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ICAN Encourages Early Chartered Status Among Secondary School Students

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The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) has inspired accountants to pursue chartered status to practise across the various branches of accounting and avoid being labelled mere bookkeepers.

A chartered accountant, Adeyemi Salau, advised on Wednesday when ICAN, Ilorin and District Society, visited the Queen Elizabeth Secondary School and the Government Secondary School, Ilorin.

The Catch-them-young visit was to encourage secondary students, not only to pursue the profession, but also to become chartered at a young age.

Salau encouraged early education, explaining that the district aimed to create ICAN consciousness in the students’ subconscious minds.

According to Salau, the Chief Executive Officer of Springboard Associates, being a chartered accountant is not restricted to commercial students alone, but also to science and arts students.

He said the only requirement was a minimum of five credits in O-level results, including Mathematics and English Language.

“For those who have the dream of being an accountant in future, it is not enough to be an accountant; you have to be a smart accountant and to achieve that, you must be chartered.

“This is because being a chartered accountant gives room to practise various branches of accounting like Management Accounting, Taxation, Auditing, Forensic Accounting, Cost Accounting and others.

“An accountant that isn’t chartered yet is just a bookkeeper,” Salau said.

According to him, three levels qualify one as a junior accountant.

Salau urged the students to utilise the opportunity to break the record of the present youngest chartered accountant in Nigeria, who became chartered at the age of 17.

Earlier, the District Chairman, Bose Fagbile, had said the essence of the campaign was to catch them young.

Fagbile urged the students not to wait till they secure admission into higher institutions before starting the process.

“You can start right after secondary school,” she said.

To encourage the students, the district’s General Secretary, Toyin Alabi, offered to sponsor the first five students to register for the Accounting Technician Scheme (ATS) examination.

The Principal of Queen Elizabeth Secondary School, Rashida Abdul, appreciated ICAN for finding the school worthy to gain from their knowledge.

She urged the students to utilise the opportunity to make a decision that will shape their future.

On his part, the Principal of Government Secondary School, Babatunde Kuranga, said the school was privileged to be a beneficiary.

He commended the district for encouraging the students to be professionals.

Oil & Gas

NNPCL Cuts Petrol Pump Price by N100 in Lagos, N95 in Abuja

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The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited has reduced the pump price of petrol at its retail outlets to N1,130 per litre in Lagos and N1,165 per litre in Abuja.

The new pricing reflects a N100 reduction from the previous N1,230 per litre in Lagos and a N95 decrease from N1,260 per litre in Abuja.

Checks showed that the revised price was being dispensed at several NNPC retail stations in Lagos, including outlets along Isheri Oshun Road, Apple Junction and Ago Palace Way.

Similarly, some stations operated by the national oil company in the Federal Capital Territory were selling petrol at N1,165 per litre, including outlets in Jabi, Lifecamp, Wuse Zone 5 and Wuse Zone 4.

The price adjustment follows a recent reduction in the ex-gantry price of petrol by the Dangote Refinery, which lowered its rate to N1,075 per litre amid easing global oil prices.

According to OilPrice.com, Brent crude prices recorded a sharp reversal on Tuesday, falling by nearly 27 per cent from the previous day’s high of $119 per barrel to about $87 per barrel.

Similarly, diesel is now priced at N1,430 per litre at the gantry, representing a N190 reduction from the earlier price of N1,620 per litre.

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BUSINESS

Six Ships Laden with Commodities Arrive Lagos Ports

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Tin Can Port
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A total of six ships have arrived at Lekki, Tincan and Apapa ports in Lagos, waiting to discharge crude oil, bulk urea, aviation fuel and petrol.

The Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) stated this in its publication, “Shipping Position”, on Wednesday in Lagos.

The document stated that 40 ships laden with petroleum products, food items and other goods were being expected in Apapa, Lekki and Tin-Can Island ports from March 11 to March 16.

The NPA added that the expected ships contain buckwheat, bitumen, empty containers, fresh fish, crude oil, bulk wheat, petrol, bulk clinker, bulk urea, aviation fuel, general cargo and containers of different goods.

20 other ships are at the ports discharging containers, petrol, bulk wheats, bulk sugar, bulk salt, bulk gypsum aviation fuel and bulk urea.

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BUSINESS

AfDB, PAPSS Promote Policy Alignment, Cheaper Payments across Africa

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Director-General for Southern Africa, African Development Bank (AfDB), Dr. Kennedy Mbekeani, has called for stronger policy alignment and private capital mobilisation to unlock Africa’s trade potential under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCTA).

Mbekeani made the call while delivering a keynote address at the 2026 Africa Trade Conference in South Africa on Wednesday from Lagos.

The conference, organised by Access Bank, has the theme: “Turning Vision into Velocity: Building Africa’s Trade Ecosystem for Real-World Impact”.

According to him, Africa possesses the resources, institutions and capital needed to drive its development but must strengthen coordination and confidence in its own systems to accelerate economic growth and regional integration.

He noted that AfCTA provided a major opportunity to transform the continent into a single market capable of boosting production, consumption and trade among African countries.

“Africa has the resources, the financial institutions and the capital required for development. What we need is stronger coordination, improved policies and confidence in our own systems,” he said.

Mbekeani said the continent’s large population and vast natural resources placed it in a strong position to build one of the world’s biggest consumer markets if governments harmonised policies and created enabling environments for businesses.

According to him, Africa’s development challenge is not a lack of resources but the need to mobilise capital and channel it effectively into infrastructure and productive sectors.

“We must focus on mobilising private capital at a continental scale. The funds needed for Africa’s development already exist within the continent,” he said.

He urged African governments to deepen partnerships with the private sector in areas such as energy, transport, water and education to bridge the continent’s infrastructure deficit.

Mbekeani noted that successful public-private partnerships across several countries had shown that private investors could deliver critical infrastructure when supported by clear policies and effective regulation.

“We need governments to create enabling environments while the private sector participates actively in building the infrastructure that will support regional integration,” he said.

He also stressed the need for African institutions to shape the narrative about the continent’s investment climate, saying perceptions about risk in Africa were often exaggerated.

“Africa must begin to tell its own story. The perception of risk on the continent is sometimes higher than the reality,” Mbekeani said.

He added that stronger regional markets would reduce the continent’s exposure to global shocks and enable African countries to process more of their resources locally.

According to him, deeper economic integration will increase intra-African trade, strengthen supply chains and enhance the continent’s ability to withstand global disruptions.

Mbekeani said the AfCFTA represented a historic opportunity to build a truly integrated African market and urged governments, financial institutions and businesses to take concrete steps to turn the vision into reality.

The Chief Executive Officer of the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS), Mike Ogbalu, said high transaction costs and fragmented payment systems had long hindered trade within Africa.

Ogbalu noted that some of the world’s most expensive payment corridors existed in Africa, making cross-border transactions costly for businesses and individuals.

“It is ironic that the poorest people often pay the most to move money across borders. Some of the most expensive payment corridors in the world are in Africa,” he said.

He noted that PAPSS was created to address this challenge by enabling businesses and individuals to make cross-border payments in their local currencies across the continent.

Ogbalu explained that the platform allowed payments initiated in one African currency to be received in another within seconds, eliminating the need for third-party currencies and lengthy correspondent banking processes.

“A payment can originate in Nigeria in naira and arrive in Egypt in Egyptian pounds within seconds. That is the efficiency we are bringing to African trade,” he said.

According to him, the system guarantees that transactions are completed within 120 seconds, although most payments are currently processed in about 12 seconds.

He added that PAPSS had reduced the cost of cross-border payments by more than 98 per cent while ensuring transactions complied with global standards on anti-money laundering, sanctions screening and fraud management.

According to him, the platform currently operates in about 20 African countries with more than 170 participating commercial banks and fintech firms connected to the network.

“For many African entrepreneurs, their real market is not just their home country but the entire continent of over 1.4 billion people,” Ogbalu said.

He added that improving payment efficiency would help African businesses expand beyond national borders and unlock the full potential of intra-African trade under the AfCFTA.

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