🤣🤣🤣
This is the height of hypocrisy coming from someone like @ayomairoese and her colleague, @The_Vimbai.
These bunch of jokers at @ARISEtv, sometime last week, had successes of the Nigerian Military reeled out to them and they vehemently and disrespectfully disregarded the efforts of our military.
Today, they now want to look good. Guys, keep your fake praises. We don’t need you on our winning side.
Many organisations are already generating emissions data every day, but very few are using it strategically.
Swipe through to see if your organisation fits the profile, and what that could mean for your next phase of growth.
#carbonmarkets#esg#sustainability#tphgtechnologies
Across the continent's fast-growing cities and emerging industries, we are seeing bold ideas, practical innovation, and systems designed to solve real challenges in real time.
TPHG is proud to support that reality.
Happy Africa Day!🌍
#africaday#tphg#data#africa#innovation
God’s grace comes through the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Hyper is the nature of God’s grace because nothing else can achieve what it did for humanity—destroy the power of the sinful nature and input into us the righteousness that no one, other than grace itself, can ever attain to.
Yes, the grace of God, when it appears to anyone, teaches and continues to teach to shun unrighteousness and embrace godly lives in Christ. Grace did not ask us to do it by ourselves. Grace teaches us to, and grace enables us to, because it is God who works in us both to will and to do according to His pleasure. All these emphasize a process of continuous transformation. This is the means. These testimonies align with it. And even the Lady K hasn’t gotten to an end yet.
A christian’s perfection is not by his works or in his ability not to sin—Pharisees boast about that. A believer’s perfection is only in his acceptance of Christ’s grace. What condemns to eternal damnation is one’s rejection of Christ as the Son of God, which maintains nature of sin in one. If acts of sin condemn people to eternal damnation, then everybody is condemned eternal damnation.
The global carbon economy is expanding rapidly, creating new conversations around climate finance, emissions trading, and green growth.
Our latest article explores 10 carbon registries shaping the future of climate in Africa.
https://t.co/5Muue0qFbf
#carbonmarkets#tphg
Today we celebrate the people behind every system, every insight, and every solution.
Happy Workers’ Day from TPHG Technologies.
#tphg#workersday#datatosolutions
The full picture of the Supreme Court order is that INEC should retain the David Mark's leadership at ADC whilst the case goes back to the Federal High Court for hearing and completion.
Considering the time frame for the court case to end and the potential appeals that will likely follow, it doesn't seem like the David Mark's group is out of the woods yet.
You can’t fix what you can’t clearly see. And in many emerging markets, that’s where things slow down.
Here are 5 critical data gaps holding development back.
At TPHG , we’re building systems to close these gaps, making data more reliable, usable, and impactful.
#tphg
Imagine spending ₦49 million on power every month. That’s the reality of a Lagos hotel, as shared on The Builders Podcast.
But what if the The Lagos Greenhouse Gas Registry could help turn that into a source of income?
Find out here:
https://t.co/ycdgSa2SZL
#tphg#lasepa
My LinkedIn article about the Lagos Greenhouse Gas Registry, an online carbon MRV system, and its value proposition to organisations operating in Lagos State, Nigeria 👇
https://t.co/gulmtVYCL9
Good morning @ayomairoese.
Perhaps you should read this about the World Bank's report on the deductions from the federation account. Your analysis of the matter gives the impression that you haven't read the report.
This brief should enlighten you, and prompt you to read the report dispassionately for thr sake of clarity and verification.
Dear @PeterObi,
Your post about a World Bank report on Nigeria’s federation account deductions simply reinforces the fact that you're confused about many things.
For someone who aspires to lead the 19th largest economy by in the world by PPP, this is a 🚩.
A thread 👇👇👇
You have freedom to choose who you endorse and who you don’t. Don’t allow anyone constrict or box you to align with their views or opinions.
President Tinubu is doing his bit for Nigeria. His opponents did their bit when they were in power. None of them was absolutely good or absolutely bad. They all have their support base, unashamedly.
Don’t feel threatened or ashamed or embarrassed or belittled for whoever you support or endorse in leadership. Nigeria’s challenges aren’t tied to one politician. Nigerian challenges are a reflection of who the people are, both the leaders and the followers.
It is only an irresponsible lot that fails to pinpoint their roles in a systematic malaise with the aim of addressing them. They will rather blame everyone else except themselves.
Your attackers are irresponsible and undemocratic. You don’t owe them the phrase “engagement is not endorsement”.
Hello Dr @abati1990,
Your attack on our military’s decimation of terrorists at the Jilli market is unreasonable and unintelligent.
Simple reasoning should tell you that the state government has the right to shut down the market, having identified it as a hangout used by terrorists. That is part of civil administration in a democratic system.
The closure of the market, and the reasons for the decision, is known to the citizens of the community. Therefore, anyone trading in that market did it illegally. It then sensible to conclude that the traders found there were sympathizers and enablers of terrorism in the region. They have a choice to do ethical business, instead.
It is an aberration of your ‘intelligent self’ to tow that line of argument. You listen to your argument again. It doesn’t make any rational sense. It is uncharitable to our security officials for anyone to refer to their efforts, in this instance, as a war crime.
Your analysis this morning may undermine our security and subtly encourage locals to provide support for terrorists.
@EsosaPaul Yes, I wore suit. That’s some resemblance of rationality and sanity. It’s good use of my urgent 2k.
But you display an ideology that gets advise from mad people. I sincerely wish you healing from your infirmity.
Btw, 👇🏾
https://t.co/3xpyCZ5eYD
My dear @ruffydfire, you’ve now shifted goalpost—and quite amateurishly also. Like a Division 12 reserve goalkeeper for a relegation-bound team. But I’ll be patient with you for now, my dear brother. And I will explain.
Are you aware that the payments in question are coming from bonds being raised from THE PRIVATE SECTOR: a wide range of institutional investors—including banks, pension funds, asset managers, trustees, etc?
I PUT IT TO YOU THAT, in fact, according to the AFC, “The [initial 501B bond] transaction received strong support from the pension fund investment community with about 50% of the total financing secured from Pension Fund Administrators…”
Source: https://t.co/yuHrAtoDrW
Do you know what this means? That your own pension fund administrator (PFA)—if you have one—most likely invested in the bond, which is guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the FGN.
In other words, Rufai, I put it to you that even you are very likely an investor in the bond 😂 — through your PFA (if you have one).
So it’s not like it’s “public money” or “budget money” directly at play here—it’s all coming from the private sector, and the repayments will be going directly to them, and by extension, to the millions of Nigerians who have assets invested with them.
So if you don’t trust the judgement of institutional investors—who care very much about the sanctity of their funds—or you think, in your conspiracy-clouded mind, that they’re somehow ALL conspiring to collude with the FGN to do whatever you think they’re doing, then this is 100% on you—and I suggest that first thing tomorrow morning you should contact your PFA, order them to close your account with immediate effect, and henceforth keep your pension money in your wardrobe.
And also don’t forget to ask for an audit of your PFA, for somehow conspiring with the President to (as you wildly claim) put money inside multiple approvals for the same purpose—despite my very clear explanation on this matter.
Finally, congratulations on being an investor in the power sector bond, and for contributing to a resolution to a lingering problem. Unless of course you don’t have a pension account. In which case I’d ask you to contact @PenComNig for guidance.