
functional, Nigerian iron ore cannot be converted to high-grade ore for the
furnace in Ajaokuta.
So, it follows that for
Ajaokuta to work, we MUST have three key critical paths:
NIOMCO must be functional
The Itakpe to Ajaokuta Railway
line must be functional
Blast Furnace operational
All three are not functional,
so Nigeria cannot make steel in Ajaokuta. Nothing, however, stops a corrupt
government official from importing billets and running them in the rolling
mills to deceive taxpayers. So, when anyone tells you Ajaokuta will soon work,
ask them if a steel plant can work without NIOMCO, railways, and a blast
furnace.
All is not gloom; Kayode
Fayemi, as Minister, secured an out-of-court about Ajaokuta, and we must build
on this.
In closing, Ajaokuta is the
only steel plant in the world built by the USSR, sold to Americans, then to
Indians; all these teams have come and gone with their technical style; there
have even been accusations of asset stripping by the Indians.
So why this post? Because I am
a patriot, I will not sit by and watch scarce resources be wasted in a grand
deceit. Some corrupt folks have probably told Mr President that Ajaokuta can
produce economically viable steel if “small” dollars are spent. You can already
see how the critical rail line delivery dates were moved back to ensure it was
done in time for the 2019 elections, yet it is still in the design stage.
Ajaokuta is Nigeria and probably Africa's biggest failure. It has failed. Can
it be made to work? Yes, but the cost of integrating Ajaokuta with her mines
and rails can be used to build new, smaller, modern, turnkey, functional steel
mills. The government should get out of Ajaokuta, sell the place and allow the
private sector capital and expertise to restructure and own it.
If you want to make jollof rice
and there is no rice, the solution is not to keep boiling water without rice
but to go and get rice.
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