Tag: Gas

  • Getting graduates employed: the oil, gas industry template

    Getting graduates employed: the oil, gas industry template

    Graduate unemployment, especially among those with the requisite skills set in the oil and gas industry, has been a challenge. To solve this problem and grow indigenous manpower in the country, relevant government agencies such as the NNPC, DPR, CAC and others have a role to play, Gbubemi Peter Agbowu, writes.

    Nigeria is a petroleum rich country, and an oil and gas producing member of Organisation of Petroleum Corporation (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, in the not so distant past, before petroleum.

    One effect of our mono-economy is the lack of a diverse enough economy to accommodate the ever growing diverse Nigerian 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 of youth unemployment, and often remain unemployed for upwards of five years after graduation (NISER 2013).

    With the current high rate of youth unemployment, even among university graduates, coupled with the fact that Nigeria’s current predominant economic sector is the petroleum industry, massive strides must be made by the government to get the Nigerian graduate youths employed in this 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 whereby exemplary 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 bidders 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 youths 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 education overseas.

    Despite high academic achievement, the missing ingredient from our youth graduate, 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 due to 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, safety standards etc.

    While this is on a macro level, on a micro level, such processes and standards are company specific, 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 programs 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 this said, what is of most importance 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 oil, it must be more pragmatic now with a lower price for oil, and a glut of the commodity on 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 streamlines 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.

  • Dangote, others flag off campaign on cooking gas

    Dangote, others flag off campaign on cooking gas

    Dangote Group yesterday flagged off a nationwide pilot scheme to encourage Nigerians to embrace the use of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LP Gas), called cooking gas.

    At the event held in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Vice President of the Group and President of the Gas to Health Initiative (GTHI), Sani Dangote, said the initiative was aimed at protecting the health of Nigerians and preserve the environment from deforestation.

    Dangote, who also launched a new book by the Secretary of GTHI, Mrs. Betty Ugona, said the book addresses key issues of acceptability of LP Gas, focusing on four cardinal elements: efficiency, benefits, sensitisation and the empowerment of core users of LP Gas.

    He bought 200 copies of the book titled: “Who Cooks it Feels the Brunt.”

    “The book strikes on the root causes of low LP Gas usage and offers practical steps to achieving improved usage of LP Gas,” he said.

    Dangote said with abundance resources and a population of over 165 million, Nigeria still ranks amongst the lowest in LP Gas consumption in ECOWAS member countries, with a per capita consumption of about 1.8kg, trailing countries like Senegal at 8.46kg, Cote D’Ivoire at 9.3kg and Ghana at 10kg per capita.

    He regretted that, despite being rated as the leading producer of LP Gas in Africa, with annual production of about 3.2 million MT and 12th in global ranking, the country still ranks abysmally low in terms of consumption of LP Gas and its application to other relevant domestic, industrial and social purposes.

    According to him, about 56 per cent of energy needed for cooking within Nigeria is supplied by fuel wood (firewood), particularly in the rural areas, adding that the effect of this is the negative impact on citizens’ health, the environment and the economy.

    “Deforestation and its effects (desertification, soil erosion, landslides, etc.), which can be traced directly to the high demand for cooking energy, has become a major issue in Nigeria over the years as we currently lose about 350,000 – 400,000 hectares annually,” he said.

    Dangote said in view of its environmental and socio-economic malaise, there is an urgent need to  switch from firewood and other alternative sources of energy to LP Gas.

    “While there are a number of reasons for the low rate of success in the switch to LP Gas, inadequate awareness and sensitisation of the populace has been identified as the greatest culprit,” he added.

    He stated that the flag off of the “Operation Mama Put/Local Food Vendors Conversion to LPG Usage” nationwide project is notable, as the project is designed to take a practical approach to addressing this lack of awareness and sensitisation.

    He said: “By providing the ‘Mama Put’ women with LP Gas starter kits, the project hopes to make converts, and eventually, ambassadors of these members of the community, who will in turn create micro awareness of the benefits of LP Gas consumption.”

    Chairman of the occasion Mr. Anthony Ogbuigwe regretted that despite that Nigeria produces 10 times the LP Gas it consumes,  the country ranks very low in Africa.

    Mrs. Ugona attributed the success of the campaign to the support of its sponsors, which include Mr. Dangote, saying that the initiative has also received support from market women. They are those in Utako Market, Garki International Market, Garki Model Market, Mpape Market Yanyan Market and Kubwa market among others.

    She said studies have shown that about 2.6 billion people around the world rely on traditional use of bio-mass for cooking and heating purposes, which results in the inhalation of toxic fumes leading to over four million premature deaths annually.

    At the event, the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Environment, who was represented by a Deputy Director, Mrs. Osunkoya O, said the ministry was ready to support the initiative as its aims were in line with those of the ministry.

    She said deforestation and gas flaring were of utmost concern to the ministry. “The initiative will without doubt help in the protection and preservation of the environment and the forest in particular,” she said.

    The Chief Operating Officer (CEO) of Ultimate Gas Limited and Public Relations Officer of the initiative, Mr. Auwalu Ilu, said the initiative became necessary in view of the health hazards the use of firewood poses to Nigerians.

  • Nsukka residents seek exploration of gas, crude deposits

    Nsukka residents seek exploration of gas, crude deposits

    A natural gas and oil well discovered about 50 years ago at Ehalumona in Nsukka Local Government Area of Enugu State has remained untapped since its discovery.

    The residents have expressed the desire to see exploration activities at the site.

    The natural gas and oil deposit in the area is said to be in large commercial quantity and estimated to last for over 50 years.

    An indigenous oil and gas company, Seveen Energy was said to have acquired the site for exploration but abandoned it for what insiders called political interference.

    The vast gas site was first discovered by CGG Company prior to the Nigerian Civil War in 1966. It has been overgrown with weeds and left in a deplorable state.

    The untapped crude deposit found in abundance in the area has traces of the same deposits in other communities in Nsukka and also cut across local governments in the area.

    The areas that have traces of the crude deposits include Obollo Ekeh, Ezebinagu, Isi Uzo, amomg others.

    The major base of the oil is in Ehalumona and it has about 30% petrol and 70% natural gas deposits.

    The residents of the oil rich communities   have expressed worry over the inability of the indigenous company, Seveen Energy to carry on further explorative activities since the Federal Government awarded it since 2013.

    The residents dislosed that the Seveen Energy company had carried out a siesmic operation they termed environmental impact assessment in February 2014 at the abandoned oil zone.

    In  2008 the huge natural gas deposit attracted Geokinetic Gas and Oil Plc, for further exploration of the site but failed to continue.

    A community leader, Cletus Akor disclosed that prior to the Nigerian civil war in 1966, the oil and gas deposits had earlier attracted CGG company where they carried it’s first seismic exploration but couldn’t continue as a result of the severity of the civil war.

    The community youth leader, Oji Uzo expressed his dissatisfaction over the abandoned oil-rich zone, describing it as a waste of both human and capital resources.

    He said: “This type of thing should not be joked with. Look at an endowment being overlooked, something that would have been a source of employment opportunities for jobless Nigerian youths is overgrown by grasses. When this company first came here, our youth were employed as labourers and some worked in other lucrative positions, but look at how delapidated it is, a treasure of a nation.

    “They told us that they would test the natural gas which they did and carried a half tanker of the crude gas for test, but we have not heard from them again.”

    Also, Mr. Jonathan Ugwuanyi disclosed that apart from the Natural gas located in the area that there are untapped natural resources like Gold, Coal, among other resources located in the area.

    The traditional ruler of Ezebinagu /Ehandiagu communities,  Igwe Daniel Ugwuanyi expressed his belief that the company may begin exploration of the natural gas soon.

    He said: “If this gas deposit is explored, it will create job opportunities for the people as well as a source of revenue for the Federal and State government.”

    He said that the gas deposit would likely foster the construction of the much neglected Nsukka, Ehalumona, Ehandiagu, Mbu-Ikem road,” he said.

    He therefore apealed to the State and Federal government to react positively to the abandoned huge gas deposit located in Ezebinagu/ Ehandiagu communities.

     

  • DPR begins licensing of cooking gas retailers

    As part of measures to reduce frequent cases of cooking gas accidents, the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) has commenced the process of licensing cooking gas retailers.

    The move, according to the President of Liquefied Petroleum Gas Retailers (LPGAR), Association, Mr. Michael Umudu, was also aimed at ridding the sector of quacks and unlicensed professionals.

    Umudu stated this at a safety awareness campaign organised by the Lagos chapter of LPGAR in Lagos state. He said the high rate of cooking gas accidents across the country remained a cause for concern to the association, hence, the decision of the DPR.

    He said the safety awareness campaign was put together by the association to equip its members ahead of the licensing exercise by DPR while also building members’ capacity to be in tune with latest safety trends. The awareness programme, he said, was in line with Health Safety and Environment (HSE) practice in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry.

    The Chairman, Lagos chapter of LPGAR, Mr. David Okenwa said the training had become imperative in view of the growing demand for cooking gas as an alternative to kerosene and firewood. Okenwa said: “Many of our members don’t know much about the safety aspect of this business. That is why we engaged a consultant who will train them on the safety aspect because there are cases of related to gas hazards in the country.

    “As an association, we have deemed it fit to bring our members to the classroom to widen the scope of their knowledge base so that they will be more careful when carrying out their duty.”  He warned that any member found wanting in any fire incident related case after the training, will be dealt with according to the rules governing the association.

    The Managing Director of Crownbondis Global Resources Nigeria, an HSE consultant, Mr. Adebiyi Adewale, said gas retailers as the last link, must be adequately equipped with the knowledge of safety handling of gas in order to reduce the cases of gas accidents.

    Safety tips given to retailers during the training included how to transfer LPG from bigger cylinders to smaller ones, proper kits to use; checking expiring date of cylinders; how to check for leakages, and the consequences of not adhering to safety standards.

  • Gas to flood market soon, says group

    Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) will soon flood the market Petroleum Gas Association of Nigeria (LPGAN) president Dapo Adesina has said.

    He said the product is coming from the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas Limited (NLNG) based in Bonny, Port Harcourt, Rivers State. Adesina said the supply is imperative in order to buoy availability and minimise the stress consumers have gone through in recent times to buy the product.

    Adesina dismissed allegations that the scarcity of the product was caused by technical problems. He said market forces were responsible for the shortage and slight increase in the price of LPG by operators, adding that NLNG has promised to replenish the market with the product.

    He said the scarcity of LPG in the country, was caused by the forces of supply and demand, and not technical issues. “In the past few weeks, the demand for LPG has outstripped supply in the country. The moment LPG vessels berth in Lagos from Port Harcourt, people waste no time in demanding for the product. Consumption of cooking gas has increased in the past few months because more people have seen the need to use it because it is a safer, healthy and friendly source of energy for domestic and industrial purposes,” he added.

    According to him, LPG consumption will exceed 350,000 tonnes in Nigeria before the end of 2015, in view of the fact that the demand for the product has increased.

    “The computation of the volume or tonnes of LPG consumed in a year is normally done at the end of the fourth quarter. By that time, operators must have compiled all the records of LPG supplied by NLNG, and consumed in the country. In 2014, 350,000 tonnes of LPG was consumed in Nigeria. Given the fact that the demand for LPG has increased in 2015, the consumption figure will be more than 350,000 when it is computed,” he added.

  • Nigeria, Ghana to settle $185m gas pipeline debt dispute

    The Nigerian and Ghanaian governments have supported amicable resolution of the $185 million owed the West African Gas Pipeline Company (WAPCo) and gas suppliers by the Volta River Authority’s (VRA) of Ghana.

    The West African Gas Pipeline Company Limited (WAPCo) is a limited liability company, which owns and operates the West African Gas Pipeline (WAGP). WAPCo is a joint venture between public and private sector companies from Nigeria, Benin, Togo and Ghana with a mandate to transport natural gas from Nigeria to customers in Benin, Togo and Ghana in a safe, responsible and reliable manner, at prices competitive with other fuel alternatives.

    The WAPCo Managing Director, Mr. Walter Perez, had told reporters that owing to the huge debt, gas delivery to VRA would be curtailed. The cut in gas supply to VRA, it was learnt, would negatively affect electricity supply to Ghana; hence the governments of the two countries have intervened to ensure that such action is not implemented.

    Currently, VRA and its gas shipper, N-Gas (a joint venture company owned by NNPC, Shell and Chevron that delivers gas through the West African Gas Pipeline Company (WAGPCo) to Ghana), are in discussion, with the support of governments of the two countries. The outcome of the discussion would determine if WAPCo and N-Gas would go ahead with the plan to curtail gas supply to VRA.

    Perez said: “Since August 2014, VRA has received natural gas and pipeline-related transportation services totaling $231 million through the West African Gas Pipeline (WAGP). As of today, VRA has paid only $46 million of this amount. Of the outstanding balance of $185 million, VRA owes $109 million to WAPCo with the balance being owed to the other parties in the gas supply chain.

    “ WAPCo has regularly engaged VRA, the Ghana Public Utilities and Regulatory Commission (PURC), the relevant ministries, and even the highest level of the government to find a solution to this situation before it reached crisis level.  Unfortunately, these efforts have not achieved the desired result.

    “Just one month ago, WAPCo received a formal notification from VRA’s gas shipper, N-Gas, that deliveries to VRA should be curtailed effective 16 October 2015.  In doing so, N-Gas informed WAPCo of the intent of one of its major gas suppliers, Nigeria National Petroleum Company (NNPC), to curtail gas supply as a result of N-Gas being in payment default due to the inability of VRA to settle its gas supply and gas transportation invoices.”

    He continued:“We are very certain those in positions of authority in Ghana are fully aware of this information, and we are hopeful they are taking appropriate action to prevent curtailment.  Otherwise, WAPCo is contractually obligated to curtail deliveries to VRA.

    “WAPCo management is keenly aware and sensitive to the effect that this directive from N-Gas could have on power generation in Ghana.”

  • Duke Energy stakes $4.9b on Piedmont Natural Gas

    Duke Energy Corp, the largest U.S. power company by generation capacity, said it would buy Piedmont Natural Gas Co for $4.9-billion (U.S.) in cash, helping expand its natural gas distribution business.

    Duke offered $60 in cash for each Piedmont share, representing a premium of about 42 per cent premium to the stock’s Friday close.

    A glut of supply from shale fields has ensured relatively stable pricing for natural gas distributors such as Piedmont.

    This has prompted a number of U.S. power producers to boost their natural gas infrastructure and lower dependence on power generation as demand for electricity weakens due to increased energy efficiency.

    Southern Co said in August it would buy AGL Resources Inc for about $8-billion in cash.

    Duke and Piedmont are also among the partners in the $5-billion 550-mile (885-km) Atlantic Coast pipeline, which moves gas from Pennsylvania’s Marcellus shale field to North Carolina and Virginia. AGL resources also has a five per cent stake in the pipeline.Duke sells power to 7.3 million customers in North and South Carolina, Florida, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky at rates set by state regulators. It also provides regulated natgas services to about 500,000 customers in Ohio and Kentucky.

    Piedmont has about 1 million customers in North and South Carolina and Tennessee.

  • Oil and gas operations: rights and obligations

    Oil and gas operations: rights and obligations

    Also, certain interests can be created in oil and gas exploration. These interests are based on the parties’ interests and background.

     

    Concessions

    Concession is one of the main interests that can be created. It is the agreement which hands over and transfers certain interest in a property to another person. It has been used for a long time in many parts of the world for transfer of interest in land and resources from one party to the other. The interest is normally not an outright sale or purchase but for a certain period of time. This is usually between the company and the state that has petroleum embedded in its land. It does not involve complete transfer of the land but it signifies the permission by the owner to the company that wants to work upon and se the land

     

    Traditional Concession

    This is an agreement whereby the oil company received the exclusive right to explore for petroleum and if petroleum was discovered, to produce, market and transport the oil and gas. In return, the company paid specified costs and taxes. These concessions had certain characteristics. The area was often very large. In many cases it extended over the whole land in the nation. The duration was very long, usually between forty years to seventy-five years. They were in respect of very large areas of land of the host country. In Nigeria for example, the concession granted to Shell in 1938 was in respect of the entire mainland of Nigeria. It usually had exclusive ownership of and was free to dispose of them as it deemed fit.

     

    Modern Concession

    Modern concession is similar to the traditional concession in many ways. It is also an arrangement whereby the oil company receives the exclusive right to explore for petroleum and if petroleum was discovered, to produce, market and transport it. The company pays specified costs and taxes to the State that has the crude oil. Under this type of concession “the company has rights over the produced petroleum and owns it as from the point of extraction.” It is now called by various names such as licence or lease, but it is still the most widely used type of agreement. The duration is normally for an initial period of twenty years. The area of coverage has also been reduced. The company is usually given rights only in respect of crude oil and sometimes natural gas. Petroleum remains at all times the property of the State in almost all agreement of this nature.

     

    Petroleum sharing contracts

    These are legal arrangements in which crude oil is shared by the parties in prearranged proportions. In a standard PSC the company bears all the risks of exploration, and is often in charge of the operations and management of the contract area. When oil is discovered in commercial qualities, the company is entitled to recoup its investments from the crude oil produced from the contract area. The remainder is then shared between the National Oil Company (NOC) of the oil producing country and the company in a predetermined proportion. Unlike the concession, ownership of petroleum discovered remains vested in the State or its NOC and the contractor does not acquire title to its share of the petroleum until the oil reaches a mutually agreed point.

    Joint Venture Agreement: A joint venture is agreement between two or more companies/parties to jointly do a business or to jointly undertake the formation of a company/ business in which the parties jointly fund and bear the risks. It is common in the oil industry to have a JVA between the host country and the international oil company. This is so as to have the two parties engage in the exploration and prospecting for oil in the country.

     

    Participation Agreements

    This agreement sets out the respective rights of partners to the joint venture. Such agreements vary in detail, because they were individually negotiated, but they remain the same in substance. Participation enables the host country exercise more control on the operations of its industry. It makes for more effective technology transfer, since the host country is likely to become more familiar with the practical aspects of the petroleum industry. Through participation, the host country’s objectives are potentially capable of fulfillment, although its effectiveness depends on the way it is implemented.

     

    Operating Agreement

    This type of agreement spells out the legal relationships between the owners of the respective leases, and lays down rules and procedures for the joint development of the area concerned, and of property jointly owned by the two parties. It gives the details of the workings and activities that the oil company is expected to do, while also stating the roles of the host country. The national oil company’s scope of work in the operation is clearly defined in this type of agreement and each party is fully aware of its responsibility under the JVA.

     

    Oil Exploration License

    and Lease

    The Petroleum Act provides in Section 2 (1) that the Minister of Petroleum may grant any of the licenses or lease created subject to the provisions of the Act.  The Act further provides that an oil exploration license shall not confer any exclusive rights over the area of the license, and the grant of an oil exploration license in respect of any area shall not preclude the grant of another oil exploration license or of an oil prospecting license or oil mining lease over the same area or any part thereof.

    Oil Prospecting License: Oil prospecting under the Petroleum Act, includes the right to explore and carry away and dispose of petroleum won during prospecting operations subject to the fulfillment of obligations imposed upon him under the Act. An oil prospecting license (OPL) can only be granted to a company incorporated in Nigeria. The holder of an oil prospecting license has the exclusive right to explore and prospect for petroleum within the area of his license. The duration of an oil prospecting license is determined by the Minister but must not exceed five years including any periods of renewal.

     

    Oil Mining Lease

    Oil mining involves the exclusive right to conduct exploration and prospecting operations or otherwise treat petroleum discovered in or under the leased area. The Act provides that the term of an oil mining lease shall not exceed twenty years. This term may however be renewed in accordance with laid down procedures stipulated by the Act. The lessee of an oil mining lease shall have the exclusive right to conduct exploration and prospecting operation and to win, get, work, store, carry away, transport export or otherwise treat petroleum discovered in or under the leased area

    Assignment of Rights: The holder of an oil prospecting license or an oil mining lease shall not assign his license or lease or any right, power or interest therein or there under, without the prior consent of the minister.

    As already stated entire ownership and control of mineral oil or petroleum and natural gas in Nigeria is vested in the Federal Government. The Federal Government may grant the following rights to companies incorporated in Nigeria, an oil exploration license OEL, an oil prospecting license (OPL) and an oil-mining lease (OML).

    One advantage of the Act from the point of view of the oil companies is that there is no delay in land acquisition for oil operation. With both oil and land now being vested in the government, procuring the necessary licenses to drill oil and leases to enter upon land are now relatively quicker and easier. On the government side, in addition to royalty and rents from oil, the government, as land owner, now receives compensation for land hitherto paid to families and communities. For the local people, once there is an acquisition of land by the government, they are only entitled to compensation for improvements to the land.

     

    Rights, obligations,

    mitigation and innovations

    Most exploration and production activities in the oil and gas industry are carried out exclusively by multinationals under joint venture contracts whereby the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), the state oil company, contributes to 55-60 percent of production contracts and claims the same ratio of total revenues. Despite the huge revenue that accrues to the nation from these resources, there is little to show for it as far as the oil producing areas are concerned. Rather they have suffered consequences of environmental pollution and other disturbing issues. S. 36 of Schedule 1 of the Petroleum Act 1969 provides for the payment of “fair” and “adequate” compensation, which refer to surface right including specified plants, crops and economic trees.

    A factor in the deteriorating economic condition of not just the Niger Delta is environmental pollution arising from careless and unmonitored oil production.  The byproduct of gas flaring continues to destroy the ecosystems of surrounding areas, and pipelines that have been constructed through numerous farmlands have ruptured, causing damage to vast areas of agricultural land.

    These are responsible for the environmental problems facing the country, but mostly the Niger Delta such as the destruction of the nitrogen cycle of the soil and plants, the contamination of water, and the extinction of plankton, fish, and other aquatic organisms.  Taking agriculture and fishing industry into account as the primary source of subsistence for a large portion of the Nigerian population, making up about 40 percent of the nation’s labour force, the current destruction of the ecological balance translates into depressed income and widespread poverty.

    Another factor is the large amount of displacement that has occurred over the course of oil exploration and production.  As stated earlier, land falls under the direct control and management of the state governor, or under the local government of the rural areas.  The act allows designated government officials to grant statutory rights of occupancy to any land, and this has been used to expropriate farmlands for the use of the oil companies.

    Since the law has been passed, a large number of families from the oil communities have lost their farmlands to claims on areas for oil production and transportation alone. Land in Nigeria represents a fundamental safety net for a great number of people who have traditionally depended on it for subsistence agriculture and various indigenous medicines.  Important food crops such as cassava, pepper, garri, and cocoyam have all been subject to poor yields over the past few decades.  Other crops such as yellow yam, one of the most commonly grown specie of yam in many communities, have all together disappeared from local markets, as evidence of serious pollution.

    Aside from crude oil, industrial wastes from exploration activities and refinery emissions, coupled with thermal pollution from gas flar

  • Debt cripples gas supply to power

    Debt cripples gas supply to power

    The huge debt incurred by operators in the gas value chain, is hindering electricity generation and distribution in the country, the Group Managing Director, Aiteo Power, Dr Ransome Owan has said.

    He said stakeholders were only looking at the issue of perennial gas scarcity from the angle of pipeline vandalism, without considering the financial bottlenecks affecting the transportation and utilisation of gas in the power sector.

    He said the issue of payment for gas used in firing turbines is becoming a challenge among stakeholders especially the gas producers, and power plants owners.

    Owan, who spoke during a stakeholders’ forum in Lagos, said gas producers, power generation companies (GenCos) and power distribution companies (DisCos) have stories to tell on the issue of payment for gas supplied and utilised.

    He said: “If you ask gas producers how much they are being owed by power generation firms, they would tell you it is a lot of money. Also, the gas powered plants are being owed by DisCos, which do not have enough money to pay for the electricity they buy from GenCos. Based on this, the issue of debt affects all stakeholders in the value chain.

    “This means that gas pipeline vandalism is not the only critical problem in the power sector. The issue of debt, arising from inability of the operators to pay for gas is another major problem besetting the growth of the sector.”

    Also speaking, the Managing Director,  Frontier Oil Limited, Thomas Dada, said further investment is required in the gas sector in order to ensure availability of the product to improve power generation.

    He said there are whole lots of problems affecting the growth of the power sector, advising the Federal Government, gas producers, and other stakeholders to work together in order to make the gas market stronger and competitive.

  • ‘Oil, gas sector earnings audit  report out soon’

    ‘Oil, gas sector earnings audit report out soon’

    The audit report on oil and gas sector earnings for 2013 would be made public before the end of  this year, the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI),  has said.

    The audit is expected to establish how much money  the country earned from the oil sector within the period and bring to the lime light how much crude oil that was produced and how much of it was exported within the given time.

    Again, the report would  explain the processes used to manage the revenues that accrued to the government from from the oil and gas sales and how the revenues were managed. On the other hand, it would give specific answers to how much the country earned from petroleum profit tax, royalty, grants and concessions.

    NEITI Director of Communications,  Ogbonnaya Orji, in a telephone interview, said the report would also be able to make the difference between what the government received from oil and gas revenue and from all other sources and what the companies actually paid.

    He said: “We will establish from the audit if there was a difference between what companies said they paid in terms of tax, royalty, and other revenues and then find out if what they said they paid was what the government said they received or if there was a  variance.

    “We will also find out if companies paid what they were supposed to pay and if the government received what it is supposed to receive because in the past, companies had made claims that they paid so much while the government would say it received so little; we want to find out if that gap exists,” he said, adding that the report would establish if there were cases of over payment or under assessment of taxes.

    He said as soon as the report is ready, it would be made public to the media, civil societies, members of the National Assembly, adding that it would be used to ask informed questions and initiate debate that would help ongoing reforms in the sector.

    While commending the recent publication of financial statement by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), he urged the  oil firm to be more  transparent and accountable adding that its activities needed to be more in the public domain.

     

    He said there was the need for the NNPC to share more information on the internal reforms that are going on currently.

    “It needs to be faster and again there is the need for more information on what has been done and what needs to be done”, he uttered

    “We need them to support their information and communication department to come out almost weekly or monthly to brief Nigerians on what exactly is going on within the organization. For the reason that over 70 percent of the country’s revenue is coming from that organization, if anything goes on well with the NNPC it largely affects the wellbeing of Nigerians, and if anything goes wrong it will also affect them adversely”

    The NEITI boss has also stressed the urgent need for the government to exploit the huge potential in the mining sector

    He said as the oil price has collapsed globally it is high time Nigeria paid more attention to the mining sector adding the country can no longer depend on oil

    He said there were abundance of gold, diamond, copper, limestone and all sorts of solid minerals available in every nooks and cranny of the country waiting to be harnessed

    He urged the government to come out with a comprehensive policy and work closely with the NEITI recommendations on information and data that we have collated that are available in the mining sector expressing the hope that the federal government would appoint an experienced minister to take over the solid mineral sector

    Orji informed that a lot of illegal mining were going on especially in the northern part of the country where according to him are very rich in these solid minerals

    “Our concern is that most of these minerals are exploited illegally by foreigners and nobody seems to be paying attention”

    Meanwhile, he expressed the commitment to be bold in its efforts to continue to inform Nigerians on whatever that is going on not only in the NNPC but also in the mining sector