General
Military Must Apologise for Disrupting Nigeria’s Democratic Path—Banwo
By Modupe Gbadeyanka
For disrupting Nigeria’s democratic path and weakening its institutions, the military must tender an apology to the nation, foremost public commentator, Mr Ope Banwo, has submitted.
The legal practitioner, who called for a national reckoning, insisted that an apology would acknowledge the harm caused by repeated military interventions and reaffirm the supremacy of the constitution.
Speaking on the recently commemorated Armed Forces Remembrance Day, Mr Banwo argued that decades of political intervention by the military disrupted the country’s democratic growth.
According to him, repeated military takeovers did not rescue the country from early post-independence challenges but instead deepened instability and entrenched authoritarian governance.
While acknowledging that Nigeria’s early civilian leaders contributed to political chaos through electoral malpractice and ethnic tensions, he maintained that military coups worsened the situation, noting that the first coup in 1966 triggered a cycle of interventions that culminated in civil war, institutional breakdown, and long-term political trauma.
He emphasised that successive military regimes promised to fight corruption, restore discipline, and sanitise governance, but failed to deliver lasting reforms.
“Rather than ending corruption, they professionalised it,” he posited, adding that military rule created a powerful elite class that continues to wield influence in politics and business long after the return to civilian rule.
Mr Banwo further argued that the military never fully relinquished power, but merely exchanged uniforms for civilian attire, leaving behind a culture where constitutional authority is often treated as optional, stressing that in democratic societies, the armed forces must remain subordinate to civilian leadership, warning against any renewed appetite for military intervention in governance.
“The military is not Nigeria’s emergency solution to political failure,” he disclosed, urging the armed forces to focus on their constitutional responsibility of securing the country amid rising insecurity.
General
What is Automation and Why Does It Matter in Process Control?
Process control depends on accuracy, consistency, and quick response across every stage of production. In industrial environments, even small manual delays can affect quality, safety, output, and energy use. Facilities need systems that can monitor conditions, process data, and adjust equipment without constant human intervention.
Understanding automation in process control systems helps businesses see how machines, sensors, controllers, and software work together to improve operational performance. It supports faster decisions, safer workflows, and more predictable results across complex industrial processes.
Let’s look at what automation means and why it matters in process control.
What is Automation in Process Control?
Automation refers to the use of control systems, machines, sensors, and software to perform tasks with limited manual involvement. In process control, it helps monitor operating conditions and adjust equipment based on predefined logic.
For example, an automated system can track temperature, pressure, flow, or speed during production. When the process moves outside the set range, the system can send commands to valves, motors, drives, or alarms.
This makes process control more stable because actions happen quickly and consistently. Instead of depending only on manual checks, automated systems respond to live data. This helps facilities reduce errors, maintain quality, and protect equipment from unsafe operating conditions.
Why Automation Matters in Process Control
Automation matters in process control because industrial systems need accuracy, speed, safety, and repeatability. When processes depend too heavily on manual intervention, performance can vary between operators, shifts, and operating conditions.
- Consistent Monitoring Improves Process Stability
Process control requires continuous monitoring of variables such as temperature, pressure, flow, humidity, and speed. Manual checks can miss sudden changes, especially in fast-moving environments.
Automated systems use sensors and controllers to track these variables in real time. When a process moves outside the set range, the system can trigger an immediate response. This helps maintain stable operating conditions and reduces the chance of quality variation.
- Faster Responses Reduce Operational Delays
Manual intervention often takes time. Operators must detect the issue, understand the cause, and then adjust the system. During this delay, the process may continue moving away from the desired condition.
Automated control reduces this response time. Controllers can compare live data against programmed limits and send commands to valves, drives, motors, or alarms immediately. This helps equipment respond faster to process changes.
- Better Accuracy Supports Quality Control
Product quality often depends on keeping process conditions within a defined range. Inconsistent settings can cause defects, waste, rework, or rejected batches.
Automated systems improve accuracy by applying the same control logic repeatedly. They can regulate speed, pressure, dosage, temperature, and timing with greater consistency than manual operation. This helps businesses maintain uniform output across shifts and production cycles.
- Reduced Manual Dependency Improves Safety
Industrial processes can involve high temperatures, moving machinery, pressure systems, chemicals, and electrical equipment. Manual handling in such areas may expose workers to unnecessary risk.
Automation helps reduce direct human involvement in repetitive or hazardous tasks. Operators can monitor systems from control panels, human-machine interfaces, or supervisory platforms. This improves visibility while keeping teams at a safer distance from potential hazards.
- Data Visibility Supports Smarter Decisions
Modern process control is not limited to switching equipment on or off. It also involves collecting data that helps teams understand performance over time.
Automated systems can provide insights into energy use, equipment behavior, cycle times, alarms, and process deviations. This information helps teams identify inefficiencies, schedule maintenance, and improve control strategies.
Improve Process Reliability with Smarter Automation Planning
Understanding what automation is helps businesses see why it is central to modern process control. It improves stability, reduces manual errors, and supports faster responses across critical industrial operations.
Partnering with a reputable electric brand can help businesses choose dependable control, monitoring, and automation solutions for industrial environments. This becomes important when safety, uptime, and process accuracy are key priorities.
A well-planned automated control setup helps facilities reduce errors, improve productivity, and build stronger process performance for future growth.
General
FG, IFDC Sign MoU to Ease Farmers’ Access to Fertiliser
Adedapo Adesanya
The federal government, through the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the International Fertiliser Development Centre (IFDC) to improve farmers’ access to fertiliser.
The agreement seeks to address key challenges limiting the productivity of smallholder farmers, particularly fertiliser affordability, accessibility and timely distribution.
Under the partnership, both parties will work to strengthen fertiliser supply systems, expand soil testing and balanced nutrient management, and promote private-sector-led distribution networks across the country.
Speaking at the signing ceremony in Abuja, the permanent secretary of the ministry, Mr Marcus Olaniyi Ogunbiyi, described fertiliser as a critical input for increasing agricultural productivity and ensuring food security.
Mr Ogunbiyi noted that the MoU would support ongoing efforts to improve fertiliser accessibility, strengthen soil fertility management, promote sustainable agricultural practices and increase food production nationwide.
“Fertiliser remains indispensable for increasing crop yields and improving farm productivity across the agricultural value chain. A farmer may appreciate access to machinery, tools, or financial services; however, the availability and affordability of fertiliser often determine the success or failure of a farming season,” he said.
He said the Memorandum of Understanding will support efforts to improve fertiliser accessibility, strengthen soil fertility management, promote sustainable agricultural practices, and enhance food production nationwide.
He called on IFDC and other stakeholders to maximise the opportunities provided by the partnership to develop impactful programmes capable of boosting agricultural productivity and improving rural livelihoods.
Responding on behalf of IFDC, the organisation’s Executive Director, Mr Ben Lenkcher, pledged continued technical and logistical support to Nigerian farmers in line with the federal government’s agricultural transformation agenda.
Mr Lenkcher said IFDC remains committed to improving fertiliser accessibility, availability and affordability across Nigeria, noting that the partnership would contribute significantly to strengthening the agricultural ecosystem and enhancing food production to meet the needs of the country’s growing population.
General
Arridex Plans Mega Industrial Additive Manufacturing Plant in 2027
By Aduragbemi Omiyale
Plans are underway by Arridex to commission a mega industrial additive manufacturing facility in the first quarter of 2027.
The chief executive of the organisation, Mr Kayode Adeleke, disclosed this at the commissioning of the company’s omnifactory in Lagos some days ago by Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State.
The new plant is the first multi-technology industrial additive manufacturing facility in West Africa.
The Arridex Omnifactory integrates multiple additive manufacturing technologies under a single roof, including Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF), Cold Spray, Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF), and Selective Laser Sintering (SLS), enabling on-demand production of industrial components, spares, and improved part designs for critical industries. Its large-format capabilities extend to full-size marine components and other large-scale industrial structures.
The Omnifactory’s commissioning is the point at which two decades of accumulated capability become infrastructure. Arridex began operations in 2005 as an asset integrity practice in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector and grew sector by sector into maritime, defence, construction, technology, and aerospace. The organisation has recorded zero lost-time incidents across more than seven million man-hours of operations.
For Nigeria and West Africa, the Arridex Omnifactory addresses a structural dependency that has long affected operational continuity across critical industries. Asset owners managing ageing infrastructure have routinely contended with extended procurement lead times, supply chains spanning multiple jurisdictions, and the increasing obsolescence of legacy parts whose original manufacturers may no longer exist. The Omnifactory manufactures those components on demand in Lagos.
Arridex holds Pioneer Status in additive manufacturing, granted by the Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission (NIPC), it is the first company qualified by the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) for additive manufacturing deployment in the oil and gas sector, and has a joint venture partnership with the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria (DICON) for the local production of military-grade additive manufactured components, a set of recognitions that collectively signal the institutional grounding of what the Omnifactory represents.
“We did not set out to build the biggest company, but a resilient one. For over two decades, we have chosen the harder path, and that is to make in Africa what others import, to meet global standards without exception, and to put purpose before profit.
“The Arridex Omnifactory is where that conviction becomes infrastructure. The name on the door is new, but the work behind it is not. We are not stopping here. By the first quarter of 2027, we will commission the Arridex Mega Omnifactory, which will stand among the largest single-site industrial additive manufacturing facilities in the world. The next chapter of global manufacturing can be written from Lagos. We are building it,” Mr Adeleke commented.
On his part, Mr Sanwo-Olu lauded the firm for its “vision and commitment to building solutions that serve not only Nigeria but the wider African continent.”
“Lagos will continue to support investments that create opportunities, grow local capacity and position our state as a hub for innovation and industry,” he assured.
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