 Now, Professor Wahab Akbarli, Vice Chancellor of the University of Bilalori, argues that Nidra and public universities are not revenue-generating agencies, stating that the only chance students for services, like identification cards, internets and hostile accommodations, also noted that the University of Bilalori spends about $110 million a month on electricity services, a cost no public university can generate internally. The University of Bilalori is already addressing these issues. University is not a revenue-generating outfit, and for as long as we push the idea that all universities are generating, the only thing universities do is charge for services. For instance, students paid for ID cards. You cannot but give them the ID card. So where is that money going to come from? As we speak, I have said it over and over. On a monthly basis, University of Bilalori spends between $100 and $130 million for electricity alone. How much can we charge students to be able to meet that kind of demand? If we really want to be global players, then we need to do things differently. And that is why I believe that we are positioning ourselves as a university to the point that we should be self-sustaining. The Vice Chancellor of the Institute of Institution moves on inter-real value-addition farming on its arable campus land. It's going to be value-addition farming, real commercial farming on our campus. We are dealing with maize and soya beans. As we speak, we already have another arrangement with broad grain, the 2000 hectares. And all these are not just production in commercial quantity but with value-addition. Hello, hope you enjoyed the news. Please do subscribe to our YouTube channel and don't forget to hit the notification button so you get notified about fresh news updates.