Tag: Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC)

  • Gunmen abduct Agip workers, two others in Bayelsa

    Unidentified gunmen have kidnapped two workers of the Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC) and two other persons along the creeks of Azuzuama in Southern Ijaw  Local Government Area of Bayelsa State. 

    It was gathered that the victims were in the area last weekend to carry out a Joint Investigation Visit (JIV), usually done by stakeholders after an oil spill, when the gunmen swooped on them.

    The armed kidnappers were said to have stopped the officials, seized four of them and took them to an unknown place.

    A source, who spoke in confidence,  said the victims included an employee of the Bayelsa State Ministry of Environment, the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) and two from Agip (HSE Department).

    Read Also: NNPC, Agip to add 500mw to power grid

    He said the abducted victims were taken to an unknown destination adding that the assailants later contacted Agip to negotiate their ransom and release.

    Following the development, the source said the oil company sent a letter to the Director, Petroleum and Pollution Department in the Bayelsa State Ministry of Environment.

    But Agip and the Bayelsa State Ministry of Environment could not be reached for their reactions. 

    It was however gathered that armed solders were deployed in the area to locate the whereabouts of the victims. 

    When contacted, the Spokesman of the Joint Task Force (JTF) in the Niger Delta, Operation Delta Safe (ODS), Maj. Ibrahim Abdullahi, said he was not aware of the abduction. 

    He said:”There is no information like that at my disposal. However,  I’ll check further and let you know if there’s anything like that.”

  • Agip tackles restiveness in Niger Delta with Green River Project

    Agip tackles restiveness in Niger Delta with Green River Project

    The Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC), has acquired a farm in Bayelsa State to train youths, women and local farmers in the Niger Delta on agriculture as part of its efforts to stop restiveness in the region.

    The oil giant also provided over 5000 poultry birds, 17,000 plantain suckers 100 banana suckers, 2,500 bundles of cassava stems, over 500 pineapple suckers and 350kg maize seeds to farmers in the region within the year.

    The Vice-Chairman and Managing Director, NAOC, Massimo Insulla, said at the weekend that the agricultural initiatives were all part of the Nigerian Agip Oil Company’s Green River Project.

    Speaking in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State capital, at the company’s 21st Farmers’ Day celebration, Insulla said over 2,000 yam seeds and 850,000 fingerlings were also distributed to farmers.

    He said the multinational in partnership with its joint ventures trained about 300 youths in agro-skills acquisition programme adding that NAOC inaugurated a 10-hectare plant propagation centre in Kwale, Delta State.

    “To further strengthen and sustain the future of Niger Delta, Eni companies in Nigeria have embarked on training of over 1000 vendors in capacity Development initiatives through our various programmes.

    “We have commitment to the Nigerian Content Development Management Board (NCDMB) to provide one year specialist subsea engineering training for 10 NCDMB nominated engineers.

    “We have subsisting Memorandum of Understanding (MOUs) with Standard IBTC, Zenith Bank, and UBA for provision of credit facilities to our vendors at favorable rates”, he said.

    He said the annual Farmers’ Day is a project of the company and its joint venture partners designed to celebrate the achievements of farmers over the last planting season.

    Insulla, who said the celebration was being hosted for a second time in Bayelsa added that in the past 30 years, the project remained a prime source of employment and improvement of standard of living for various communities.

    He said the project served as a tool for sustainable development and food sufficiency, insisting that the annual project offered the platform to individual farmers and various cooperative societies to come together to showcase their products, produces and services.

    He said that the theme of this year’s celebration, ‘GRP: Actively leading the future of the Niger Delta’, was chosen to highlight the contributions and preparedness of Agip JV scheme to support the development of the communities.

    He said such development would come from boosting the capacity of the communities through training, extension services, technological support and knowledge transfer.

    In his welcome remarks, the General Manager, District, Marco Rotondi, said the GRP which started in 1986 has been visionary and pioneering.

    He said that in the next 30years, Nigeria would be the third largest country by population after China and India and there was the need to rethink how the country treats and distributes her resources.

    Rotondo said: ”Access to food will be extremely crucial. In addition, Nigeria has the impelling need to diversify its economy, which is solely relying on oil and gas.

    ”It is easy to understand focus and drive to make farming very attractive and accessible and to encourage the youth and especially the women to embrace a modern and mechanised agriculture.”

    The host Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson insisted that the only route to achieve prosperity in the country was self-reliance on agriculture instead of total dependence on oil and gas.

    Dickson, who was represented by his deputy, Rear Admiral John Jonah (retd.), urged the people to embrace the emergence of agricultural revolution to achieve sustainable socio-economic development of the country.

    He said: ”I was very impressed with what I saw here because it is in line with what Bayelsa State, particularly in this time of oil infiltration that is taking place right from onset that Bayelsa must think beyond oil.

    ”With this, I state that there is no other way to go in this country today. The only route to go to prosperity, self-reliance is farming.

    ”These actions by Agip, not only to get our farmers empowered but also trained is very commendable and I urge you to continue with it. A good head with a good heart is what we need to move forward.

    ”Thankfully, Agip has a good head and heart and thus they gave to us. They have assisted in training and also empowering our young and old men and women who were once focused on oil as the only source of living and I am certain that they are benefitting from it today.

    ”I implore you all to embrace the emergence of agricultural revolution. We have the farms for it and the mechanized aspect has been inculcated in them.”

  • Pipeline fire: Bayelsa community threatens to shut down Agip’s operations 

    Pipeline fire: Bayelsa community threatens to shut down Agip’s operations 

    The Ayamasa community in Ekeremor Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, are threatening to shut down operations of the Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC) following an explosion of a pipeline belonging to the company in the area.

    It was gathered that the Ayamasa-Tuomo trunkline owned by Agip burst into flames spilling unquantifiable amount of oil into the environment.

    Community stakeholders were said to have believed that the incident was caused by equipment failure.

    It was learnt that the bubbling fire lasted for about three days, spreading to vegetation and destroying aquatic lives, before it was put out by the company.

    Hundreds of women, youths and people of the community issued an ultimatum to the management of Agip following protest over the firm’s handling of the situation.

    They accused the company of failing to comply with due process saying the firm’s contractors came to clamp the ruptured section of the pipeline without consulting other stakeholders.

    The Central Zone’s leadership of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) Worldwide confirmed the incident in Yenagoa and said the community youths were planning to disrupt the company’s operations in the area.

    He said: “Ayamasa end of the Trunkline got exploded and the fire was on for two days before this terrible pipelines contractors put it off and left the community without a word.

    “Up untill now the community has not heard from them and the community boys are now about to shut down the operations of that platform as I am speaking with you now”.

    Porri said the community was angry that Agip and government agencies failed to visit the site to assess the damage done by the incident.

    He insisted that obsolete equipment especially expired pipelines was the reason for facility failures and explosions in the Niger Delta region.

    The chairman said the youths were worried about the age of oil pipelines criss-crossing the state adding that such equipment required immediate replacement.

    According to him since the pipes were buried after the discovery of oil in commercial quantity at Oloibiri area of the state, they had not been changed.

    He insisted that expiration was the cause of most of the pipeline explosions and equipment failures causing oil spills in the environment.

    He said: “We have been appealing to oil companies to immediately begin the process of replacing pipelines buried in the region for many decades.

    “Since oil was first discovered in Bayelsa, in Oloibiri, the pipelines that are criss crossing  the entire central zone which they used in taking first oil from our environment have all expired. Even human life has an expiring date much less equipment made by humans.

    “Most of the explosion, most of the things that happen in the environment are not caused by Ijaw youths. Ijaw youths are law-abiding, Ijaw youths are not fighters and we are hardworking.

    “I want to make bold to say that all the multinational oil companies that are again operating in our zone should as a matter of urgency commence the process of replacing all the expired pipelines across the central zone because we will no longer tolerate corrosion and equipment failure”.

    The IYC boss appealed to Agip to immediately move to the site, access the damage done by the incident to begin the process of remediation and compensation.

     

  • Gas supply threatened as firm defies court order

    Gas supply threatened as firm defies court order

    Italian oil giant – Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC) – is locked in a battle with Arco Group Plc., an indigenous oil servicing firm. The crisis may trigger shortage in gas supply nationwide as a major gas plant is threatened, reports Assistant Editor Seun Akioye. 

    It doesn’t require an expert to know  that all is not well at the Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC) gas plant in OB/OB Omoku, in Ogba, Egbema, Ndoni Local Government Area of Rivers State. From the entrance, one could see a giant gas flare being accompanied by a thick, black smoke  from the three gas pipes in the plant.

    Employees at the gas plant blamed  the heavy black smoke and the unusual high flare on inadequate maintenance of the plant. For more than a year, the operation at the plant has been a subject of litigation. Locked in the legal tussle are: an indigenous oil and gas engineering company, Arco Group, NAOC and an engineering firm, Plantgeria Nigeria Limited. Plantegeria has strong Italian roots.

    In 2006, Arco Group and its erstwhile partner, General Electric International Operations Nigeria Limited (GEION), won a contract in a Joint Venture involving the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and NAOC Limited to maintain the latter’s rotating equipment, gas turbines and machines at NAOC’s OB/OB, Kwale and Ebocha gas plants in Delta and Rivers states.

    The initial contract ran from 2006 to 2011, with Arco responsible for the maintenance of the plants rotating equipment, including the turbines, the centrifugal and reciprocating compressor. The company was also mandated to do preventive, corrective maintenance and general overhaul. However, trouble began when both Arco and GEION were requested to submit a proposal. But, NAOC, a party to the joint venture deal, allegedly had other plans. It allegedly introduced a fresh company – Plantgeria – and decided to award the contract to it against the directives of the Joint Partners.

     

    Between the law and an erring company

    Arco instituted an action at the Federal High Court in Port Harcourt on January 27 against NAOC, joining the NNPC, NAPIMS and Conoco Philips Petroleum Nigeria Ltd as co-defendants. The plaintiff was seeking several declarative and injunctive reliefs against the defendants jointly and severally. It also urged the court to restrain the parties from “awarding or taking any step or steps to award to any person, company or firm, except to the plaintiff company, any contract whether designated as interim, stop-gap, 4+1 years or whatsoever described….for the maintenance of gas turbines and rotating equipment.”

    In a string of retraining orders delivered June 30, the Presiding Judge, Lambo Akanbi, ordered “the parties to maintain the status quo” while adjourning the case to October 26.  excited by the court’s order, counsel to Arco Group, Chief Wole Olanipekun, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, (SAN), said “the judge has strengthened the key principle which ensures that the substance of a case in dispute remains intact until the case is disposed of to avoid destroying the major aspect of a matter after ruling had been obtained.”

    But, Olanipekun’s excitment was not shared by all the parties as investigations by The Nation showed that NAOC, has blatantly flouted court order by going ahead to hire Plantgeria Nigeria Limited to take over the servicing of the gas plant.

    It was learnt that on October 7,  at the OB/OB plant in Omoku, ARCO worker were denied access into the processing gates of the plant by NAOC security and Plantgeria officials.

    The Nation discovered that trouble started on July 7  when the Land Area Manager of OB/OB, instructed that Plantgeria would henceforth take over the maintenance of the gas plants, a directive that ran foul of a substantive court order, restricting all parties from further action on the matter.

    “We were told that Plantgeria would now be managing the plant and we were restricted from the process gate. But because there is a court order asking that the status quo be maintained until the court decides on the case, we have been coming to work, but they didn’t allow us to touch anything. We are restricted to our base within the premises, whatever the court says when the matter comes up is what we will abide with,” an Arco official, who pleaded for anonymity said.

     

    Threat to gas supply

    Further investigations showed  that, Plantgeria has been battling to maintain the gas plants since July. Some of its employees were seen moving around the plant and The Nation confirmed that the company has taken charge of gas maintenance   at OB/OB. A source wondered why a company, with its primary expertise in auto mechanic, generator repairs and equipment leasing was could be hired for such technical job.

    “But Plantgeria does not have the required expertise to handle the gas plants and they have been having a tough time. When we were in charge, we maintain at 97/98 per cent but what we have now since Plantgeria took over is less than 50 per cent. That is the reason for the black smoke and the huge flare that you see. It is not supposed to be like this,” a source said.

    Though claim could not be independently verified, another source alleged that the community has not enjoyed electricity supply since July.  It was learnt that the turbo generator, which generates power has not been serviced by Plantgeria. No official reason was given for this but many insisted that it was because the company lacked the expertise.

    The poor management of the OB/OB gas plant has resulted in environmental problems for the community. Apart from the unbridled gas flare which further threatens the country’s efforts at mitigating climate change, the development has further dented iNigeria’s commitment to implementing the United Nations (UN) Strategic Development Goals (SDGs).  The gas plant and many of the houses around it have blackened roofs and whenever it rains, black soot  drops on water sources and homes of the residents.

    This situation, it was learnt, has forced Plantgeria to poach Arco workers.

    “We understand that NAOC told them to go and get Arco staff if they want to succeed. They have called for me and many of our staff to come and join them. They are offering juicy incentives but there is no way we would leave our company. They know we have the experience and expertise. We have successfully maintained this plant and the others even when the foreign companies abandoned the site due to militancy, we were here working,” a source within Arco Group said.

    The OB/OB gas plant is strategic to Nigeria’s quest for a stable electricity supply, one of the cardinal promises of President Muhammadu Buhari. According to The Nation investigations, the OB/OB gas plant has an average capacity to produce 40,000,000 Metric Standard Cubic Feet (MSCF) of gas.  The average monthly gas supply to Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas Company (NLNG) Bonny is 28,000,000 MSCF.

    “If you cannot maintain the plants properly and it results in a breakdown, whatever gains Nigeria has achieved in electricity generation and distribution will be affected and this will be against the plans of the federal Government,” Denis Ayisire, Arco’s company secretary said.

    It was further gathered that NAOC may bar Arco workers from entering their own base inside the gas plant from October 20. This, according to sources, is to preempt the court ruling billed for October 26.

    The disregard for court orders by the multinational oil companies will have dire consequences for indigenous companies, who are being muscled out of the sector by bigger players.

    “Where is the local content law here which is supposed to protect an indigenous company like Arco? The disregard for court orders and impunity which is being carried out here must be checked because it has consequences for other indigenous companies in Nigeria. If this is allowed, then our country has shown that local companies do not have the support of their own government,” Ayisire said.

    Arco currently has about 131 workers working on the gas plants and over 400 on its payroll.  According to an employee, if the company loses the battle, what will happen to Nigerians with the required skills who will be thrown into the job market?

    “We will be affected, our wives and children, the chain effect on the economy. What will be the lot of other indigenous companies in this sector and others? What is the rationale for pushing us out, we have been the ones doing the job and we have not been found wanting,” the source said.

    When The Nation contacted the Corporate Affairs section of Plantgeria at the company’s headquarters on Danjuma Road, Trans Amadi Industrial layout, Port Harcourt, the company declined comment on the matter. “We do not attend to such enquiries,” the company said. Also efforts to get NAOC to comment were abortive, but in a previous interview, Taju Adigun, Manager, Government & Institutional Relations, said:  “Why do you want to write about it. Are you aware the case is in court? The ethics of journalism as I know it stipulates you can’t write about a case already in court and I think you should know that.”

    The fate of Arco and other indigenous companies in the face of fallout with a multinational company remained unknown. But as industry watchers have noted, this will be one case that will test the resolve of President Buhari on cleaning up the oil and gas industry and empowering competent indigenous firms.