Tag: Gas

  • ‘How Fed Govt can leverage oil, gas to diversify economy’

    RAW hydrocarbon export is hampering the Federal Government’s diversification programme, the Vice Chairman/Chief Executive Officer, Emerald Energy Resources Limited, Dr Jude O. Amaefule has said.

    He said refining crude and utilisation of gas in-country would create huge value and jobs. He noted that taking crude overseas for refinning was uneconomical.

    He cited some member-countries of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) that own refineries overseas and the importance of policies and environment that would drive the diversification goals.

    In a paper he delivered at the conference of the Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE), Nigeria Council held in Lagos, Amaefule stated that there is a linkage between the oil and non-oil sectors.

    Nigeria needs to develop a broader-based economy, diversifying its exports to ensure its growth is not affected by global price or demand shock, he added.

    In his paper entitled: “Emerging economic diversification era in Nigeria: Implications on oil and gas supply value chain and investors,” he said: “On oil and gas supply value chain, threats to petroleum export market create opportunities for refining, gas utilisation and other spin-off sectors.

    “Nigeria, as the largest market in in Africa, offers unique opportunities for investment in in the petroleum downstream sub-sector.  However, the government needs to create the required investment climate to spur economic diversification through price liberalisation, strengthened macroeconomic stability, improved independent regulatory and institutional frameworks, which encompasses governance, host communities, fiscal reforms and downstream bills, among other forward and backward linkages.”

    He noted that as the oil and gas sector prepares for gas to overtake oil as the world’s primary energy source in the mid-2030s, nearly two-thirds, about 64 per cent of the industry’s senior professionals expect to increase or sustain spending on gas projects in the year.

    He listed areas gas can be utilised to  include liquefied natural gas (LNG) for export, power, petrochemicals, natural gas liquids (NGLs), liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), urea, fertiliser, pharmaceuticals, and methanol, among others.

    He continued: “In today’s globalised economy with very complex industry interactions, the global value chain (GVC) methodology is a useful tool to trace the shifting patterns of global production, link geographically dispersed activities and actors within the oil and gas industry, and determine the roles they play in developed and developing countries alike. The GVC framework focuses on the sequences of value-added activities from conception to production and end use; thereby examining and engaging the job descriptions, technologies, standards, regulations, products, processes, and markets in specific industries and places competitive advantages.”

    On the global value chain approach, he noted some OPEC countries that have refineries in foreign countries.

    He said Abu Dhabi has refineries in Austria/Germany through the participation of OMV, where it refines 282,000 barrels per day (bpd) and also in Spain through CESPA with 360,000 bpd output.

    Saudi Arabia has refining stakes in United States, through Star Enterprise refining 625,000 bpd in conjunction with Texaco, which owns 50 per cent of the output. In Korea, it operates through Ssangyong refining 146,000 bpd and in Philippines through Petron refining 147,000 bpd as well as in Europe through Motor Oil Hellas refining 100,000 bpd.

    Kuwait refines Denmark, Netherlands and Italy through KPC and KPC/Eni in Italy with refining capacities of 56,000 bpd, 75,000 bpd and 300,000 bpd with Eni responsible for 50 per cent.

    Libya has refineries in Italy, Germany and Switzerland through Tamoil, Holborn and Collombey with refining capacities of 95,000 bpd, 78,000 bpd and 72,000 bpd. Also, Venezuela has refining stakes in the United States, Germany and Belgium/Sweden/UK, through Citgo, Ruhr Oel and Nynas with daily outputs of 725,000 bpd, 716,000 bpd with 50 per cent from VEBA and 62,000 bpd with 50 per cent from Neste. It also refines 260,000 bpd from other sources with 65 per cent from Lyon dell.’’

    He commended the operation of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) as an Incorporated Joint Venture (IJV), noting that it would allow the Corporation and operators raise money for their operations outside of the government’s budgets and controls.

    “It will allow NNPC to run as a private company and take decision privately rather than awaiting the approval of the National Assembly before it can make counterpart funding available to its partners. Under the IJV arrangements, NNPC JVs will be turned into a firm that control its own budgets, similar to gas firms, such as the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG), which sources for its own funding, pays taxes and royalties and also pays dividends to the government from its operations,” he said.

    He cited Indonesia’s diversification method. He said: “Indonesia highlights the importance of using active policies to encourage agriculture in the face of a booming oil sector. Large investments of oil income were used to develop natural gas resources, both for export to Japan and as an input to fertiliser production. Fertiliser was then distributed at subsidised prices, greatly boosting yields. Agriculture and the rural economy were strengthened by a series of successful community-based programmes that absorbed large quantities of labour and produced local infrastructure, including schools, roads and local construction. Indonesia is the 16th largest economy in the world.

    To Amaefule, in achieving diversification, there was need to look beyond the traditional approach  adopted by oil and gas firms such as cost-cutting, vertical integration, mergers and acquisition. Oil and gas firms recognising the evolution of Nigeria to a diversified economy, should develop strategies for local technological capability, retool revenue generation via further processing of hydrocarbon resources, integration into supply and global value chains to encompass higher value-added activities.

    He said the petroleum industry drives the economy as it is responsible for 10 per cent the Gross Domestic Ptroduct (GDP), 83 per cent of government revenue and 90 per cent of foreign exchange revenue.

    “Diversification within the petroleum sector is key to harnessing the linkages to the non-oil economy. This implies Investments across the various downstream sectors to develop Industries relevant in both industrial and consumer products, which Nigeria import.

    “The need to improve the climate for investment in non-oil industry may involve lowering entry requirements, streamlining tax structures and creating investment promotion intermediaries. Nigeria should develop its institutions and infrastructure towards achieving this goal,” he said.

     

  • Nigeria to become third world largest exporter of gas

    The Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Ltd, says its ongoing plans to reach a Final Investment Decision (FID) on its Train-7 project by December will make Nigeria the third World largest gas exporter.

    The NLNG General Manager Production, Mr Tayo Ogini, said this yesterday while making a presentation on the facility located at Bonny Island.

    The presentation was to acquaint the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Ibe Kachikwu who visited the plant to see the progress made on the project so far.

    According to the presentation, Nigeria is presently the fourth exporter of gas in the world.

    The NLNG has six operational trains (gas plants).

    The first train was built in 1989 but by 2007 till date, plans to build Trains 7 and 8 were shelved.

    The six trains have a combined capacity to produce 22 metric tonnes per annum (mtpa) of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG).

    However, plans to invest seven billion dollars on the Train-7 project would expand its production capacity to 30 mtpa making Nigeria the 3rd largest exporter of gas in the World after Qatar and Australia.

    Ogini said the gas produced in Nigeria was world-class, adding that the NLNG had built a reputation of reliability in its gas supplies around the world.

    According to him, the hub of crude oil exporters on the island namely: Shell SPDC, ExxonMobil and the NLNG can easily produce two million barrels of oil per day.

    Ogini said the country had 23 NLNG carriers which had sailed more than 4,000 cargoes making it the largest in Africa.

    He, however, said the companies were being faced by inadequate infrastructure, adding that with the three-year Bonny-Boro road project which the company had embarked on, part of the problem would soon be addressed.

    Responding, Kachikwu commended the NLNG management for its efficiency, saying the company was a testament to the fact that things could be properly done in Nigeria.

    He recalled that during the cash crunch of 2016, NLNG saved the day and helped to avert a shutdown of the nation’s economy.

    According to the minister of state, the Train-7 project is fantastic but Nigeria is not yet where it should be.

    He challenged the NLNG to begin to think of exporting 40 mtpa over the next 30 years, as well as tackle the issue of gas pricing as most importers of domestic gas prefer to bring in shipments than to patronise the NLNG.

    Kachikwu, who also inspected the facility, said Nigeria’s 2019 elections would not interfere with the company’s expansion plan.

    He said that whatever happened at the polls, FID on Train-7 as well as its construction would go ahead.

    On NLNG assisting Brass and Olokola LNG projects, he scored the companies 100 per cent in terms of performance.

    “We have opportunities that are stranded everywhere – Brass LNG in terms of shareholding and financing; OKLNG in terms of even taking off the ground.

    “I am saying as the grandfather of this business – they built six trains, looking at seven, hopefully potentially more. Let’s begin to look at minimal investments, through structures and designs and reconfiguration and expert advice.

    “You can actually hand-hold some of those trains that are beginning to lag behind so that the whole founding father concept of ‘take this all over the place’ can happen.

    “We are going to be reaching out to them, not from an imposition point of view but from a collaborative point of view to see what we can do and learn from what they have done well.”

    Also speaking,  the Executive Secretary,  Nigerian Content Management Development Board (NCDMB), Mr Simbi Wabote said his agency had moved to ensure the Train-7 project would be built with consideration to Nigeria’s local content law in the industry.

     

     

    “We worked with them conscientiously to ensure that the FEED contract was signed within record time and we have a clear service level agreement between ourselves and NLNG to ensure that we fast-track the contracting cycle.

    “This is also very important to ensure that we take FID at the end of the year as soon as we finish FEED work.

    “We are going to focus more with them to ensure that the letters of the law are properly interpreted in terms of construction phase of the plant as well as its management phase,’’ Wabote said.

    According to NLNG’s shareholding structure, the Nigerian government through the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) owns 49 per cent of its shares.

    Other shareholders are Shell Gas B.V. 25.6 per cent, Total Gaz Electricity Holdings France 15 per cent, and Eni International – 10.4 per cent.

    The company also recently signed agreements with consortia to embark on FEED for the Train-7 ahead of the FID in December.

     

     

  • ‘Oil, gas free zones vital for economic growth’

    The Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Oil and Gas Free Zones Authority (OGFZA), Umana Okon Umana, has said the OGFZA is a channel for conveying the nation’s growth opportunities.

    Umana stated this in an exclusive interview on the sidelines of the Africa Trade & Investment Global Summit (ATIGS) in Washington DC, United States.

    He said: “Nigeria is business ready and our oil and gas free zones are conduits of economic prosperity. Nigeria is the largest producer of oil and gas in Africa and the sixth largest in the world. The real growth of its oil sector as at first quarter of 2018 was 14.77 per cent year-on-year. In addition, we are the largest economy in Africa, the only country in Africa with dedicated oil and gas free trade zones and we are open for business.”

    Also, at an oil and gas forum in Abuja, Umana said: “The country is on a growth trajectory with a GDP growth of 1.95 per cent year-on-year as at first quarter of 2018 with a projected growth rate of 4.8 per cent.

    “The Federal, State and Local Governments are committed to maintaining this growth trend.  The Nigeria Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) is the encapsulation of this commitment; and since its implementation, Nigeria has moved 24 points up in the ease of doing business ranking according to the World Bank Ease of Doing Business Index for 2018.

  • NEITI to address oil, gas sector challenges

    The Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI), said it was commited to addressing the remedial issues in the  oil and gas sector.

    These issues include metering and measurement infrastructure, crude and product losses, payment issues, Nigerian Petroleum Development Commission (NPDC), divested assets, governance and regulatory issues. Others are production sharing contracts (PSCs), expired memorandum of understandings (MoUs), as well as domestic crude allocation and refining capacity.

    NEITI challenged the civil society and the media to wake up to their responsibilities by helping to address the remedial issues in the oil and gas sector, saying it is not something that should be left to NEITI alone.

    During a programme on civil society and media consultations on remedial actions with the theme: “Fixing the gaps together: Towards a collaborative approach to extractive sector remediation”, in Abuja, NEITI stressed the importance of its collaboration with the civil society and the media to right the wrongs in the oil and gas sector by making its operation and activities as transparent as possible and add value to the lives of the people through infrastructural provision, including electricity, education and health facilities, among others.

    Its Executive Secretary, Waziri Adio, said implementation of all the recommendations would serve the country interest and its citizens. According to him, with more money coming from the sector, government will be able to attract more revenues and have more money to spend on infrastructure which will eventually benefit businesses.

    He said: “We will have a lot to gain as a country for implementing these recommendations and cleaning up our extractive sector in such a way it will be for the benefit of all Nigerians,” there is need for the sector to be run with transparency and accountability.”

    Adio, who maintained that Nigeria is endowed with abundant mineral and natural resources, questioned why poverty was still the order of the day. He noted that this has given rise to high rate of corruption, conflicts and crimes, among other social vices.

    “NEITI will do its part, we need the National Assembly to do its part, we need the executive arm of the government to do its part, we need citizens to do their own part, that is when the change that we are looking for can come,” he added.

    Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) Programme Manager, Kolawole Banwo said the civil society was working especially for the strengthening of the Inter-Ministerial Task Team (IMTT)

    “We are engaging in advocacy to strengthen it and ensure that there is a remediation plan that will be made public for citizens to engage,”he said,  adding that part of the problems is that they are mutually self-accounting and do not usually account to any higher authority

  • Sub-Sahara Africa oil, gas’ll complement industry value

    Group Managing Consultant and Chief Executive Officer, Sub-Sahara Africa Upstream Oil and Gas Summit and Exhibition and Invest Africa Energy, Dapo Ayoola, said the Sub-Sahara Africa Upstream Oil and Gas Summit and Exhibition was created as a clearing house for oil and gas practitioners, investors and all who support the value chain process.

    This platform, he said, would make countries of the sub-Sahara Africa including Nigeria, Ghana, Tanzania, Uganda and Ethiopia to come together so as to see what each country is doing very well and also help them correct mistakes made in the past. He noted that the Invest Africa Energy is an integral part of Sub-Sahara Africa Upstream Oil and Gas.

    He said the platform would also open up the market in Africa and turn it to a global market.

    “We want to see Nigerians go to Tanzania, Nairobi as consultants, we want to see our investors in Addis Ababa or in Nairobi, it is a new thing we are bringing on board, exchange of ideas and best practice and supporting each other to succeed,”he said, adding that the idea of looking for consultants who do not understand the complexity of the African community should not be encouraged.

    The fourth Sub-Sahara Africa Upstream Oil and Gas Summit and Exhibition, scheduled for next month, he said, was being organised by Zenith Professional Training (ZPT), a firm with several years of building oil and gas capacity through industry specialised trainings.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Gas preferred in global market forecast, says Attah

    Gas preferred in global market forecast, says Attah

    •NLNG may invest $10b in Train 7 gas supply, infrastructure 

    Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas Limited (NLNG) Managing Director/CEO Tony Attah has said projections put gas in the top quartile of the most competitive and strategic investments in the global energy market.

    Attah, who spoke at an executive roundtable discussion titled: “Growth Outlook and Strategies for Staying Competitive after a Global Downturn”, at the first Nigeria International Petroleum Summit (NIPS), in Abuja, said a combination of factors would give gas an edge as the energy of the future. He added that the global LNG trade was projected to nearly triple from about 12 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) in 2015 to around 31 Tcf in 2040.

    “Electric power sector carbon emissions are projected to be flat through 2050 as a result of favourable market conditions for natural gas and supportive policies for renewables, compared with coal”  he said, pointing out that the projections are underpinned by the prospect of the global economy growing at an average rate of 3.4 per cent per year, a population that expands from 7.4 billion today to more than 9 billion in 2040, and a process of urbanisation that adds a city the size of Shanghai to the world’s urban population every four months.

    Attah said global energy consumption would increase in the future, but on the other side of the fence, we also see the clamour for cleaner energy rising, and that is where gas comes in. Coal would be totally displaced as a source of energy followed by crude oil.

    “Oil will still be in demand, but (particularly as a source of power), will go down by about 50 per cent. Countries like the United Kingdom, Sweden, Norway and many other countries are making moves to significantly reduce their carbon footprint. Norway aims for all new passenger cars and vans sold in 2025 to be zero-emission vehicles, while Sweden has committed to 100 per cent renewable energy by 2040.”

    He warned that Nigeria was losing the competitive space in the LNG industry. “Nigeria started 24 months after Qatar. Qatar now produces 77 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) and is the number one LNG supplier in the world, while Nigeria is still on 22 MTPA. Australia is already flooding the market and will knock down Qatar to the third, or fourth place. In Africa, significant gas finds in excess of 127 Tcf in Mozambique have created the potential for another African super player. Mozambique is expected to become the second-largest exporter of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) by 2025, as the country steps up production from 10 million tonnes per annum (Mtpa) in 2017 to an envisaged 50 Mtpa.”

    Attah said the real investment opportunity was last year, when prices were low; but he, however, assured that it was not too late. He stated “that is why “we need to take the decision on Train 7 now so we can stay within the Top 5 space. The future is gas and NLNG is ready to play.”

    He said for Nigeria to remain competitive in the oil and gas industry, upstream investment needed to be increased. “It’s time to prepare for the likely demand outlook that’s positive and has out-performed projections in the last three years,“he said, adding, “let’s get back to exploration and production (E&P) activities.”

    Attah listed other strategies to include stable regulatory framework, ease of doing business, as well as strategic implementation of cost management by developing projects that are competitive under current pricing. In addition, he said implementing structural cost-saving measures, such as standardised, modular approaches to plant construction and embarking on new E&P projects that have shorter payback periods, are recommended. He said  Train 7 project by NLNG will increase its production capacity from the current 22 MTPA to 30 MTPA of LNG.

    Also, NLNG Deputy Managing Director,  Sadeeq Mai-Bornu, said the NLNG business model needs to be replicated so as to generate opportunities for the power and gas sectors in the country.

    He spoke at an executive roundtable discussion titled: “Africa as an Emerging Gas Producer: Prospects and Opportunities” also at the first Nigeria International Petroleum Summit (NIPS) in Abuja.

    Other participants at the discussion included Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company Limited (SNEPCO) Managing Director, Bayo Ojulari; President, Nigeria Gas Association and Managing Director of Frontier Oil Limited, Dada Thomas; Group Executive Director and Chief Operating Officer (COO), Power and Gas at Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), as well as other executives in the industry.

    Mai-Bornu said:  “Nigeria is a gas country with some oil. NLNG is a success story partly because we are in the mid-stream and most of the risks have been taken by the upstream companies. But the thing is that there is a market out there. We sign a 20-year contract for the supply of molecules and we can actually go to the bank and get the funding we need.  When NLNG was set up, it had guarantees and incentives that safeguarded investments and returns. There was also the sanctity of contracts. That is what has helped NLNG. This model needs to be developed in the upstream and downstream.

     

  • Agency trains 500 Niger Delta pupils in oil, gas

    The Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) has trained 500 pupils in Niger Delta states.

    A statement by the Chief Operating Officer, Mr. Idowu Adejumo, said the training was an initiative to fill the technical gap in oil and gas.

    He said the pupils were selected from 200 schools to participate in the maiden edition, titled: “Bridging the local content gap in Nigeria’s industrial sector: Science, technology and engineering to the rescue”.

    Adejumo said the facilitator, Osk Leverages and Vie Logistique, worked with the Ministry of Education in Ondo, Edo, Delta, Cross River, Akwa Ibom, Abia, Imo, Rivers and Bayelsa states.

    He said: “The talks, anchored by an experienced facilitator, a senior safety engineer with over 15 years’ experience in the oil and gas sector, Victor Ekasa, have been held in Ondo, Edo, Delta, Cross River, Abia and Imo states.

    “The pupils are encouraged to consider careers in sciences, engineering and technology towards building local capacity and reducing the number of expatriates in the country.”

    The chief operating officer said NCDMB management, under the Executive Secretary, Mr. Simbi Wabote, supported the move to catch the ‘engineers’ young.

    He said: “The two best pupils in each of the states are to go home with a branded mini laptop.

  • Edo, Sahara Energy to power public utilities with gas 

    Edo, Sahara Energy to power public utilities with gas 

    Plans by the Edo State government to improve power supply through partnership with oil and gas companies have received the buy-in of Sahara Energy.

    The innovative energy solution includes the conversion of gas, hitherto flared, to electricity that will be used to power hospitals, schools, street lights and other public utilities.

    Governor Godwin Obaseki, who spoke yesterday after the weekly Executive Council (EXCO) meeting at the Government House, Benin City, said during the unveiling of representatives of Sahara Group, led by the Chairman, Funso Kupolokun, an engineer, the company indicated interest in partnering the government in electricity generation through the exploitation of the state’s gas assets and other key developmental areas.

    The Co-Founder/Executive Director, Sahara Energy, Tonye Cole, hailed the governor for opening up the space for investment, saying he (governor) had expressed interest in collaborating with Sahara Energy in electricity and curbing illegal migration.

    “Governor Obaseki is committed to stopping gas flaring and to convert it to electricity. This ties 100 per cent to what we stand for. On illegal migration, which has become the biggest problem in the state, we are standing here to give hope to the people and commit to developing the nation,” he said.

     

  • Unhealthy Economic Diet: ‘Drinking Oil and Smoking Gas’

    Unhealthy Economic Diet: ‘Drinking Oil and Smoking Gas’

    First of all…INTRODUCTION!

    It is interesting to think of Nigeria as an overweight giant with unkempt beards irregularly scattered all over his face (at least we like to pride ourselves as THE GIANT OF AFRICA). Even an overweight giant becomes a burden to itself.

    Giant of Africa
    Giant of Africa?

    His excessively rotund and roly-poly body is as a result of the over-consumption and excessive reliance on a particular kind of food nutrient.

    He likes to drink oil and smoke gas.

    Quite frankly, no human species can survive or thrive with that kind of dietary equation; in fact, such a one is a disaster waiting to happen.

                       Also Read: God has plans for Nigeria – Osinbajo

    After the discovery of fossil oil at Oloibiri area of Bayelsa in 1956 in commercial quantity, petroleum industry in Nigeria became the largest industry.

    Oloibiri
    Oloibiri

    Oil, therefore, supplied approximately 90 percent of foreign exchange earnings and about 80 percent of federal revenue and contributes to the growth rate of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of our economy.

    The oil boom of 1970s made Nigeria rely heavily on crude oil and natural gas for its continuous supply of economic diet. Crude oil has since then become the darling of our nation; she received preferential treatment to the detriment of our first love (Agriculture).

    Eventually, agriculture which in times past earned us at least 70% of our foreign exchange deteriorated very fast because our policy wonks became derelict in their sacred obligations to her (Agriculture).

    Today, the salubrious broth called crude oil has started to turn sour and rendered our taste buds sore. Significant precincts of oil-rich regions are no longer habitable due to oil spillage.

    The persistent groundswells of legitimate agitations and destructive activities by militants in the Niger Delta have almost crippled the economic wheels of our dear country.

    The bludgeoning and bloodying of our nation’s “economic head” by corrupt practices and sleazes in the public and private sectors are all a part of the curses and crosses emanating from our overreliance on crude oil.

    It is shameful that we still grovel at the feet of crude oil when countries on the global pedestal have begun to embrace and deliberately fade out their reliance on it by cannibalizing and diversifying other sectors.

    Thespians in the crude oil intoxication Melodrama

    thespians
    The thespians

    Our ludicrous fixation on oil further deepened as we now have a President in the person of Muhammadu Buhari, who shuttles between his primary role as the chief executive helmsman of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the substantive Minister of Petroleum.

    However, when we thought that we have heard and seen the last of the behavioural debauchery that took place in past administrations from crude oil intoxication, the recent wrangling between the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu and the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Maikanti K. Baru regarding the alleged awarding of contracts without due consultation with the minister betrayed our gullible optimism.

    The melodrama became even messier when the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo debunked widespread statements that he approved the said sum as the Acting President during the period Muhammadu Buhari was on his medical vacation. Regardless of who is right or wrong, the obvious solution is a total overhaul and sanitation of the inherent tacky climate in the oil sector.

    Sad yet is the fact that the President’s Chief of Staff, Abba Kyari is a member of the Board of Directors of the NNPC, according to legal experts, this is wrong in its totality. Unfortunately, this and much more have been handled like nothing is happening.

    If truly our President intends to be involved personally, operationally and officially in the development of the Nigerian project, then he should hands-off the oil ministry as its head, and get a hands-on on some ministries like Agriculture, Health and Education – all of which are in dare need of a state of emergency.

    If Nigeria perpetuates in this state of plateau; posturing itself as the biblical “fig tree”, it might eventually fall like the proverbial humpty dumpty for overreliance on oil “blocks”.

    While the world is running, jumping and jetting into the future with precise plans and ground-breaking innovations in Science, Technology, Medicine, Agriculture, Art etc., Nigeria is busy performing the “moon walk” and sliding backward very fast into antiquity.

    It is heartbreaking that our country is still unnecessarily dependent on fossil deposits that have become more or less a curse and an albatross to us as a nation instead of a great vault of opportunities to all and sundry.

    Death and burial of crude oil

    A Resident fetching Crude Oil from leakage at Adibawa Well 8 in Edagberi Community in Rivers State.

    It is instructive to note that countries like Norway, India and France have decided to stop the exploration and production of crude oil by year 2025, 2030 and 2040 respectively in order to combat the deleterious and hazardous effects of climate change.

    There seems to be a growing movement by these countries to force the extinction of vehicles that run on fossil fuels. They have resorted to the production of electric cars and the complete obliteration of petrol and diesel-driven engines.

    Volvo Cars became the first mainstream automaker to sound the death knell of the internal combustion engine, saying that all the models it introduces starting in 2019 will be either hybrids or powered solely by batteries.

    Their goal is to drive a sharp stake through the heart of carbon emissions; the boogeyman whose corollary effects manifests as global warming, depletion of the ozone layer and its other destructive appurtenances.

    European countries like England, France, Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Germany are making definitive moves away from the use of fossil fuels. They have completed plans to announce the death and burial of the era of fossil domination.

    Big car manufacturers like Tesla, Volvo, Renault and the PSA Group are beginning to embrace alternative sources of powering cars through electric, solar and battery.

    The repugnant smell of doom and gloom

    On a macro scale, what are the economic implications of these decisions by some of the stakeholders and key players (countries and car companies) in the crude oil space on the African continent, heck!…on Nigeria? What will be its effect on our social, political and cultural survival?

    Before reaching any hasty conclusions, it is important that we understand the sundry contributions of the oil sector to our nation.

    Also, how bright will the future earnings of Nigeria be? Nigeria being a member of The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and the second largest producer of oil in Africa?

    OPEC

    Your guess is almost as good as the writer’s.

    We would definitely hit a slide due to the sudden drop in the demand for our crude oil.

    In retrospect, when the price of oil fell from highs of about $112 a barrel in 2014 to below $50 in 2016, Nigeria was thrown into recession. It is, therefore, better imagined what will happen to Nigeria if European and Asian countries completely deviate from fossil fuel dependence to other healthy alternatives like electricity and solar, knowing fully well that Crude oil sales account for 70% of government income.

    Although government have had tiny sparks of successes in several non-oil sectors like agriculture, however, it seems all we can boast of at best are “tiny sparks” because of poor storage, haulage and management of agricultural produce, which is gradually becoming an embarrassment to our nation especially with the outright rejection of our export agricultural produce in Europe, United States and other parts of the world in recent times. What a shame! We can do better in Agriculture only if we set our minds, hearts and hands to it.

    Salvation in the Non-Oil sector?

    There is a portion of one of the Holy Books that says: “At least there is hope for a tree: If it is cut down, it will sprout again, and its new shoots will not fail…. at the scent of water it will bud and sprout again like a new seedling.”

    There's hope
    There’s hope

    Last month, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) unveiled the bright figure of 0.55% GDP Growth in the second quarter (Q2) of 2017; this indicated that we are “statistically” out of recession. This momentous declaration by the bureau was a joyous daybreak to millions of Nigerians who had been seared in the flames of poverty and encumbered by the manacles of economic hardship.

    However, for us to avoid our “joyous daybreak” reversing into long nights of starvation, those at the helms of affairs of our great country need to latch upon and capitalize on the non-oil sector to bring to us the dividends of democracy.

    Below are a few statistics from the NBS:

    According to the preliminary results for the second quarter of the year 2017, Nigeria’s economic recovery was driven principally by the performance of four main economic activities comprising Oil and Non-oil (agriculture, manufacturing and trade).

    The results showed that Oil GDP recovered significantly from -11.63 per cent in Q2 2016 and -15.40 per cent in Q1 2017 to 1.64 per cent in Q2 2017.

    GDP

    While Oil GDP expanded considerably in the second quarter of 2017, Non-oil GDP only grew at 0.45 per cent, down from 0.72 per cent in the preceding quarter and -0.38 in the corresponding period in 2016.

    Agriculture continued its strong and positive growth, which it had maintained throughout the recession, growing by 3.01 per cent in Q2 2017, from 3.39 per cent in Q1 2017 and 4.53 per cent in Q2 2016.

    Manufacturing retained its positive growth for the second consecutive quarter in Q2 2017, growing at 0.64 per cent compared to 1.36 per cent in Q1 2017 and -3.36 per cent in Q2 2016.

    Trade which has a dominant share of GDP remained negative at -1.62 per cent, but the contraction in the sector decelerated from the -3.08 per cent recorded in Q1 2017.

    The results also showed that the industry sector grew positively by 1.45 per cent in Q2 2017, after nine consecutive quarters of negative growth since Q4 2014.

    Service = 53.73%

    Industries = 23.31%

    Agriculture = 22.97%

    Does it look like Nigeria’s economic future is bright? Yes! Can we begin to pop Champagne and take a little rest? Absolutely NOT!

    Although the oil and gas sector accounts for about 35 per cent of gross domestic product, and petroleum exports revenue represents over 90 per cent of total exports revenue, Agriculture is expected to feature as one of the pertinent driving force in Africa’s economic rebirth and is already ranked among the critical factors contributing towards an increasing curiousity in the continent’s native resources.

    It is estimated that over 60 percent of the world’s available and untapped farmland is in sub-Saharan Africa. Interestingly, for Nigeria, agriculture contributes about 22 percent of its GDP.

    With the allocation of N92 Billion to the Agriculture sector, and the ubiquitous potentials in other sectors like tourism, entertainment, art and culture, manufacturing, trade and other non-oil sectors of the economy, the government might be able to improve the economic aesthetics of Nigeria.

    A few Recommendations

    We need to consciously divest our reliance on the oil sector and begin to focus on other non-oil sectors; especially those that are currently driving world economies. For example, in Asia, technology drives the wheel of their economy; in Europe, agriculture does it for them; even as they expand and bolster their technological strength.

    Our leaders need to be selfless and sincere in the making of policies that are people-centred and not one to fuel their political and personal agendas.

    Also, our Presidents need to eschew the ideologies of heading the oil sectors alongside their executive portfolios. This appears like they have ulterior motives.

    Citizens should use the power of their votes to elect fresh and credible individuals with concrete antecedents of leadership and accomplishments. These should be individuals who can clearly enunciate their plans and can galvanise the people towards the achievement of these plans.

    We need to invest more in tapping the resources between our ears and not those beneath the ground. In Asia, there are technological schools whose certifications are as valid as those of the universities; making it a viable alternative for everyone to have access to education. The never-ending battle between the B.Sc and the HND is a mere case of “potayto…potahto”; just mere nomenclature. We need to place more premiums on competence instead of certificates.

    Moreover, the clamour for true federalism, especially when it bothers on resource control and decentralisation should be placed in the front burner. This will make states more competitive and accountable to their people.

    These recommendations (though not exhaustive) are some of the immediate approaches we can engage to move the economic and political wheels of our country.

    Sidon look no dey!

    Twitter: @memorinken

    Facebook: Moses Emorinken Omoikhoa

  • How to avoid gas tanks explosions, by SON DG

    How to avoid gas tanks explosions, by SON DG

    Frequent explosions of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) storage tanks and cylinders across the country are avoidable, Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) Director-General Mr. Osita Aboloma has said.

    To avoid such incidents, Aboloma urged operators in the sector to subscribe to the SON certification of their vessels.

    He said due certification of LPG storage vessels, proper maintenance and handling of cylinders, safe and ethical practices are necessary steps to avoid explosions and gas accidents.

    According to him, the agency will invoke the provisions of the SON Act No. 14 of 2015 on any operator found to have circumvented the mandatory requirement of certifying its LPG storage vessels, thereby putting the lives of Nigerians at risk of injury and or death.

    He said necessary investigation was being carried out on the recent explosion in Owerri, Imo State with a view to nipping future occurrences in the bud.

    Abaloma gave these safety tips while speaking to reporters in Abuja at the training of 30 SON engineers in the operations of three recently acquired mobile testing equipment for the inspection, testing and certification of LPG storage tanks, pressure vessels and pipelines.

    He challenged the SON officials to ensure that only certified LPG vessels and storage tanks are in operation across the country within the shortest possible time.

    The engineers were trained on the theory and practical of operating the mobile testing equipment to enable them acquire skills necessary to effectively use them across the country.

    This, according to the DG, was in line with SON’s policy to develop required human and material capacity to enable the organisation carry out its statutory mandate, which in this case, applies to the LPG sector.

    He said the LPG storage vessels certification by authorised and competent bodies is an international practice and a mandatory requirement to assure the integrity, effectiveness and suitability of the vessels to store liquefied petroleum gas without failure.

    Aboloma said LPG vessels are certified to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Code, Division 1, Section VIII: 2015 by SON.

    The certification, he stated, is one of the requirements of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) for issuing licences to LPG plant operators. He said brand new vessels are certified for five years after which revalidation is carried out every three years.

    Aboloma said another set of 32 engineers were trained in Lagos to ensure that the mobile testing equipment in Lagos (for the Southwest Zone), Enugu (for the Southeast and Southsouth Zones) and Abuja for the Northern Zone can be put to effective use across the country.

    The SON chief said a joint committee of stakeholders in the LPG sector was inaugurated by SON to, among others, work out modalities for a scheme to re-qualify LPG cylinders.

    The scheme, according the SON chief executive, will involve the withdrawal of substandard cylinders from circulation and ensure the production, import, sale and use of only duly certified LPG cylinders.