Tag: Gas

  • Germany shows interest in Nigeria’s gas

    Germany shows interest in Nigeria’s gas

    Nigeria’s quest to expand its Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) market into Europe received a major boost  yesterday as a visiting German trade delegation indicated interest in the country’s gas supply.

    Leading German investors on a visit to the  Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Towers, Abuja, Vice Minister for Economic Affairs & Energy and Member of the German Parliament, Mr. Uwe Beckmeyer, said the country was seeking development of business relationship to accelerate the supply of LNG especially in the country’s ship building industry.

    Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, NNPC, Mr. Ohi Alegbe,  in a statement yesterday explained that Mr. Beckmeyer, said Nigeria’s LNG would come in handy as the country and other European industrial powers seek to cut down drastically on carbon dioxide (C02) emissions arising from heavy industrial operations since LNG is far friendlier to the environment.

    “We have a lot of interest in LNG and I think this is one special thing we should develop in the next few years. I think there is increasing demand in Europe especially as we seek to reduce emissions. It is useful for both sides to develop this special business relationship,’’ the German Vice-Minister stated.

    Welcoming the delegation, Dr. Kachikwu said the oil and gas industry was ready to embrace the interest for improved business relationship expressed by the German trade delegation noting that the Federal Government is working assiduously with other relevant stakeholders to ensure activation of LNG Trains 7 which would help accommodate potential off-takers from new markets.

  • ‘Why gas import thrives’

    ‘Why gas import thrives’

    The importation of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) from  neighbouring countries by some operators persists because of the huge profit they make.

    This is despite the efforts of the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas Limited (NLNG) to increase LPG supply and reduce the price, The Nation has learnt.

    It was gathered that some operators bring the product from Niger Republic and Chad.

    Sources, who spoke to The Nation on condition of anonymity, said importers of LPG create the impression that there is scarcity. They said such firms bring LPG from Niger and Chad to make more money, and not to help grow the market.

    Such firms try to give the impression that there is inadequate LPG in the country; as a result, they import to complement supply from the NLNG.

    The sources said: “There was no iota of truth in that claim. The reason is because NLNG has the capacity to double supply of the product in the country. In fact, the company has what it takes to provide more than one million tonnes of Liquefied Petroleum Gas to the market. After all, NLNG started supply with 150,000 tonnes, and later increased it to 300,000 tonnes. Given this, the firm can provide more than a million tonnes of LPG as far as the market is ready to absorb it.”

    The Manager, Marketing/Development, NLNG, Abdulkadir Ahmed, corroborated this assertion during  a stakeholders’ forum in Lagos,  saying the   company has increased the supply of the product from 150,000 metric tonnes in 2007 to 350,000 metric tonnes in 2014.

    He said the firm was able to achieve this feat, despite problems, such as lack of inadequate vessels, that would bring the product from NLNG’s base in Port Harcourt to Lagos, inefficiency in shipping operation and its attendant huge freight cost, and uneven distribution channels.

    He said other challenges include absence of functional gas cylinder manufacturing companies in Nigeria, importation  of cylinders and other accessories into the country, poor funding caused by inability of  many people to get capital  to start the business, and delays at the LPG terminals, among others.

    He said analysis of the LPG supply chain and key problems in the sub- sector carried out by NLNG, shows that the commodity is not without market. He said the problems are surmountable, stressing that NLNG was working to fix the problems.

    Also, the Federal Government has ordered the North Oil Jetty (NOJ) and NAFGAS, the two terminals in Lagos, to give priority to the supply of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) otherwise known as petrol to reduce scarcity of fuel in the country. The development has affected the distribution delay of LPG at the terminals

  • How to boost oil, gas reserves, by operators

    President Muhammdu Buhari has been asked to  encourage exploration and production to boost oil and gas reserves.

    Oil chiefs gave the charge at Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN) dinner/awards, night in Lagos.

    They issued robust  and continuous consultations with the government to create an all-inclusive and implementable policies that would keep the sector productive and competitive.

    PETAN Chairman Mr. Emeka Ene, who is also the managing director of  Oildata Energy Group, said the crude oil reserves might not enable the country realise its long-term economic objectives if urgent measures were not taken to boost exploration and increase oil reserves, which were being depleted.

    He noted that robust oil and gas reserves form the basis for increased production, adding that exploration and drilling is best done during periods of low oil prices, which is now.

    He urged the government to follow the steps of other oil producers in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), where he said that drilling rig counts have sharply risen since the fall in oil prices began resulting also in reduced cost of services.

    Ene, the immediate past Chairman of the Nigerian Council of Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE), said Nigeria’s long-term economic aspirations were at stake because investments in exploration had fallen resulting in drastic reduction in fields, which gave rise to redundancy and massive staff lay-offs across the industry’s value chain.

    He said PETAN can provide leadership in the service sector by providing a model for value-added local content, which guarantees significant cost reduction, and a stimulus for increased drilling and production activities.

    He urged the government to provide stable medium to long-term economic aspirations by diligently working to actualise the planned oil reserves of 40 billion barrels, daily production of four million barrels per day, monetisation of gas resources, and increase in local content activities for the advancement of indigenous capacity and job creation.

    Managing Director Seplat Petroleum Development Company Plc and former President of Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE), Mr. Austin Avuru, said low oil reserves is not good for Nigeria considering the contribution of the oil and gas sector to the economy.

    He said Nigeria is seriously feeling the impact of oil price crash because it failed to build a robust sovereign wealth fund that would have cushioned price fall shock.

    He said the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) countries were driving exploration and production with sovereign wealth funds despite the low oil prices, while Nigeria is cash constrained to carry out such activities.

    Avuru corroborated Ene’s position on the need for medium to long-term economic plans, adding that little or no exploration in the industry means the nation’s lean oil and gas reserves can no longer provide support for economic projections.

    Avuru said oil production from onshore and shallow water environments has fallen from 2.4 million barrels per day to 1.2 million barrels per day (mbpd), adding that production from the deepwater which should have increased the  production has merely ended up only stabilising output at 2.4 mbpd.

    Domestic gas demand, according to him, has jumped from the previous 300 million standard cubic feet per day (mscf/d) to 1.0 billion scf/d. He projected that demand will jump to 3.0 billion scf/d by 2017. “The projected domestic gas demand is about four times more than what the country’s estimated gas reserves can support,” he added.

    Outstanding industry players conferred with awards include the  late Dr Rilwanu Lukman, Dr Emmanuel Egbogah, Gaius Obaseki, Sanni Bello, and Mutiu Sunmonu, Mrs. Callista Azogu, Charles Ngoka and Ugo Ralph Ekezie.

    Others include Shawley Coker, Pedro Egbe, Steven Aribeana, Sam Adegboyega, Dr Diran Fawibe and Emeka Okwuosa.

    Corporate award winners include Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), Neconde Limited and First bank Plc. They recognised for their contributions to the development of the oil industry in 2015.

    The event ended with meetings, conferences and other industry forums with members of PETAN, Nigerian Association of Indigenous Petroleum Companies (NAIPEC), Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE) and the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE), among others in attendance.

  • Content Board, banks discuss  long-term loans to oil, gas firms

    Content Board, banks discuss long-term loans to oil, gas firms

    The Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), has started  engaging banks to find ways of providing long-term funding to oil and gas firms, the Executive Secretary,  Denzil Kentebe, has  said.

    Kentebe, who spoke on the sideline of the Load-Out and Sail-Away ceremony of Chevron’s Sonam Non-Associated Gas Wellhead Platform (Sonam NWP), built by Hyundai Heavy Industries and Nigerdock in Lagos at the weekend, said the discussion has become imperative to enable banks move away from the current short term facilities to oil and gas companies, as the oil industry projects are long tenured.

    He said the Board has been in discussion with banks on the issue. “Discussion with banks to ensure they (banks) don’t put pressure on oil firms is nothing new to us, because we have over time been engaging the bankers and that has been one of the areas we have been pushing them to make sure we have facilities that last for quite long and not just short term facilities.”

    He debunked allegations that the Nigerian Content Fund has remained idle while many players in the  industry couldn’t access funds to execute their jobs, or projects.

    Kentebe, who refused to be drawn as to the current value of the Fund, or the amount so far disbursed, said Nigerian companies are utilising the Fund, “therefore it is not idle,” he added.

    He said: “The Nigerian Content Fund is not idle. The Fund is being utilised by Nigerian companies. For instance, Ladol, which is in Lagos, is taking advantage of the facility, and a lot of other companies. We are doing all we can to make sure Nigerians are more aware of the Fund’s availability. We are also engaging the banks to ensure that the banks release information at their disposal that can help their clients on the standards of the facilities that can be tapped into.”

    He expressed concern over the job loss in the industry on account of low oil prices in the international market.

    The Nigerian Content Development Fund (NCDF) as at April last year, had about $540 million. The Fund was established by the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Act (NOGIC Act), 2010 to address financial and liquidity challenges of local companies that operate in the oil and gas industry.

    The Fund is built through contribution of one per cent from every contract awarded to any operator, contractor, subcontractor, alliance partner, or any other entity involved in any project, operation, activity or transaction in the upstream sector. It is deducted at source by contract awarding entities and paid into designated accounts which are kept with Custodian Banks under the programme

  • ‘How to mitigate pressure of US gas market control’

    Developing Olokola multi-billion dollar liquefied natural gas project to attract foreign direct investment (FDI),  increasing investment in the liquefied and petroleum gas (LPG) sub-sector, and fertiliser plants, among others, are some of the ways the Federal Government can galvanise the potential in the domestic gas market and further reduce impact of the  impending dominance of the United States in the global gas market, experts have said.

    The experts, including Dr Adebayo Ayoade of the University of Lagos (UNILAG) and Prof Adeola Akinnisiju, the former President, International Association of Energy Economics ( IAEE), said the launch of the first cargo exporting liquefied natural gas (LNG) into the international market, last week by the US, and the country’s resolve to produce 84.3 million tons of gas yearly would not have much impact on Nigeria’s LNG market, if the Federal Government can grow  the nation’s domestic gas industry well.

    Ayoade urged the government to focus more on developing the gas potential locally in order to generate more revenues, instead of seeing export of gas, and other initiatives implemented by the US as a threat to Nigeria’s foreign earnings. He said Olokola gas project holds huge potentials, adding that it would earn more revenues for the government when it is well developed.

    Ayoade, a Senior Lecturer in Energy Law, said Nigeria would be under pressure to reduce the price of its gas in the event that more countries buy gas from US. He said: “To avert pressure from the impending US dominance of the oil and gas market, Nigeria has to look for more buyers, while at the same time, develop its domestic gas market. One way of doing this is to develop Olokola oil and gas project to a level that it would attract foreign direct investments into Nigeria.”

    Also, Akinnisiju said US gas supply in the market would outstrip demands in the nearest future, urging the Federal Government to fashion out plans of increasing gas exports for growth. Currently, Nigeria exports 22milliion tons of gas, far below the 84.3 million tons, which US is planning to produce annually.

    He said: “Anywhere there is an increase in supply of a product and the demand is not increasing at the same time, there is going to be a problem. Now that US is planning to increase its gas supply to the market.”

    Akinnisiju said the larger percentage of gas produced by Nigeria is associated in nature, stressing that the country would not find it easy to produce huge quantity of natural gas.

    The Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) is a major contributor to national earnings, and has generated $85 billion (about N17 trillion) from exports since its inception 15 years ago. Therefore, efforts by the Federal Government to develop gas market locally would bring in more money, which is good for the country.

  • Invest in gas infrastructure, expert tells operators

    The 678-kilometre West African Gas Pipeline (WAGP) can transform the region into an investment hub, if stakeholders invest in gas infrastructure, Head, Energy and Power, Ecobank Plc, Mrs Olufunke Jones has said.

    She said the pipeline, which cuts across Nigeria, Ghana and other countries in the sub-region, can transform the economic landscape.

    Speaking during a stakeholders’ forum on Wednesday, last week in Lagos, Mrs Jones urged operators to assemble and transport gas molecules to where they are required for socio-economic growth.

    She said operators would benefit if there is increased investment in gas infrastructure.

    Mrs Jones said: ‘’The challenge we are facing in the power sector is not that of turbines, but that of aggregating the gas potentials for growth. Stakeholders should try and increase investment in gas infrastructure. Once they are able to do this, access to gas by users across the broad spectrum of oil and gas industry, would not be a problem. Besides, the price of gas is going to be competitive and the better for players in the industry.’’

    She urged operators to look for ways to access funds, and invest in critical components of the oil and gas sector.

    Mrs Jones said debts would reduce once the power distribution companies (DisCos) adopt what she described as ‘’Strategic Debt Collection Method.’’

    ‘’What I mean by strategic collection is that the DisCos should strategise on how to increase revenue collections from 60 to 65 per cent; 67 to 70 per cent; and thereafter move to 80 per cent or 100 per cent. This is possible if stakeholders can do the needful by increasing, investment in the gas industry,’’ she added.

  • Govt cancels oil/gas pre-shipment tender

    The Federal Government has cancelled the engagement of Pre-shipment inspection and monitoring agents for the oil and gas industry.

    The Minister Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, who gave the directive said the cancellation followed complaints and petitions alleging irregularities during their engagement.

    A statement signed by the  Director,  Press, Marshall Gundu, said Mrs Adeosun ordered the immediate cancellation of the tendering process for the engagement of Pre-Shipment Inspection and Monitoring Agents for Oil and Gas. The decision was necessitated by the receipt of numerous complaints and a petition regarding alleged irregularities in the process.

    It said President Muhammadu Buhari had in June this year, “mandated the Federal Ministry of Finance, under the then  Permanent Secretary, Mrs. Anastasia Nwoabia, to commence the process of engaging Pre-Shipment Inspection and Monitoring Agents. Upon the approval of the Bureau of Public Procurement, a selective tendering process was initiated under which 65 companies were selected and invited to bid.

  • Getting graduates into oil, gas industry

    Getting graduates into oil, gas industry

    Many graduates with requisite skills are finding it difficult to get jobs in the oil and gas industry. The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and others have a role to play to solve this problem, Gbubemi Peter Agbowu writes.

    Nigeria is a petroleum rich country, and an oil and gas producing member of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) since 1969. The advent of oil production turned Nigeria from a multi-sectoral economy to a mono-economy, with oil and gas providing about 95 per cent of export earnings and 70 per cent of government revenue.

    This is an obvious negative economic trend, known as the ‘Dutch Disease”. Pundits have agreed that for the country to attain its true growth potential, it must rekindle other sectors of the economy; sectors for which it ironically had comparative advantages before petroleum.

    One effect of our mono-economy is its inability to accommodate the ever growing population, majority of which are youths.

    The age structure of the populace is as follows: 0-14 years account for 43.2 per cent, 15-24 years account for 19.3 per cent, while 25-54 years age group accounts for 30.5 per cent of our population.

    This results in a youth dependency ratio of 84 per cent (CIA World Fact Book). These numbers vividly show Nigeria’s massive current and future youth population.

    Of this youth cross-section, 50 per cent are unemployed, with graduates of tertiary institutions making about 20 per cent, and often remain unemployed for upwards of five years after graduation (NISER 2013).

    With the current high  rate of youth unemployment  among university graduates, coupled with the fact that petroleum still remain our mainstay, serious efforts should be made  to get graduate  youths employed in the sector.

    In Europe, since the 2008 financial crisis, there has been an increase in youth unemployment, although varied among its different countries.

    One unifying trend, based on research and experience, is that young people who do not get attached to the labour market at an early stage upon graduation, risk being permanently excluded from the job market.

    Such exclusion could have severe consequences not only on the personal level, but also for the long term social and financial sustainability of the country. Nigeria currently faces this dilemma, with a staggering number of its youths plagued with unemployment.

    Furthermore, its university graduates are faced with the usual trend of never being able to find employment, years after graduation. The burning questions are: how do we get these able bodied, qualified individuals into the workforce?

    How do we get a graduate employed in the oil and gas industry; the mainstay of the economy? How can these graduates be ushered from school leaver status to employment?

    The answer lies in Federal  Government’s ability to initiate and execute policies that would stimulate opportunities and assimilation of qualified graduates into the oil and gas sector.

    Nigerian Petroleum Exchange (NIPEx) oversees both the e-marketplace and the Joint Qualification System (JQS) for electronic procurement, contracting and registration of contractors/service providers respectively.

    This has been a welcomed development by Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) since its inception, and has helped to ensure transparency in the contracting process and reduction in the contract approval cycle in the oil and gas industry.

    A  recommendation is to use the NIPEx process to aid the transition of graduates into the oil and gas workplace. This can be achieved by enabling a process where graduates with outstanding results in oil and gas-related degrees are able to register their details into the Nipex portal.

    The system would require validation and attestation of the credentials of these recent graduates. The portal would maintain a high level of “graduate pool”, and will be organised according to their various disciplines.

    When there are Invitation to Tenders (ITTs) issued by the oil and gas companies for various projects, via the portal; depending on the scope of work, most call to tenders require each prequalified bidder to submit its man-power and staffing plan, complete with CV’s, showing the bidding company’s ability to successfully execute the proposed work.

    It is at this juncture that the National Petroleum Investment Management Services (NAPIMS) in conjunction with Nigeria Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) mandates a policy that man-power from the graduate pool in the portal is assigned to each bidder’s bid package submitted in NIPEx.

    This ensures that regardless of which bidder wins the contract, it would have absorbed highly competent graduate staff who would get their much needed assimilation into the industry.

    This exercise will be an advantage, not just for the graduate that is being placed, but for the contractor, who sometimes finds it difficult to find quality personnel with oil and gas related degrees. Another avenue is for the government to initiate policies that would easily enable the youth to be part of a registered and licensed local content oil and gas company, and provide measures that would pave the way for these companies integration into the Nigerian oil and gas industry.

    A way of achieving this is for the government to begin a programme which mandates the Nigerian Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) to subsidise the costs and simplify the process of company registration for qualified graduates.

    This subsidisation and simplification process will be afforded to groups of youth graduates that have come together to form a company with the intention of operating in the oil and gas industry, with the support of the government.

    To qualify, the group of shareholders in the company must either have the same discipline, forming a specialist company, or have different but complimentary disciplines.

    An important requirement to qualify for this status would be that at least one of the shareholders of the proposed company must have at least 10 years of oil and gas industry experience in the companies proposed area of specialisation.

    This is to bridge the gap of inexperience within the company. This would mean that recent graduates would need to align with an experienced industry professional.

    Such a scheme is not only advantageous to a fresh graduate, but would prove beneficial to an industry worker with valuable work experience, but currently out of a job; or industry professionals that are looking to go into private business and consulting.

    In parallel to the CAC registration programme, the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) should have a special category for these youth companies involved in this programme, to subsidise and fast track their certification process.

    The laxity involved in the certification of these companies is by no means a compromise to standard and safety, but based on the premise that these companies will be assimilated and paired with established companies with all prerequisite qualifications, certifications and accreditation should be given.

    Acceptable DPR licensing categories for this programme will be the general category and the major category, with the services to be licensed within these categories left at the discretion of DPR; depending on the qualifications and credentials of the company’s shareholders.

    Upon successful company registration and licensing by DPR, these companies should be registered with NCDMB, as a special “Youth Integration Company”.

    The aim of this status is for these companies to be assimilated into the industry, and for these companies to benefit from a training programme. While NCDMB fulfills its remit of vetting the industry procurement processes to ensure local content requirements are adhered to during the award of contracts, as directed by the Local Content Act; it should take this opportunity to mandate that these Youth Integration companies are paired with the established bidding companies, as a prerequisite for contract award.

    In turn, these youth companies will act as subcontractors to the awardee, and will be required to execute a part of the contract scope. Furthermore, as it is a requirement for all companies operating in the nation’s oil and gas industry to provide a plan and execute training for its local personnel, adequate training plans for these youth companies must be submitted by the contractor, and approved by NCDMB before the award of the contract, or start of the project.

    The contractor shall be required to provide the necessary insurance coverage and necessary guarantees to enable its paired Youth Integration Company (now subcontractor) execute its work.

     

    Labour market integration training, orientation

    There is a catch 22 situation in the sense that oil and gas companies are looking to employ candidates that possess certain skill sets which are attained through industry work experience.

    This puts our graduates in the dark, as no matter their academic achievement, they cannot attain these skills they are not privy to. In order to ease integration of the graduates into the labour force, the onus is on the government to ensure that they are taught these vital skills after graduation.

    This will bridge the gap between the academic knowledge of the graduate and the much sought after industry work place mannerism, etiquette, understanding of processes and procedures. Skills which would ordinarily only come with work experience within an oil and gas company.

    The fact of the matter is that the Nigerian graduates are intellectually competent. Despite the lacklustre, ill-equipped and badly run universities, highly competent graduates are churned out in high numbers.

    Evidence of this is the success and achievement levels of Nigerian graduates who thrive and exceed their peers in post-graduate studies  overseas.

    Despite high academic achievement, the missing ingredient from our youth graduates, which is key to employment by the oil and gas companies, is the work experience.

    Drilling down into “work experience”, what is of most importance to the hiring companies, is familiarity with the industry ethics. The reason oil and gas companies bring in expatriates to man their projects in Nigeria is not solely due to their technical competence, but also their industry ethics.

    The evidence of having worked in varying projects across the world is proof that the individual is knowledgeable in the industry’s code of conduct, business ethics, procedures, processes, and safety standards.

    While this is on a macro level, on a micro level, such processes and standards are company specifics, as individual companies have their specific modus operandi. This is particularly the case with multinational companies with huge operations across the world.

    The aim of such standards is unification of its global operation, where a worker in for instance, Brazil can easily come to work in a project in Scotland with a very short learning curve.

    This is the reason a firm such as Chevron will prefer to hire a worker that has previous Chevron experience, as he or she would know the “Chevron way”.

    As a result of this trend among the oil and gas companies, a recommendation for our government in aiding the hiring of our graduate youths, is for each NNPC Joint Venture, such as Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), Chevron Nigeria Limited (CNL), Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited (MPNU), under their Joint Operating Agreement (JOA), to set up training programmes under their JV.

    The aim of these programmes will be to furnish these youth graduates with the skillsets required to work successfully within their joint venture companies.

    The curriculum would focus on team building initiatives, company policies, procedures and job skills specifically catered to the requirements of the companies. This would enable each student’s easy assimilation into these companies, upon completion of the training and orientation.

    The training would be certified, thereby making each graduate more marketable to companies in the industry as a whole. A key advantage of the JV initiated training programme is the JVs knowledge of their upcoming projects, manpower specific requirements and the skills and disciplines needed for these projects.

    This would ensure that the training programs are fit for purpose and prepares its students for the upcoming projects. With all theses, what is  most important is for the Nigerian Petroleum industry to be stimulated.

    This is what will spur the multiplier effect that would lead to more industry activities, spending on projects and the resultant need for industry personnel; to accommodate our graduate youths.

    The Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), looming in the air for years without passage, has created the Achilles heel to any industry’s development; uncertainty.

    The uncertainty of the fiscal regime, and petroleum laws that will be in place, has prevented spending of billions of dollars on new projects in Nigeria, by the International Oil Companies (IOC’s).

    Furthermore, although Nigeria unfortunately missed out on a flurry of industry activities during the era of $100 per barrel oil, it must be more pragmatic now with a lower price for oil, and a glut of the commodity in the world market.

    What is needed is an efficient PIB that secures an appropriate amount of economic rent for the Nigerian government, but yet allows operators to continue a profitable business, particularly in riskier ventures such as deep offshore exploration, new frontier basin exploration and non-associated gas development.

    Such an environment will increase oil companies’ confidence in operating in Nigeria amidst a global downturn in global spending. Government policy is required to stir our industry further down the petroleum value chain, stimulating activity in refining and petrochemicals; to create further value from our oil, in a low priced market.

    Government policies that streamline   the process of licensing and approval of modular refineries, blending plants, and other downstream capital projects and promoting availability of feedstock for these projects is invaluable.

    These projects would create added value, increased revenue, sector growth, and much needed job opportunities for our graduate youths. In conclusion, there is no doubt that Nigeria needs to make active strides to develop its ailing real sectors such as manufacturing and agriculture to increase its growth and create jobs for its fast growing youth population.

    However, in the current state where the petroleum industry is the mainstay of the economy, and unemployment of the youth is at staggering levels, the government must step in with the right policies to guide the industry down the right path, and in parallel, ensure that qualified youths can gain employment in a more efficiently run industry amidst current global challenges

    • Agbowu, a Contracts Advisor in Saudi Aramco and a promoter, Star Delta Energy Services can be reached via email: info@stardeltaes.com; twitter: @GPAStarDelta.
  • Senate frowns at gas flaring law breach

    The Senate yesterday frowned at what it described as the blatant flouting of gas flaring law in the country by oil companies.

    The Upper Chamber said it has resolved to ensure that stakeholders adhered to the law on gas flaring.

    Chairman, Senate Committee on Gas, Senator Bassey Albert Akpan, who spoke at the inaugural meeting of the committee in Abuja, insisted that the Nigerian Gas Supply and Pricing Act, 2008 must be respected by stakeholders.

    Akpan who represents Akwa Ibom Northeast Senatorial District said the committee would engage stakeholders in the oil and gas sector and the regulators to ensure that the right thing was done in the sector.

    He noted that since law is not the respecter of any person, group or an entity those who flout the law should be punished accordingly.

    Members of the committee, he said, have discovered that the law guiding gas flaring is not being enforced by the regulators.

    He said, “For this committee, there is an Act of the National Assembly that was enacted in 2008 which is called the Nigerian Gas Supply and Pricing Act, 2008.

    “That Act actually stipulates what the domestic gas supply obligation of every single international oil company operating on the soil of Nigeria should do; the law also stipulates the penalty on the issue of gas flaring.

    “We will be engaging the various stakeholders. We will first of all talk to the regulators, the Ministry of Petroleum Resources.

    “We will talk to the NNPC, Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and we will also talk to the gas aggregator.

    “We should first of all come to terms with the fact that there is a law guiding the gas sector and then we begin to look at the areas where we can enforce the law, because what we have found out here is that the law is not being enforced.

    “One thing is to have a law, another is for you to ensure that every stakeholder, every operator adheres strictly to the conditions of the law.

    “So, we will be looking at the law because this is an era of the rule of law. The president believes in the rule of law.

    “The president believes that the oil and gas sector must be completely sanitised and that is what we are all here to do.

    “We are going to carry out a very robust oversight and we will not compromise in terms of international best practices.”

    Akpan said members of the committee will work to ensure that the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) received speedy passage.

    The passage of the bill, he said, will assist the country to increase investment in the sector.

    The lawmaker noted that there was no doubt that increase in investment would translate to increase in revenue for the country.

  • ‘Nigeria’s oil and gas facing difficult times’

    ‘Nigeria’s oil and gas facing difficult times’

    National President of the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas (NUPENG) Comrade Dr. Igwe Achese has expressed dismay over the challenges facing the oil and gas industry.

    Achese, who spoke at a national education seminar: Global Oil Politics, Investments and Employment Relations in the Nigeria’s Oil and Gas Industry,’ in Owerri, the Imo State capital, regretted that the situation had led to a drop in investment.

    “Times are really tough with the sector with the global fall in oil prices at the international market which has led divestment in some fields to retrenchment etc,” he said.

    He observed that the practice of casualisation and contract staffing has become endemic in the industry, adding that this category of workers is subjected to slavery and exploitative labour.

    He regretted that international oil companies were selling off their on-shore oil fields in Nigeria and moving to Angola, Uganda, Sierra Leone, and South Sudan, among other, countries, while NUPENG members were being retrenched with redundancies becoming the order of the day.

    Giving the current situation, Achese stressed the need for the Federal Government to look inwards by diversifying the economy, warning that the nation must not rely on oil, but should focus on other areas that would bring the needed revenue.

    While not opposed to deregulation of the downstream sector, the union urged the Federal Government to create an enabling environment to engender private investor’s interest in building refineries to provide the capacity to meet local demand.

    He praised the Federal Gvernment’s effort to fix the four refineries, adding that when they become fully operational, they can refine 440,000 barrels of oil daily.

    In a related event, the newly appointed ministers have been urged to work assiduously to address pressing issues of insecurity, high electricity tariffs, dilapidated infrastructure, unemployment, non-payment of salaries and naira devaluation.

    The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) set this agenda for the new ministers at the end of its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting in Abuja.

    The union lamented the state of the nation, especially the oil and gas industry, listing Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), crude oil theft, job insecurity, and expatriate quota as areas of focus for the ministers.