Analysts have excited considerable interest as governors wind down for new administrations nationwide. Outgoing Delta State governor Senator Dr Ifeanyi Okowa is in the first rank of those attracting attention. He has received so much positive and negative attention.
Okowa is one of the outstanding performers in the Class of 2023. He left giant footprints. My column, The Public Sphere in EMetro.com, pays close attention to the South-East and South-South, so I am familiar with the issues around Delta State.
The facts indicate that outgoing governor Okowa’s performance won the confidence of Deltans, who delivered his successor in the Rt Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori and retained an overwhelming majority in the state House of Assembly.
Even his critics end up paying a backhanded tribute to Okowa. One such detailed several areas that showed Okowa in good standing, contrary to his summation.
Infrastructural and human capital development are some of the many strong points of Okowa as governor. Okowa transformed the infrastructural and human capital foundation of Delta State. He transformed Asaba into the state’s de jure and de facto capital.
For many years post-creation, Asaba was indistinct, neither a state capital nor a regional city. Asaba boasts today of many projects, including one of the best state secretariats in Nigeria, a network of roads that has seen neighbouring Okpanam merge into Asaba, the upgrade of the Asaba Airport, and the completion of the Stephen Keshi Stadium after 18 years on the drawing board. Today, the massive infrastructural renewal that has turned Asaba around lured investors and homeowners and made it one of Nigeria’s most dynamic property markets—Asaba throbs with life from the work of Governor Okowa. Okowa’s Storm Water Drainage project removed Asaba from the ignominy of the Flood Capital of the South-South. A similar stormwater drainage project in Warri, the commercial capital, was at 85 per cent completion as the governor left office. It will change Warri.
Governor Ifeanyi Okowa delivered “a transforming and prospering economy…,” according to NextMoney and MONEY magazines. I read the journals before my trip to Asaba and gladly shared some of the data they highlighted. Landmark projects and significant milestones announce the Okowa years. Let’s look at some economic indicators.
- Delta State has an estimated GDP of US$15 billion as of 2022, making it the third-largest state economy in Nigeria. Estimated growth has been 60% since 2015.
- Delta State has an estimated per capita income of US$2701, higher than Nigeria’s national figure of US$2085 by World Bank estimates.
- Delta State is number one in crude oil production. It is a function of peace, security, and good governance in the state. Okowa engaged the restiveness in the creeks and stopped it. Before Okowa, oil production fell severely, and insecurity forced oil firms out of the state.
- According to the National Bureau of Statistics figures, Delta State ranked the second lowest in poverty in Nigeria in 2020, a significant leap from the 12th-lowest poverty rate in 2010. The 2021 Multiple Indicator Cluster/National Immunization Coverage Survey, also by the NBS, showed that only 4.2% of households fall within the poorest quintile (20%).
- The National Competitiveness Council of Nigeria, in its 2017 Report, declared Delta State the first in human capital development due mainly to Okowa’s entrepreneurship development programmes which boosted the social services sector.
- Asaba Airport has moved up from the 15th position to the sixth in passenger traffic. Okowa made the necessary investment to upgrade the airport after it was downgraded by the Federal Airports Authority just before he assumed office in May 2015. It is now a concession run by Asaba Airport Limited. The Federal Government has followed the concession route with the Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport, Abuja, and the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport (MAKIA) in Kano. I recall engaging some naysayers in my column regarding the airport concession then.
- Under Okowa, Delta State was the first to introduce the mandatory health insurance scheme by establishing the Delta State Contributory Health Commission in 2016. Delta State currently holds the number one position in comparative health coverage across Nigerian states. It is the first state in Nigeria to cover over 20% of its population with health insurance services, with over 1.3 million enrollees. It is on a good trajectory towards achieving the Universal Health Coverage mandate of the United Nations.
- The Delta State Contributory Health Commission is Nigeria’s first and only Health Insurance Agency, listed by the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) as compliant with the National Data Protection Regulation (NDPR) requirement for National Data storage and management.
- Delta State has an increasingly diversified economy whereby the non-oil sector constitutes 52.5% of 2020 GDP compared to 41.9% in 2013.
- Delta State continued to better its internally generated revenue by increasing it cumulatively by 82.04% from 2016 to 2021.
- Delta State under Okowa created 14,075 new youth entrepreneurs through skills training, retraining, reorientation, start-up and working capital support. It also created 223,905 jobs through multifaceted programmes and initiatives. It facilitated 1,325,750 indirect jobs from the multiplier effects of investments in public infrastructure works, public-private partnerships, community-level development projects and public-private collaborative youth empowerment grants.
- Delta State has an unemployment rate of 31 per cent from the latest reckoning of the National Bureau of Statistics. It is less than the national average of 37.2 per cent.
Okowa’s many infrastructure projects provide a platform for Deltans to activate – and maximise – their potential. With about 2,000 kilometres of roads and over 1,400 kilometres of drainage channels constructed by his administration, Delta State boasts a network of roads and bridges that have furthered rural-urban integration and enhanced trade and commerce. The many roads and physical infrastructure in the riverine areas, such as the 20.29 kilometres Obotobo – I Obotobo – II –Sokebolou-Yokri Road in Burutu Local Government, Okenrekoko township roads, and Ogulagha township roads are few of them. It would be interesting to visit the market on the sea that Okowa built, the Ogheye Floating Market in Warri North LGA.
The Okowa government recorded many strides in education and human capital development. He built three new universities and polytechnics that enhanced access to higher education for Delta State students. In addition, Governor Okowa revived the six moribund technical colleges in the state. He began constructing ten new ones in line with his administration’s policy emphasis on skills acquisition through technical/vocational education. He completed three out of the ten before leaving.
The many policy and administrative actions of the Okowa government significantly enhanced the ease of doing business in Delta State and attracted new investors. Evidence of a better business environment is the continued attraction of new businesses. They include these 15 PPP projects.
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Concessions: Asaba International Airport; Leisure Park and Film Village; Agro-Industrial Park, Aboh Ogwashi-Uku; Norsworthy Farms and Agro-Allied Industries, Akwukwu-Igbo; Delta State Rest Park, Umunede, Automobile Dealers and Mechanics Park, Asaba, Warri Trailer Park, and Ogbe-Ogonogo Market, Asaba, Ovie Fish Feed Mill to O-Secul Nigeria Limited.
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UTM Offshore Floating Liquefied Natural Gas Plant, Warri, Stallion Tricycle Assembly Plant, Asaba, Private-Public Ownership of Songhai Delta Agricultural Complex, Amukpe, Virtual Gas CNG Plant, Ebede, Ukwuani LGA, DELCOM CO- OP 17, 345 hectares Oil Palm Development Initiative.
The many ups of Okowa in eight years are multifaceted and speak to responsiveness, responsibility, and reliability in tackling the challenges of Delta State and moving it many notches higher on the development indicators. He answered and went beyond bare economic fundamentals.
Indeed, the evidence is that Okowa lifted Delta State and recorded numerous ups.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Nwakanma, journalism scholar and public affairs analyst, lives in Lagos