Osita Aboloma
Jonathan Eze
Worried about the moribund state of
paper industry in the country, the Standards Organisation of Nigeria
(SON) and relevant stakeholders have reviewed standards to revive the
sector.
Indeed, the regulatory body has harped
on the need for the country’s paper industry to be abreast of ...
global
technology and standards in order to be competitive with similar
businesses across the world.
The Director General, SON, Osita
Aboloma, at a technical committee meeting for standards consideration of
pulp and paper, explained that the meeting was to ratify the
requirement of standards that a group of experts have already worked
upon, stating the need to review standards for these products, because
they pose danger to science, manufacturers and by extension the Nigerian
economy.
“We need standards to guide some
technical issues related to these products, perhaps this is what has
been causing the collapse of some of our giant paper mills in the
country, but with the set of these new standards, it would go a long way
to revive some of our ailing industries. Controversies will be resolved
with ease because we have a source of reference and the review will
make us in tune with global best practices,” he added.
The SON boss, who was represented at the
meeting by the Deputy Director, Standards Development Directorate and
Group Head, Chemical Technical Group, Agboola Afolayan, said: “We have
been carrying out different Technical Committee meetings in different
sectors of the economy to provide relevant standards available to all
the sectors of the economy. Every sector needs standards for its
operations to ease ways of doing business and promote trade.”
Earlier, the Chairman of the Technical
Committee, Dr. Chima Igwe, who is also the Director, Chemical, Fibre and
Environmental Department, Federal Institute of Industrial Research,
Oshodi, (FIIRO), said without standards, quality products will not
exist, pointing out that the meeting would help to review existing and
develop new standards for papers and allied products.
He urged Nigerians to look out for
quality products, saying that SON is out to protect the interest of
Nigerians while also encouraging local manufacturers of paper products.
He said beyond the protection of local
manufacturers of these products, the SON through standards is also
promoting the trade of paper and allied products.
In his words: “The development of a
country could be established via the quantity and the volume of paper
the country uses whether for education or other domestic purposes. This
technical committee is important because we used to have three paper
mills, but all went comatose and later just one is about to come back.
We are out to ensure that this mill do virgin pulping which is the key
to paper production and not secondary fibre formulations like most
companies are doing as stakeholders.
The task is not going to be an easy one,
because setting standards is not an easy task. Standards are consensus
documents but it has to be grounded in science and technology.”
The Director of Laboratory Services, Institute of Public Analysts of
Nigeria, (IPAN), Wole Opeoluwa, said the aim of the meeting was to
enable end-users get the best from manufacturers and also from
recyclers.
“The public should be assured that very
soon that product in the markets would see obvious improvements in their
quality in terms of use, durability and safety. 20 to 25 years ago, the
industries that take the raw materials from trees and convert to paper
have all shut down due to obvious economic reasons; we would discuss
this and seek way forward in terms of policy to government on how to
revive these industries. The infrastructure and manpower is still
available, it is believed and hoped that at the end of this meeting, the
industry would have a working template to come back on stream,” he
stated.
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