Tag: IOCs

  • ‘IOCs undermining Local Content Act’

    ‘IOCs undermining Local Content Act’

    •We will punish offenders, says Nwapa

    THE Federal Government’s drive to involve local oil firms in the oil and gas sector is being thwarted by some oil majors that are bent on maintaining the status quo and denying indigenous companies their place as enshrined in the Nigerian Local Content Law, The Nation has gathered.

    The  Act, which became operational in 2010, gave Nigerian oil companies the leverage to be given first consideration in the award of contracts in virtually every area in the sector, including oil blocks, oil field licences, oil lifting licences,  in addition to being considered for award of contracts in all projects for which they have demonstrable competences and proven capability  in the oil and gas industry.

    The Act says there shall be exclusive consideration to Nigerian indigenous service companies which demonstrate ownership of equipment, Nigerian personnel and capacity to execute such work to bid on land and swamp-operating areas of the Nigerian oil and gas industry for contracts and services contained in the Schedule to this Act.

    However, this legal provision which is binding on all operators in the energy sector, is being  flouted by some foreign players.

    It was gathered that some  foreign companies, amongst them, Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC)  and General Electric (GE), are working in unison against the provision and the intent of the Local Content Act,  to edge out an indigenous oil servicing company, ARCO Petrochemical Engineering Company Plc, in an existing Gas Turbines and Equipment  Maintenance Contract Working Agreement.

    The intent of the scheme, it was learnt, is to introduce another foreign firm,  Plantgeria Nigeria Limited, with no pedigree of any related experience, to take over the job from ARCO

    A source who asked that his identity be veiled, said the surreptitious action of NAOC and GE, if allowed to stand, will negate everything the Local Content Act represents.

    The source explained that the object of contention is the Obob/Kwale/Ebocha Gas Plant Rotating Equipment Maintenance Contract, involving Nuovo Pignone, GE and ARCO.

    The five-year contract was awarded by the Board of NNPC  sometimes in 2006 to Nuovo Pignone,  together with Arco Petrochemical Engineering company Plc, a wholly Nigerian company as the local Technical Partner, for the maintenance of the OBO/Kwale/Ebocha gas plants.

    It was learnt that the Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC) later changed the contract terms and awarded the same contract to GE on its own terms. By the new arrangement, Arco was reduced from being a partner to a sub-contractor.

    However, just under a year of the commencement of the contract, the Niger Delta crises erupted, leading to the evacuation of GE’ expatriate staff from the site. On their exit, Arco’s engineers and technicians took up the challenge and maintained the plants for over six months before the crises abated and the evacuated GE expatriate  staff eventually returned to site.

    Apparently surprised that ARCO successfully performed the task for that length of time without any hitches, and for unexplained reasons, GE turned against ARCO, reduced the scope of Arco’s jobs and introduced a third-party company, Plantgeria, to perform part of Arco’s scope of work in the contract.

    “But surprisingly” the source exclaimed, “GE poached 19 of Arco’s engineers and technicians to do the job.”

  • Nigeria needs $60b investment in oil, gas

    Nigeria needs $60b investment in oil, gas

    Nigeria’s oil and gas industry needs over $60 billion investment but the controversies surrounding the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) has made international oil companies (IOCs) hold-on to their money awaiting the passage of the bill, stakeholders have said.

    Participants at the ongoing World Petroleum Congress (WPC) in Moscow, Russia, yesterday said that Nigeria can always get the required funds needed to be invested in the sector if the government exhibits a sense of seriousness and focus on what it wanted.

    Discussants at a panel discussion on financing investment in the oil and gas industry;  challenges and opportunities, said there are funds, which run  into several trillion of  US dollars that are available for investment in the oil and gas industry globally, but  noted that such funds could only be deployed to areas where the environment is conducive and friendly for investments.

    Frankly Brooks, who spoke to reporters after the panel of discussion said: “We discovered that there are lots of funds that are available which can be invested in the oil and gas sector.  The estimate was that in the next 20 years the industry would require trillions of dollars globally.”

    He said it has been established that funds are available to support all the projects that have been earmarked to be carried out at different locations around the world.

    “But the environment must be friendly and attractive for investment for such funds to flow in that direction,” he said.

    The Group Executive Director, Commercial and Investment, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC),  Attahir Yusuf, said there has always been money to fund the oil and gas industry.

    He explained that funding the oil and gas industry could be carried out in different ways, such as equity financing, bonds and project financing. On equity financing, he said, the country can finance its projects through such arrangement because it does not have enough money, and also cannot afford to waste its scarce resources.

    He said there are so many ways Nigeria could raise money. What we need as a country is to carefully look at what we want, what funding will be suitable for that, and engage different funding organisations that are there. This is important because as a country we need to have focus strategies earmarked for raising funds, he said, adding that that the discussants looked at a different ways of dispensing funds based on sectors, from explorations, development, production and also transmitting the end product.

    “The conclusion therefore, for us as a country, is that we have a lot of funding requirements and we know that we don’t have all the funds, so we have to look for funds. But the good thing is that the funds are available, so we have to look at our requirements, be it in exploration, production or infrastruc-tural developments,” he said.

  • ‘IOC’s divestment good for local players’

    ‘IOC’s divestment good for local players’

    THERE should be no anxiety over the assets divestments by international oil companies (IOCs). The development  will not create a crisis in the oil and gas industry, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, has said. The trend actually provides opportunity for indigenous companies to become active players in the upstream sub-sector of the industry, according to the minister.

    The Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Ohi Alegbe, in a statement yesterday, said the minister spoke at an investment luncheon organised by the Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN) held during the recent Offshore Technology Conference in Houston, Texas, United States.

    Mrs. Alison-Madueke explained that with the divestments, indigenous oil and gas companies now have the opportunity to acquire the assets being divested as springboard for the development of local capacity.

    Speaking on Assets divestments in the Nigerian oil and gas industry: Opportunities and challenges, as theme,   the minister who was represented by the Group Managing Director, NNPC,  Andrew Yakubu, said the divestments by the IOCs were creating opportunities for indigenous oil and gas companies to partake in the upstream sector  to  grow capacity.

    “Let me allay your fears that the spate of divestments would not lead to crisis in the nation’s oil and gas industry, rather the divestment by the majors is changing the onshore corporate landscape and creating material brownfield opportunities for upstream players looking to enter the Nigerian upstream space,”Alison-Madueke noted.

    She observed that the divesting IOCs were not leaving the country but only shifting their focus from onshore to the more challenging frontiers of deep offshore which currently accounts for 60 per cent of Nigeria’s production.

    “The IOCs remain very much present in Nigeria. Shell still retains ownership of 34 onshore blocks while Total, ExxonMobil, and Chevron are still committing large amounts of capital to assets offshore Nigeria,” she explained.

    Highlighting the opportunities inherent in the divestment, Alison-Madueke stated: “The indigenous Nigerian companies have been presented with the opportunity to develop local operatorship capacity as well as boost local production and consequently grow into major upstream players.”

    She cited the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), the upstream subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), as an example of indigenous Nigerian company that has tapped into the opportunity provided by the divestment to transform from a small time player with a production of 60,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2007 to a mid-size player with a current production of over 140,000 bpd through the assignment of 55 per cent equity in 8 divested blocks.

    She disclosed that NPDC has grown to become the biggest producer and supplier of gas to the domestic market through its aggressive development of the assets assigned to it from the divestment process, adding that the Federal Government was ready to strengthen and support the company toachieve its medium term objective of growing production to 250,000 bpd.

  • Pains, gains of oil divestments

    Pains, gains of oil divestments

    International oil firms’ divestment from onshore oil fields is gathering momentum. To some, this is a welcome development for indigenous companies as it will help them to build capacity, but to others, it portends danger for foreign investments as the divestments could mean that all is not be well in the sector. Senior Correspondent AKINOLA AJIBADE reports.  

    THE international oil companies (IOCs) in Nigeria have been divesting some of their assets considered marginal and commercially unviable. Such marginal oil blocks were handed over to local oil companies, which are small in both balance sheet size and technology, to aid them make foray into exploration and production.

    However, from 2009, the game changed. The IOCs began to divest, not just from oil blocks that were considered marginal, but also those with considerable oil and gas reserves that have substantial commercial value and make good business to operate in.

    Since 2009, oil giants, such as Shell, Chevron, ConocoPhillips and British Gas, have sold no fewer than 20 oil blocks, which are considered juicy.

    Shell is about concluding sale of four oil blocks. With the sale of interests in the four blocks, the number of blocks in which Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) would have divested its stakes since 2010, would be about 10.

    Although these divestments are coming at the peak of the oil and gas industry reforms, which aims at promoting Nigerian Content development, local capacity and capability, industry observers said it is both good and bad.

    To them, the transfer of such assets certainly would boost the drive to grow indigenous capacity in the exploration and production, and position Nigerians and local firms to take control of the industry. They, however, argued that the remediation of the polluted and damaged environment would be at a huge cost to indigenous companies buying up these assets.

    Besides, they said the absence of a requisite business operating environment, a major factor responsible for the divestment is not adequately addressed by the government, the indigenous oil firms would also find it difficult to operate the assets. They listed challenges such as crude oil theft, pipeline vandalism and kidnap of oil workers for ransom, among others, as some of the issues government must address to create the environment for the locals. They also noted that addressing these issues becomes imperative because local firms get funds at very high cost and should anything happen resulting in undue delay, or shut-in of such assets, the affected companies may go bankrupt.

    They said: “Undoubtedly, divestment will enable local operators to engage in  exploration activities regarded as  the exclusive  preserve of the IOCs, and will ultimately increase their contributions to the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP).”

    According to Ecobank Research, by the end of last year, the IOCs would have sold at least 300,000 barrels per day (bpd) worth of equity in onshore and shallow water producing assets in the Niger Delta region. We estimate that the corresponding monetary value of these divestments will be in the region of at least $5 billion. In addition, the total number of blocks divested by IOCs between 2010 and end of 2014, will surpass 22, the research said.

    Earlier, Shell and its partners,  Total and Agip sold 45 per cent interest in onshore Oil Mining Lease (OML) 40 to Elcrest Nigeria Limited. The SPDC  also sold its 30 per cent interest in OML 30 with share production of 11,000barrels per day (bpd) in the Niger Delta to Shoreline Natural Resources Limited.

    Total sold its 20 per cent stakes and operating mandate of its Nigerian offshore project to a local unit of China Petrochemical Corporation for $2.5billion.

    Besides, US oil firm, ConoccoPhillips disposed its assets in the country to indigenous oil company, Oando Plc. The deal is said to have jerked up oil the major’s assets’ sale to $11 billion last year.

    Brazilian oil firm, Petrobras, which began operations in Nigeria about 20 years ago, has put the country on notice of its intention to auction its stakes in Nigerian oil fields to raise cash for domestic projects.     The firm plans to sell its eight per cent stake in the Nigerian offshore Agbami block, which is operated by another US oil major, Chevron and its 20 per cent share of the offshore Akpo field, operated by French oil firm, Total.

     

    IOCs’ stand

    The oil majors say their divestment decision was informed by the need to grow the country’s petroleum sector.

    The Managing Director, SPDC, Mutiu Sunmonu, said part of the reasons for his firm’s divestment of its assets was to encourage indigenous participation in the upstream oil and gas sector.

    Sumonu, who spoke in an oil and gas forum in Lagos, said: “We want to create a new set of indigenous players in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry within the next 10 to 20 years from now, while the IOCs concentrate on more difficult issues and also allow us to focus on material oil and gas fields.”

    Total’s Chief Executive Officer, Christophe de Margerie, said the disposal of his company’s assets does not mean it is leaving Nigeria’s  shores, but that the divestments are being carried out to give room for indigenous players in the nation’s petroleum sector to grow.

    Also, the Chief Executive Officer, Petrobras, Ms Maria das Graças Foster, said divesting from the oil blocks would help the company concentrate more on exploration activities in a vast deep sea region off the coast of Brazil, known as the subsalt, believed to contain dozens of billions of barrels of high quality oil.

     

    Stakeholders’ position

    But stakeholders said the divestment of stakes might be linked to the fact that IOCs were considering that some of the onshore assets as ageing and becoming unviable. According to industry players, the divestment allows the companies to prioritise the most attractive opportunities and reconfigure, or exit from less attractive ones.

    In addition, incessant crises between the host communities and the oil firms would have prompted the divestment for deep water prospect where there are fewer community related issues and less financial expenses on conflict resolution. They argued that the decision could also be linked with what the industry players consider as unfavorable profit-sharing agreements, high royalties, taxes and insecurity, considering the production output of the fields.

    Chairman, International Association of Drilling Contractors (IADC), Nigeria Chapter, Sola Falodun, said the problems in the Niger Delta region were affecting crude oil production, adding that it is becoming difficult for IOCs to produce enough oil from their fields. He said the divestment had given IOCs an opportuntity to relocate to safer environment.

    The  President, International Association of Energy Economics, Prof Adeola Akinnisiju, said multinational oil companies were divesting their shares because of security problems in the industry.

    He said the frequency of attacks on facilities of the companies in the onshore area had put investments and stocks of the companies in danger. He, however, said divestment is not bad as it will give indigenous companies the opportunity to have a good stand in the sector.

    He said the level of indigenous opportunity depends on how well the local players are able to exploit the fields to the advantage of Nigerians through investment in research and development.

    He said divestment would aid the development of marginal oil fields. Akinnisiju said the future is bright for indigenous firms, adding that the divestment will jerk up oil production.

    He, however, said  the assets divestment is a smokescreen designed by the IOCs to run away from responsibilities for the environmental despoliation oil exploration has caused the host communities.

    “There is a generally deep displeasure by the communities whose environments they have damaged without redress. This dislike or disdain poses a peculiar risk to companies that had entered those communities on th  crest of expectations and promises,” he said.

    He said the companies were eager to shake off accountability for the damage they have done to their host communities, adding that they are not ready to clean up the oil-polluted areas. According to him, the IOCs may be unwilling to adjust to a regime that requires that they be more transparent.

    He said: “A situation where oil theft and frequent leakages do not result in reduction in official oil production levels clearly shows that far more than officially acknowledged, volumes of crude oil are being extracted from these fields. So, these corporations are trying to avoid responsibility.”

    He said the IOCs are playing an arm twisting game with a government that relies heavily on oil rents. “Threats of divestment can affect the passing of the PIB  (Petroleum Industry Bill) and if passed, its implementation. These fellows are playing games. They cannot run away from the incredible gains they make here,” he said.

     

    Divestment a threat

    Executive Director, African Heritage Institution, Ifediora Amobi, said the auction of these oil blocks and their gas resources would threaten Federal Government’s power sector reforms by jeopardising domestic gas supply for power generation.

    According to him, it will lead to job losses and insecurity, as “we hope that some of the displaced workers from Shell, Total, others, who will be absorbed by the local firms, have the same working conditions they were used to under the oil majors”.

     

    Labour kicks

    Oil workers say divestment is ill wind that blows nobody good.  President,  National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), Comrade Achese Igwe, at a joint press conference in Lagos penultimate week, warned Petrobas of the severe implications of divesting its assets in the country.

    Last Tuesday, oil workers in a Brazilian firm demonstrated against the plan to divest. The workers protested at the Lagos office of the company, wondering why Petrobas is planning divestment at the time when their stakes were high. They said the  decision of the company to leave the country meant they would be out of job noting the severe economic implications to their families and the nation. They also criticised government for not doing enough to guarantee them job security in the hands of the foreign oil companies.

    Lagos Chairman, Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association (PENGASSAN), Rev Folorunsho Oginni, said the decision to divest is not in the interest of workers and the country. He lamented that expatriates in the employ of the IOCs repatriate several millions of dollars year to Brazil at the expense of Nigerians.He said the workers have despatched  protest letters to the Ministers of Petroleum Resources, Labour and Productivity to halt the wave of divestment.

    According to him, the union will not hesitate to mobilise members on a national strike if the two ministries fail to address their grievance at the  appropriate time.

     

  • Board attributes success to govt

    The Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board’s (NCDMB) has attributed its successes to the Federal Government’s courage, cooperation of International Oil Companies (IOCs) and local oil servicing companies.

    Speaking at the inauguration of the Tolmann Allied Services’ Deepwater Simulation Theatre (DST) in Port Harcourt, Rivers State capital, NCDMB Executive Secretary Ernest Nwapa praised the entrepreneurial spirit of local oil servicing firms owners who set up key facilities and acquired hi-tech assets despite the challenges in the sector.

    He also praised the Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN) for the Board’s creation, saying its members pushed for indigenous participation before the Federal Government crowned their efforts with the Nigerian Content policy which later became law.

    “You needed a resolute person to lead and drive the changes we have witnessed. The government gave the Board a strong tone from the top to implement the Act,” he said, adding that the Minister has assured that the government would support any investment and ensure that such firms get patronage.

    Nwapa, who represented the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, at the event, said the inauguration of Africa’s first DST was a good way to start the celebration of the fourth NCDMB’s anniversary.

    The DST, he said, was not only the first in Africa, but also the third in the world, and that it was conceived to carry out deep offshore exploration and groom operators in the sector.

    It was noteworthy that the company invested in such an upscale facility, adding that it is a further proof that Nigerians can own and operate key assets in the industry, he said.

    Nwapa said the Board’s insistence on indigenous ownership of key assets as a major plank of monitoring compliance is based on the fact that it is a guarantee that the implementation of the Content policy would endure.

    “Because Nigerians now have stakes in ownership, we are sure that the Nigerian Content will survive even after the current officials in the government may have left the scene,” he said, adding: “It is from these kinds of service companies and investments we see from Tolmann and PETAN companies that assure us that jobs will be created and we will push them to make more investments.”

    The Managing Director of Tolmann Allied Services, Mr. Emmanuel Onyekwena, listed the challenges the company faced while setting up the DST, noting that the intervention of the Minister helped them. He said the project would address challenges in deep water exploration, build in-country capacity with global reach, create employment and assist communities.

  • Nigeria unveils plans for Shell’s, Total’s Eni’s assets

    To ensure the viability of the six oil wells it acquired from the International Oil Companies (IOCs), the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) has adopted a new employment strategy.

    The NPDC, a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), took over some oil wells from Shell, Total and Eni, following their decision to sell their stakes because of what they called losses from crude oil theft and pipeline vandalism.

    While unfolding plans to expand NPDC’s business, including spending $5.2billion in the next five years at a stakeholders’ meeting in Lagos, its Managing Director, Mr Victor Briggs, said human resources were vital to the companies’ growth.

    He said NPDC was not following its traditional method of recruitment, in view of the huge assets at its disposal.

    He said a paradigm shift from periodic to constant recruitment of experienced professionals was necessary, in view of the enormous challenges of growing the assets to an enviable height.

    He said: “NNPC recruitment is subject to the rules of the government. However, we have to look at other options to improve oil production in the industry. We look at the assets we took over from the IOCs operating in Nigeria, to see how best we can manage them well. We do not have the time to train people; we employ whenever we see the opportunities. We lay ambush when we hear that some people are trying to leave and employ them.

    “We look for contractors to manage the assets. Sometimes, we train others at a short period to grow the assets. Upstream services sector of NNPC has been well developed. ‘’

    According to him, crude oil production is complex and comes with its own attendant cost.

    ‘’The cost of sustaining increase in crude oil production is high. There is a lot of demand for crude oil globally. People look at the sector from the point of volumes of barrels produced per day; without looking at the human resources required to grow it. When companies come into the industry, they need to ask themselves this question: What does it take to employ expatriates or local staff? That has become a challenge to many operators,’’ he added.

    NPDC is hoping to in increase its output on Oil Mining Lease, OML, 42 by an additional 30,000 barrels per day(bpd), to bring total output from the asset to 60,000 bpd. Currently, the OML 42 licence produces 30,500 bpd.

    The company took over the operatorship of the licence from SPDC in January 2012 when it was producing 25,000 bpd from 11 strings.

  • Can indigenous operators cope after foreigners’ exit?

    Can indigenous operators cope after foreigners’ exit?

    The divestment of foreign companies from the oil industry is raising question about the capacity of indigenous operators to take their place. Asst. Editor Chikodi Okereocha examines the implication of the International Oil Companies (IOCs) divestment

    The Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Mr. Andrew Yakubu, came across as an incurable optimist when he addressed participants at the Nigeria Oil & Gas Conference tagged “NOG 2014.” Waxing patriotic, he spoke of an oil & gas industry where indigenous operators, having acquired enough capacity, are in the position to run things following the divestment of some International Oil Companies (IOCs).

    Yakubu said when the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) takes off, the level of participation and investments by local oil firms would increase.

    He told participants at the premier annual oil and gas gathering in sub-Saharan Africa, held in Abuja, that with the Local Content Law, Nigeria would become the most viable investment destination, galvanised by indigenous capacity.

    While Yakubu’s optimism sounds good to local firms, which have been operating in their foreign counterparts’ shadow, many experts and stakeholders are not convinced. Some of them say Yakubu and others may be putting up a bold face to the fact that local operators don’t have the capacity, expertise and financial muscle to drive the industry.

    An oil and gas expert, Oliver Mordi, insisted that lack of capacity remains the bane of local content development in the industry. He argued that though the divestments of the IOCs should be a shot in the arm for indigenous operators, they are yet to acquire the capacity to stand on their own. He noted that local operators do not have the competence to handle highly technical aspects of oil & gas operations, saying that at the moment, most of the technical aspects are handled by expatriates. Only a few Nigerians, he said, are into oil & gas exploration.

    IOCs have since been reviewing and reducing their commitment to onshore and shallow assets in the country. The development, which is gradually changing the oil & gas landscape, started around 2010 when Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) divested some of its assets from Nigeria. The Anglo-Dutch oil company and its partners, French oil group Total and Agip Oil, sold 45 per cent interest in the onshore block, oil mining lease (OML) 40 to Elcrest Nigeria Limited. The company also sold its 30 per cent interest in OML 30 with share production of 11,000 barrels per day (bpd) to Shoreline Natural Resources Limited.

    After operating in Nigeria for 46 years, United States (U.S.) oil giant, Conoco Phillips, offered its entire business interest in Nigeria to Oando Plc, an indigenous oil producing company in a deal valued at about $1.75 billion. Brazilian oil company Petrobras has also indicated plans to auction eight per cent stake of its Agbami oil block and 20 per cent of its offshore Akpo project for about N175 billion. In November 2012, Total divested its 20 per cent offshore stake in the Usan Field to Sinopec, a Chinese petroleum and chemical company, for $2.5 billion. Chevron is also in the process of selling three onshore oil blocks.

    An estimated $6.5 billion worth of assets have so far been sold by IOCs. The figure is projected to rise in the coming months, as more assets are said to have been lined up for auction, a development, sources linked to the operational and security difficulties in the Niger Delta and the uncertainties caused by the non-passage of the PIB. For instance, the incessant crises between the host communities and the oil companies are said to have prompted the divestment for deep water prospect where there are fewer crises and less financial expenses on conflict resolution.

    But the companies are offering a different explanation. Mutiu Sunmonu, Managing Director of SPDC, said the divestment of his company’s assets was a deliberate measure to encourage indigenous participation in the upstream oil and gas industry.

    His words: “We want to create a new set of indigenous players in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry within the next 10 to 20 years from now, while the IOCs concentrate on more difficult issues and also allow us focus on material oil and gas fields.”

    The divestments are seen by some industry watchers as representing the single largest opportunity for Nigerian operators with the requisite expertise and capital to emerge as major upstream players. Already, local oil companies own more than 100 blocks across Nigeria’s oil-producing regions, and the figures are expected to double over the next few years, indicating perhaps, that the future is bright for indigenous operators.

    But Mordi thinks otherwise. He said lack of capacity by local operators might throw spanner in the works. Although he aligned with the position that divestment by IOCs is capable of encouraging indigenous participation, he noted that at the moment Nigerians lack the capacity and expertise to leverage the opportunity created by the exit of the IOCs. He however, attributed the development to “the political economy of the operating environment, which is no longer conducive for IOCs.”

    Mr Obiora Akabogu, a Lagos based lawyer, describes oil business as “capital intensive,” saying: “Nigerian operators do not have the resources and the manpower to run it efficiently considering the fact that local banks are not in the position to advance long-term loans without going into alliance with foreign banks. Besides, the prevailing high interest rate by banks poses serious hurdle for local operators particularly those without access to offshore fund.”

    Akabogu added: “Local content in the oil industry is supposed to be a long term thing; it is supposed to be implemented in a gradual manner because the enabling environment is not there. The ideal thing would have been to retain the IOCs by addressing the issues that necessitated their divestment.” He said the IOCs were merely shifting their risks to the local operators who would now deal with issues of oil bunkering and theft.

    The Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), Mr. Ernest Nwapa, drove the point home when he disclosed that Nigeria has lost an estimated $380 billion to foreign companies and contractors because of lack of capacity in manufacturing, fabrication and engineering design of production platforms, marine vessels, drilling rigs and other equipment used in the oil and gas industry.

    Mr. Nwapa said virtually all categories of contracts in the oil and gas sector were executed by foreign firms before the coming of the Nigerian Content Act in 2010. He said for instance, Nigeria is still chasing the original builders of the four refineries to come and assist in rehabilitating them because the country lacks capacity to do the job. He said before the Nigerian Content Act was enacted the engineering designs of production platforms were neither done in Nigeria nor manufactured locally.

    Between 2010 when the law came into being and now, experts say that it is doubtful if local operators have acquired enough capacity to run the industry. For instance, the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), called to question the capacity of local operators by raising the alarm that the take over of the industry by local operators would lead to massive job losses. According to the National Public Relations Officer (PRO) of PENGASSAN, Mr. Seyi Gambo, over 20, 000 local jobs in the oil and gas industry are under threat following the rapid divestments of upstream assets by IOCs. He said since the IOCs began the exercise, many of its members have been laid off.

    Akabogu says there is sufficient reason for PENGASSAN and indeed, other labour unions in the industry to fret. He said: “Their fears are justified because in a capitalist system, he who pays the piper dictates the tune. The driving principle in capitalism is profit maximisation, and one of the strategies to achieve that is downsizing or rightsizing of workers.” The legal practitioner wondered why countries like Ghana and Sao Tome & Principe could provide enabling environment for their oil industry to thrive whereas Nigeria could not.

    To renowned environmental expert and coordinator of Oil Watch International, Mr. Nnimmo Bassey, the development is hardly surprising. According to him, divestment is a business strategy by the IOCs to cut losses and maximize profits. “You will notice that they are divesting mostly from onshore and swamp fields that intersect with communities that they have massively polluted and abused. Their aged facilities in those locations will certainly bring on more resource ownership and social conflicts. So, if local companies are happy to step in and take the flak that means ‘good’ business for the IOCs,” he observed incomplete sentence.

    Bassey also said that on the other hand, the IOCs mostly divested to the extent of their equity holdings in such fields and production also activities. “They still own the pipelines and related facilities. What that means is that they are renovating their image, collecting rents from their facilities and generally smiling to the bank while the local companies will eventually take the beating for the pollutions, conflicts and other social disruptions. We see the divestment as a business strategy that benefits the IOCs and leaves the oil field communities and the environment at risk,” he told The Nation.

    Dismissing the divestment as a veiled threat to the Federal Government against erection of policies that dig into the incredible profits the IOCs have been making in the country, the environmental expert alleged that: “The IOCs do not want Nigeria to have a properly regulated oil and gas sector. They do not want a strong PIB. The spate of divestment can be seen as a statement in this direction.”

    The Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers, NUPENG, thinks so, too. Its President, Comrade Igwe Achese accused the IOCs of stalling the passage of the PIB.

    “We call for the quick passage of the PIB that is before the National Assembly, as it would go a long way to reforming and ensuring transparency in the oil and gas sector. The multi-nationals are running helter-skelter to halt the passage but this must be rebuffed by the National Assembly because the multinationals are doing it for their selfish interests,” Achese said.

    The National Assembly, through the Chairman, Senate Committee on Gas Resources, Senator Nkechi Nwaogu, and Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Petroleum Upstream, Hon. Muriana Ajibola, raised hopes when they announced at ‘NOG 2014’ that the PIB would be passed later this year.

    Senator Nwaogu said the bill, which consists of 16 legislations, was brought together to promote efficiency. She said the bill, which establishes the legal and regulatory framework, institutions and regulatory authorities for the Nigerian petroleum industry while also stipulating guidelines for operations in the upstream and downstream sectors, has just passed the second reading and at present, is at the technical stage.

    But some stakeholders including Bassey are not impressed. Bassey noted, for instance, that although the PIB is a good first step, the document as packaged, is not as strong as it ought to be. According to him, the PIB does not have stringent pro-people and pro-environment provisions, as the country, despite the PIB, will still be having illegal routine gas flaring. He blamed the delay in passing the bill on what he described as ‘toxic politics’ and pressure from the IOCs who have openly said they would not accept laws that curb their excessive profits as well as wrong perception by some legislators that provision of funds for communities mean more money to the oil-bearing states.

    Indeed, the 10 per cent additional revenue sought for the oil-producing communities is one of the contentious provisions in the PIB that divided legislators in both chambers of the National Assembly. While legislators from the South support the provision, those from the North argue that the Niger Delta already has enough money coming to it from the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Niger Delta Ministry, and the 13 per cent derivation.

    Nnimmo argued that although, the PIB makes the offer of money to oil-bearing communities on one hand, it takes it away on the other. “The PIB criminalises communities when it says that if oil facilities are tampered with then the communities, local government areas, and states would pay. Communities are not the policemen of oil facilities. The PIB speaks the old language of subsisting laws that free IOCs of responsibility where facilities are interfered with by third parties. That has made the claim of sabotage the favourite refrain of the oil companies even before incidents are investigated. The PIB fell into the same anti-people trap,” he explained.

    The non-passage of the PIB is blamed for creating an air of uncertainty in the industry, forcing IOCs to either divest or hold back on their investments. Because of the high-wire politicking that has characterised the PIB in the past 10 years, investors are said to be wary of putting their money in the industry. Senator Nworgu acknowledged this much at the conference when she said “Nigeria is currently on a standstill because investment in oil and gas has been delayed due to the delay in the passage of the bill.” She added that when passed into law by the seventh Senate, the bill would open up doors for investments and improve Nigeria’s revenue generation.

    Indeed, many IOCs in Nigeria are holding back on investment. For instance, a whopping $109 billion, about N16.8 trillion proposed investments are said to have been put on hold by oil majors who said planned projects were no longer economical due to the fiscal terms of the PIB. Some of the IOCs are also reportedly diverting their investments to other countries where oil has been found and where a transparent system is in place for the benefit of all stakeholders.

    The Nation reliably gathered that Shell alone had planned an investment of $30 billion in two offshore deepwater projects, but because of the current investment climate in the country, “SPDC would rather wait for stable and right conditions before committing finances,” Sunmonu said. The situation, which is not peculiar to Shell, but applies to all the IOCs perhaps, explains why there has been widespread apprehension and fear by stakeholders over the implications of the exit of the IOCs on investment especially at a time the Federal Government said it is encouraging more investment inflow into the industry.

    However, Bassey does not see the need for fresh investment in the oil industry. “When government seeks more investment in the sector, the expectation is that this would bring in more revenue and positively impact the economy, but up to 90 per cent of the expenditure in oil and gas production efforts are made abroad and not in Nigeria. The equipment is manufactured abroad and is merely assembled here. The sector is not a massive employer of labour and many locals working in the sector are mere contract staff,” he explained.

    Bassey insisted that what Nigeria needs to do right now is to “massively increase oil revenues by halting oil theft. We are not talking about poor villagers scooping crude oil in buckets and jerry cans. Those also need to be stopped. We are talking about the industrial-scale oil theft going on in the oil sector. The official figure bandied by the Ministry of Finance as well as the National Assembly is that 400,000 barrels of crude oil are stolen everyday,” he said

    As for local operators, Bassey and other experts and stakeholders said the ability of local operators to hold their own would depend, to a very large extent, on better collaboration, better host community management, proper valuation and raising smart financing. They also require huge investment in knowledge, research and development (R&D).

     

     

  • Indigenous operators, partners for JVAs

    Indigenous operators, partners for JVAs

    Local oil operators and their partners are fine-tuning arrangements to seal Joint Venture Agreements (JVAs) in the oil and gas industry, the President, Liquefied Natural Gas Association of Nigeria (LPGAN), Dapo Adesina, has said.

    Speaking to The Nation against the backdrop of the decision of the international oil companies (IOCs) to divest their stakes because of crude oil theft, pipeline vandalism and loss of revenue, Adesina said local players were considering JVAs to execute huge ticket transactions, especially the ones found in deep off sites.

    He said: “With IOCs leaving the shores of Nigeria and selling their marginal fields, the local operators have no choice but to brace for the challenges ahead. They are making moves within and outside the country on the issue. A combination of technical expertise and funding is required for indigenous operators to increase their participation in exploring activities. Already, they contribute 10 per cent to exploration; they want to go beyond this in the foreseeable future.

    ‘’ They did not achieve 10 per cent overnight. They started somewhere and they can dominate the exploration business in the event that oil majors left the country. Technology is available. What they need is funding running into billions of dollars to do business which international oil firms are doing. New partnerships that would provide such activities are being formed. It is not impossible for local firms to go into deep offshore projects in the next few years.’’

    He said discussions tend towards that direction, urging operators not to come together and move the industry forward.

    He said many oil companies were divesting from offshore to play in onshore, arguing that the industry dynamics unfold globally.

    On crude oil theft, he said the government, security agencies and oil companies have a role to play in checking the vices.

    ‘’Oil theft is something that needs sustained efforts before it can be dealt with. Stakeholders, including oil firms, security institutions, and governments at all levels and others must involve in the fight against crude oil theft. Bigger vessels are used to steal oil; they must be intercepted by powerful security team/ apparatus,’’ he added.

  • Gas price increase’ll jerk electricity tariff

    Gas price increase’ll jerk electricity tariff

    Electricity consumers may pay higher tariff if the Federal Government raises the price of domestic gas by 50 per cent, the President, Liquefied Natural Gas Association of Nigeria, Dapo Adeshina has said.

    He said this may have ripple effects on stakeholders in the energy sector.

    “The planned increase in the cost of gas would lead to a corresponding increase in the cost of tariff by the power distribution companies. The power generation companies would buy gas from the International Oil Companies (IOCs) at a higher price and in return pass the cost to the power generation firms.The firms would transfer the cost to the power distribution firms, which would further pass it to the consumers via increase in the tariff,’’ he said.

    He said the development is going to benefit IOCs because it would increase their revenue greatly. “IOCs, such as Texaco, Chevron, Shell, and Exxon Mobil, as gas producers, will generate more revenues as a result of the gas price increase. Fifty per cent increase in gas price is not a small thing. However, we, as consumers, are going to bear the cost by paying higher tariffs,’’ he added.

    However, he increse, he said, would boost more investments throrugh gas utilisation, arguing that the development would not affect the price of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) known as cooking gas.

    “Natural gas and LPG are not the same thing. While the latter has more comprehensive functions and capacities, the former is not. So, there is no way the increase in natural gas price would affect the price of LPG,’’ he said.

     

     

  • 30,000 lose jobs to oil theft

    30,000 lose jobs to oil theft

    About 30,000 workers have lost their jobs to oil theft in the past two years, the Petroluem and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), has said.

    Speaking during a visit to The Nation, its spokesman, Seyi Gambo, said the affected workers are from different  segments of the industry.

    He said the decision of the International Oil Companies (IOCs) to divest their stakes in the industry, among other problems,  has resulted in the loss of about 30, 000 jobs.

    Gambo said there has been confliciting reports on the issue of oil theft since 2011 when it broke out.

    “For years now we have been having problems with oil theft. In 2009, the United  Nations said that Nigeria was losing about 150,000barrels per day to illegal bunkering. It was last year that the Finance Minister said it’s about 400,000 bpd that we were losing, so that is the problem.

    “So you understand that this is a very big problem This is because Shell, Agip, Total are telling Nigerians that the process isn’t as safe as it was before, and the way we operate is not the way other unions operate because of the level of our education.”

    He said the union is doing a lot of backdoor negotations to prevent a situation whereby more people would be thrown into the labour market.

    He said the decision to award contracts to ex-militants to safeguard the waterways has not helped matter as oil theft, pipeline vandalisation among other activities continues.