Tag: Oil wells

  • Drill or lose your Oil Wells, Fed Govt warns

    Drill or lose your Oil Wells, Fed Govt warns

    Oil wells’ licensees that have failed to initiate drilling operations in the last 30 years risk losing such licenses.

    They will as well lose ownership of the facilities under the “drill or drop” provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021.

    The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil) Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, made this known while speaking at the Cross Industry Group (CIG) Meeting held in Florence, Italy, organised by international oil companies (IOCs) operating in Nigeria. He said any proactive government will revoke the licenses for undeveloped assets and reallocate them to those willing and ready to drill them.

    He urged industry players to explore collaborative measures such as shared resources for contiguous assets, farm-outs, and the release of underutilised assets to operators ready to invest in production.

    According to his spokesman Nneamaka Okafor, the minister added that the decision to enforce the “drill or drop” in the PIA 2021, is in line with the Federal Government’s drive to boost production.

     “We cannot continue to have assets sitting idle for 20 to 30 years without development. If you are not utilising an asset and it remains underdeveloped for decades, it neither adds value to your books nor to us as a country.

    “We encourage industry players to explore collaborative measures such as shared resources for contiguous assets, farm-outs, and the release of underutilised assets to operators ready to invest in production. Otherwise, like any responsible government, we will take back these assets and allocate them to those willing to go to work,” Lokpobiri said.

    Read Also: Breeds of chickens and egg prices across the globe

    The minister also urged operators to consider farm-out agreements where assets are close to existing infrastructure, rather than incurring high costs on new Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO) units.

    He urged IOCs operating in Nigeria to ramp up investments in the country’s oil and gas sector, emphasising that the administration of President Bola Tinubu had provided every necessary incentive to ensure seamless and profitable operations.

    Lokpobiri noted that while IOCs have pointed to engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractors as a challenge, EPCs will only commit when they see strong investment decisions from industry players.

    “The government has done its part by providing the requisite and investment-friendly fiscal policies, including the President’s Executive Order incentivising deepwater investments.  Now, the ball is in the court of the IOCs and other operators to make strategic investment decisions that will drive increased production and sustainability in the sector,” the Minister stated.

    He further emphasised the need for IOCs to support local refining efforts, noting that more refineries are coming on stream and will require a steady supply of crude oil.

    To make this easy and possible, he stressed that ramping up production will enable Nigeria to meet both local and international obligations.

    The Chairman of the Oil Producers Trade Section (OPTS), Osagie Osunbor, commended the Minister for his direct engagement with industry players and for the Federal Government’s continued efforts in advancing the sector.

    “We appreciate the government’s commitment to creating a conducive environment for investment. The Minister’s engagement has provided critical insights and has also challenged us as industry players to step up efforts to increase production,” Osunbor stated.

    The Federal Government, he said, remains committed to ensuring a thriving oil and gas industry and expects operators to match its commitment by making tangible investment decisions that will drive growth, sustainability, and national energy security.

  • Our Girls; $43M; Oil wells; INEC; Braids

    Our Girls; $43M; Oil wells; INEC; Braids

    Our Girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. THREE long, hard, painfully traumatic YEARS.
    Below we discuss MegaMoneywhistleblowing, oil well ownership, INEC N3b bribe, and FRSCfemale haircuts.
    We had no power for Easter 2017! The WHISTLEBLOWN money $38m, N23m, £27,000, $43m hidden and not in circulation explain why Nigeria remains undeveloped with 2,500Mw power. Are such MegaMoney caches not too big for one person’s greed or excessive need? Are they [1] NIS safe house funds or [2] secret stolen political party funds, stashed, awaiting [a] forgetfulness to allow ‘disappearance’ or [ b] to be used for bribery to encourage [c] party defections and [d] Election2019 fraud? Wike [ W-likes, W-leaks, W-pedia], Amaechi and NIS, maybe all three, but certainly one or two are blatant liars who will be revealed by tracing the currency serial numbers from the USA to CBN to the issuing bank[s] and tellers. What security, spying, surveillance, Nigerian detective Lance Spearman or UK’S 007 James Bond-ic activities require $43m ‘ON CALL’ in one safe house? How many others? The $43,000,000 is FULL INTERNATIONAL SCHOLARSHIPS FOR 860-1720 PERSONNEL to INTERPOL, @$25-50,000/annum OR ONE 2017 SUPER-FORENSIC CRIME LABORATORY in each geopolitical zones or every state and 2017 SPY TRAINING FACILITIES for ‘NIGASPIES.COM’. Why do we bury biblical ‘talent’ while the ‘SUFFERING’ police go begging states for logistics-a surveillance necessity? If it is Federal money why is it not in TSA? Money in the safe is financially unproductive and useless but easily ‘disappear-able’ from Superspy ‘Handing-Over Notes’. Is it just unused 2016 money to be chopped at year end? Such money in anti-democracy political hands can overthrow governments. Such ‘Safe houses’ are unsafe for Nigeria’s democracy. Remember it was ‘just’ N3,000,000,000 that corrupt INEC officials received from a single source??? Solution: Return ALL money to the FG Single Account or Rivers State if it is honest money as the serial number log dictates!
    INEC, which political party offered staff those bribes? Such corruption is usually multiparty! The other sources of INEC bribes, nko? Such bribing political PARTIES AND THEIR PROXIES have committed ‘treason’ –the attempted overthrow of the state by vote manipulation. Such PARTIES and those involved MUST BE FINED AND BANNED for 10 years! Meanwhile citizens who in 2015 gullibly lining up thinking ‘My Vote Counts’ will now vote ‘INEC- Zero Credibility. This is verified criminal ANTI-DEMOCRACY ACTIVITIES BY KNOWN POLITICAL PARTIES and evil political machinations of many politicians. So INEC is like a fake party with the deciding secret vote proportionate to the bribe. So INEC’s televised ceremony of sham/shame ‘INEC Certification’ to ‘and the winner is’ is often a crime scene.
    Guilty INEC officials and Political ‘beneficiaries of INEC bribes’ have violated their ‘Oath of Office’ and must be sacked outright, not suspended from office, prosecuted, jailed and forced to return monies taken as salaries under false pretences! THE PARTY ‘SUBVERTING THE PEOPLE’ IS guilty of ‘MEGATERRORISM’ and punishable by PROSCRIPTION and jail-time for the authorising leaders and foot-soldiers? These ‘politician’ terrorists are worse than Boko Haram because they pretend to be servants of the masses but they disenfranchise millions, causing untold hardship, death and destruction of livelihoods by depriving the economy of the bribery money and the citizens of their democratic election right. Some of Nigeria’s finest soldiers have been executed for lesser offences.
    The painful saga of $1.1Billion Bribe involving of the Malabu Oil and OPL 245 should force an OIL Block Policy Rethink. President Goodluck Jonathan denies knowledge but how many aides make demands and chop ‘on oga’s behalf’ but without ‘oga’s knowledge’, receive and forget to deliver ‘all or none’ to ‘oga at the top’ or the person in ‘the other room’? How can we explain to our children that yet another round of ‘oil well dashing out to cronies and connections’ is looming???
    ANOTHER WRONG OIL WELL STEP: When will NIGERIA REVERSE ITS trillion dollar losses from a stupidly DISASTROUS DECISION TO ‘GIVE’ NIGER DELTA OIL WELLS TO INDIVIDUALS ‘forever’ who are largely not even from Niger Delta? Even if the allocations had been for a finite time like five or 10 years and then returned, it is beyond belief that the malicious decisions in the 70s and 80s to maliciously SELL OF OUR PATRIMONY SECRETLY to SOLIDERS, RULERS AND EVEN HAIRDRESSER/TAILORS TO BECOME multibillionaires, silent or known. NOW THAT THESE INDIVIDUALS HAVE MADE BILLIONS for themselves and perhaps their benefactors, WILL THEY PLEASE RETURN THEWELLS TO NIGERIA AND THE HOST COMMUNITIES so the oil remnant will save us? A ‘RETURN OIL WELL REFERENDUM’ could force INDIVIDUALS to give up 50-100% of their stake to the currently suffering local community in which an oil well exists. ALL PERSONALISED OIL WELL LICENCES SHOULD BE REVOKED/RETURNED. NO NEW ONES MUST BE GIVEN TO INDIVIDUALS. Nigeria cannot survive another major bleed of its oil-blood given by God to communities NOW MIRED IN POLLUTION. When will Nigerian Presidents learn they have more responsibility for the common above making a few billionaires -‘$1b for one person’ which is $100,000 for 10,000 families!
    FRSC female staff did not sign up for ‘ASSAULT AND BARBER-Y’ haircut or braids-cut. Only qualified barbers can cut hair on invitation only. FRSC should CUT DESPICABLE CORRUPTION AMONG STAFF, not hair. What next –TUMMY TUCK? Corruption is bringing FRSC into disrepute, not hairdos.
    NB: Nigerians, reveal a new generation of untainted ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’ KNOWLEDGEABLE CANDIDATES@2019. www.tonymarinho.com

  • Anxiety as youths threaten to shut down oil wells in Imo

    The fragile peace prevailing in the oil producing areas of Imo State is being threatened, following the threat by youths in the area, under the auspices of the Oil Mineral Producing Area Landlords’ Association of Nigeria (OMPALAN) to shut down the oil wells.

    The youths called for the sack of the Managing Director of the Imo State Oil Producing Development Commission (ISOPADEC) Dr. Henry Okafor, blaming him for their woes.

    They accused the Secretary to the State Government Prof Anthony Anwuka, of not promoting their interest.

    But Okafor described OMPALAN as a popularity-seeking group, adding that they do not have the support of youths from the area.

    The youth, who gave the warning during a peaceful protest at the Government House, called on Governor Rochas Okorocha to sack the duo.

    Addressing reporters, State Youth Coordinator of OMPALAN, Comrade Chidi Jackson, decried the marginalisation of the people of the oil producing communities.

    He said: “the major problem of the people has been Prof. Anthony Anwuka and Dr. Henry Okafor”.

    Addressing the protesters, the governor advised them to remain calm, peaceful and law abiding, while assuring that his administration would ensure that the OMPALAN was carried along.

  • Sitting on ‘Bomb’

    Sitting on ‘Bomb’

    LONG before last week, residents of Tunde Alabi Street and its adjoining areas in Ejigbo, a surbub of Lagos in the Ejigbo Local Council Development Area (LCDA), had lived in peace, unaware of the danger waiting to explode around their homes.

    But the peace in the neighbourhood was shattered after the discovery of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), popularly known as petrol, in some wells in the area. Even before the dust generated by the discovery could settle down, another hail of fresh dust was raised on Tuesday, August 27, 2013, when a troop of armed and stern looking security men, comprising soldiers and men of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), stormed the area in search of homes with large deposits of petroleum in their wells in the sleepy community.

    Some of the bewildered residents stood in groups, discussing the strange find, while some others peeped from their windows as they watched in amazement as the security men combed suspected buildings in the area. Their countenance showed that they had never seen such a large number of armed security men in the community.

    From the entrance of one of the streets, Animatu Ilo, to every nook and cranny of the community, the security men stood combat-ready at strategic positions in their numbers, as if on a mission to quell a boisterous ethnic clash.

    Virtually all the raided houses were said to have large deposits of refined petroleum not mixed with water in their wells.

    However, the house owners claimed ignorance of the development. Most them claimed that they had locked up the wells for periods ranging between six and seven years, and switched to boreholes after discovering that water from the wells were not good enough for human consumption. They said they were not aware that the wells had turned to large deposits of petroleum product after they locked and stopped using them about six year ago.

    One of the house owners, Mrs. Perpetua Nwosu, expressed surprise that such quantity of petrol was in her well inside the building, located at 8, Tunde Alabi Street. She said: “I don’t even know what to say. I don’t know what to say. I never knew I had been living with fuel. If I knew that there was fuel in this compound, my dear, I would have left the house. When I came in here about six to seven years ago, the first thing we feared was fuel. They dug fuel at this junction here. I never knew they were doing it until I came out around 6am and found that the smell of fuel was all over the place and there was smoke everywhere.

    “My grandmother was with me then, so I had to pack out for one week. Throughout that period, I didn’t come close to this area. I have closed the well for the past six years. Today is my first day that I would open that well since I dug it six years ago. When I opened it, the security agents said they wanted to fetch the water and I gave them a fetching pail to do so. What they brought out was pure fuel. It is my compound. They did not bring out any water. It was pure fuel. I never knew.

    “I dug the well before I moved in here because it was the water that we used for building the house. But there was no fuel in it then. It was purely water. Why I dug this borehole was because I discovered that the well was smelling, as if contaminated by fuel. When I observed that, I locked it up and dug this borehole. I have not been using it for the past six years.”

    Asked if she reported to anybody that the smell of fuel was coming from the well, she replied: “What I am telling you is that the moment I knew that it was smelling, I locked it up. But I didn’t know that the fuel was in large quantity. I am not the only one; the whole of this area’s wells are smelling. Nobody knew how the fuel went in and how to go about it. Then the next thing we did was to condemn this well. I thought that was the only way I could take care of the problem.

    “Thereafter, I dug this borehole. I dug the borehole with the hope that if it was deeper, it would not smell, but after constructing the borehole, we still discovered that it was still smelling. I am not using it for cooking. I go out to get water that I use. If I knew that the fuel in the well was as much as the quantity they scooped out today, I would not have even been using it for bathing.”

    The story was the same when the security operatives visited the building of one Alhaja Kudirat Lawal. She lives next door to Mrs. Nwosu at house No 10. A large deposit of refined petroleum product was also found in her well. She also denied the knowledge of the development. She said: “I don’t know what to say because when we came here seven years ago, we dug this well for our use. Suddenly, we observed that our bodies were reacting after using it to bathe. We, thereafter, locked it up on the instructions of my husband when the water was not fit for bathing or drinking. It was after that experience that we dug this borehole. We have not opened it for the past six years. When he was travelling about three days ago, I asked him for the key because law enforcement agents were around. But he didn’t know where he kept it, and he said they should break it on arrival. I was even joking with my children this morning that the water might even be gushing out because it had been long when we opened it.

    “Many houses in this area have the same problem. We cannot drink our water. I believe the men were working on it before now. I am a woman; it is not everything that they discuss in their meetings that they will come back and tell me at home. We have been buying pure water for drinking in the house. We never opened the well since that period. We never knew that it contained a large deposit of fuel. I was equally surprised when they opened it. If this had not happened, we would not have known the solution to our problems.”

    Admitting that it is hazardous to live in the area, she said: “We know that it is dangerous to our health. If anything should happen, the children and others in the house are not safe. If they want to blame us, it should be minimal because we were not aware of this quantity of fuel in the well. It is a problem for us and we have been panicking since it was found. I have started moving my belongings to another place because we are not safe in this area. It is that of the well that we have seen, what about the ground we are standing on? What do we know that is right there? If there should be a fire outbreak, the ground would also catch fire. Even as we are standing here, there is strong likelihood that we are standing on fuel. The environment is not safe for us to stay. If there is a solution for it, they should help us.

    “They have picked up my sales girl. I am ready to submit myself to them so that they can allow the innocent girl to go. They held a meeting about this problem recently and planned to go to the NNPC to report. When we called our chairman earlier, he said they would go to the police station to report the problem. My husband was around at the time, and he advised he should go to the NNPC to complain because going to report to the police may not be the solution. That was the outcome of the meeting they had six days ago. Nobody would be happy to live in danger. I know what it took me to have my children. How would I be aware of this kind of a thing and happily keep them here? I have been thinking of relocating them immediately this revelation was made. I have made them to understand that they would not be returning to the house after closing from school because the house is not safe for them to live in. They should help us to proffer a solution to the problem.”

    Commenting on the development, Mr. Jolaosho Taofeek, the Financial Secretary of the community, said: “We have contacted the NNPC on many occasions on this matter. If you look at the entrance of the street, you will see a pipeline. On many occasions, we had to call NNPC officials to come there for repairs. There were times we would wake up to see fuel coming out from the ground. It has been very terrible, and on many occasions, we have had reasons to tell residents not to make fire until the arrival of the NNPC officials. Immediately they arrive, they would do the repairs, but the problem persists. What we have seen is that there are many ruptures in the pipeline. Most of the pipelines were laid about 40 to 50 years ago. There is nothing like sabotage in our area here because we have security guards everywhere. It is a clear case of ruptures.

    “They said that they abandoned the wells when they observed it was contaminated. You will find out that virtually all the affected houses have boreholes. They were forced to dig the boreholes because the wells were contaminated. The contamination is a general trend in the area.”

    In a chat with our correspondents, the Deputy Commandant of the NSCDC in Lagos, Mr Fasiu Adeyinka, said they embarked on the raid after they were given privileged information about the large deposits of petrol in some wells located in the community. He maintained that his men are prepared to ensure the safety of Nigerians.

    However, residents of Ejigbo are not alone in the problem of ruptured NNPC pipelines. Areas like Iyana Odo community, Pipeline and Diamond Estate, all in the Alimosho Local Government Area of Lagos State, are battling with the daily threat of fuel leak from NNPC pipelines.

    For instance, danger was recently averted at Iyana Odo community when a pipeline suddenly burst, emptying its contents into the street, a short distance away from Peace Estate. A resident of the community, who gave his name as Comrade Popoola Musiliu, narrated how the residents narrowly escaped the havoc that the leakage would have wreaked.

    He said: “About two months ago, we saw a liquid substance like petrol coming from the ground. When we noticed it, we quickly reported the development at the NSCDC office opposite us. They came and secured the area. NNPC officials later came and rectified the problem, but before the end of the day, it ruptured again. They later came back and fixed it again. We have not noticed any form of leakage since then.”

    Prior to the incident, residents of Diamond Estate, a Federal Government Housing Estate, located in the area, had a similar challenge when their wells were found to be contaminated with fuel. For a long time, the residents lived under perpetual fear. They neither could make fire in their houses nor get good water for their daily use.

    Though the problem has largely been put under control, the chairman of the estate, Mr. Akinsulire, said danger has not been totally averted.

    Narrating how the problem started, he said: “The presence of fuel was found in the well in December 2010 when people started moving in here. We knew that to some extent, some other estates like Baruwa, Shagari had a similar experience in the 1990s. We didn’t notice ours until around November and December, 2010. Initially, when we moved into the estate, the water we had was clean. There was no mixture of any external product. But from that point that we had the pollution, as I would call it, we called on the NNPC and other government agencies. The NNPC at that point came and put some measures in place. They dug some trenches where they started evacuating this product over a long period of time. The problem is reducing, if you put it in percentage from the period we noticed it to this point we are, it has moved from 100 percent to about 20 percent. If you move around, you will still perceive smell of petrol in the estate, but it is not as strong as it was before.

    “The explanation they gave us was that fuel vandals had tampered with pipelines over the years in the area and that was why it was so. Petrol has no oxygen, it can move over a long period of time. Like I said, the presence has reduced after the evacuation in this area because I cannot speak for other neighbouring places. It moved from one place to our area, but it has reduced after the evacuation but we don’t know what can happen between today and tomorrow, maybe it is going to move again because it has to do with the movement of the product.

    “Initially, we started observing a disturbing smell of petroleum product all around the estate. At that point, we could not open our windows. If you went anywhere in the estate, you only needed to dig just about six inches or about one feet to get petroleum product. You only needed to dig just one foot and it would start gushing out in everybody’s house. It was so bad that majority of the residents could not even cook.

    “It took a collective effort to survive the problem. There was mass awareness because we knew we had a big problem in our hands and collectively, we tackled it. The fact that we live in an enlightened environment really helped us to manage the challenge. The closest threat we had was when vandals went to the back of the fence to scoop oil and there was fire. They ran away but we invited fire fighters that saved the situation. Apart from that, we were able to manage the situation and can sleep now unlike before.

    “The remaining 20 per cent is not specifically in one area. Before, it was highly concentrated around our Phase Two. It moved from that end to the lower end of Phase One. Some people still have the mixture of petrol in their water, but it is not as bad as it was much earlier. A lot of people still buy water. I buy water too. There is a very high content of lead in the water.”

    The only solution, according to him, is for the “NNPC to remove the product from under our feet. That is all. Obviously an impact assessment was done before the estate was built, but it did not reveal the challenge at that point. It is the movement of the product from the previously contaminated area to this area over a period of time.

    “There is only one body that is in charge of petroleum in the country. That is NNPC. When this problem started, they were the first people we called. When they came, they did their investigation and the evacuation and all that. Initially, they said they could not say the product was from them. They said they could be seepage from some petroleum companies in this area through their tank. We went through that over a period of time and another story later came in that it might be the pipeline that passes through.

    “Whether it is the pipeline or whatever, the fact is that it is still the product of the NNPC. It is not a product that can be manufactured in anybody’s house and all we are saying is, remove this product from the ground. There should be a metre that monitors the movement of the product from the source to the destination. When I had a meeting with them, I asked them if from point A, I am giving 100 litres, when it gets to point B, it should be about 98 per cent, but when I lose about 20 or 30 per cent, didn’t they think something was amiss? What they said was that there might be some vandals tapping their pipeline. It is dangerous to live with it. When we noticed it, the first thing that came to our mind was our health and safety. If we could remember, we had the case of some Chinese that were scooping the product in their house. They were keeping it in their drums but were later arrested. The people in the estate rallied round and made sure that a situation like that never comes up again.”

    The 16, May 2008 pipeline explosion in Ijegun community, a suburb of Lagos, readily comes to mind. The explosion took place after a bulldozer, working on a road construction project, accidentally struck an oil pipeline, leading to serious fireball that consumed many lives.

    The Nation gathered that residents of the areas where NNPC pipelines pass through now live in constant fear, daily praying to God to spare them of a repeat of the 2008 Ijegun pipeline fire accident.

    Meanwhile, officials of NNPC returned to Tunde Alabi and other streets affected by the strange find on Thursday to commence the evacuation of the fuel from the wells. According to Mr. Jolaosho Taofeek, Financial Secretary of the residents’ association, NNPC officials arrived the area early Thursday to commence work. “NNPC officials came this morning, and they have been going round to evacuate the fuel from the wells”, Taofeek disclosed.

    However, efforts to speak with NNPC officials were futile, as they refused to comment on the matter. One of them, who refused to disclose his identity, said the team does not have the mandate to speak with the press.

  • ‘It will be horrible when our oil wells dry up’

    ‘It will be horrible when our oil wells dry up’

    Chief Rasheed Gbadamosi is a noted arts enthusiast. But he’s also a former Minister for National Planning and Chairman of the Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency (PPPRA). In the latter capacity whilst serving under President Olusegun Obasanjo, he often took the position that it was wrong to subsidise consumption of petroleum products. An economist by training and a successful industrialist, he is not happy with the parlous state of the economy and the fact that the present crop of leaders are not doing what is required to address the issues of the day. He shares his thoughts on the polity and sundry issues in this interview with Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf.

     

    At over 52 Nigeria has been described as a giant with clay feet due to her lingering socio-economic challenges. Why do you think the country is yet to attain its full potential as envisaged by the founding fathers?

    My father was among the founding fathers of the country. He was the treasurer of the Action Group. In their day they must have had dreams and visions as to how they wanted the country to grow. I remember I used to sit by the radio and listen to my dad, Awolowo, Fani-Kayode and co. These were men nearly everybody idolised because of their strength of character and courage. Looking back now, one can only feel sorry for what has become of Nigeria, in terms of her great potential, missed opportunities. And as for who to blame for Nigeria’s travails, well, the fault is ours. That’s all I can say.

    What do you make of the country’s development plan as encapsulated in the now famous Vision 20: 2020? Is it really realistic?

    I wrote the vision 2010. But what do you do in a situation where those saddled with leadership role are busy working at cross purposes? There is hardly any significant progress you can achieve in that kind of situation. So, let Nigerians go and sort out themselves: I have done my bit.

    The jury is still out as to the propriety or otherwise of petroleum subsidy, but what in your view is the best way to determine petroleum pricing?

    I was the one who started it all as the chairman of Petroleum Products Pricing & Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) under Chief Olusegun Obasanjo as president. At the time, the nation was inordinately consuming petroleum product. My idea then was how we would consume a final product that we were lucky to have through the blessing of God in a way that we were not using much, but reserve for development for the sake of posterity. I said we didn’t have the right to consume everything in our life time because petroleum is finite. You dig a hole, it springs up, but someday it’s going to dry up. I had the opportunity of representing Nigeria at the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) as well as having served as Minister of National Planning. It was based on some of these experiences I was advised to entrench a sensible price regime for us not to be wasteful. Coming from an economic background, it has taught me that we should always save for tomorrow. So, you don’t have to consume all you have today. Someday the resources might dry and you won’t have any problem because you have made provision for the rainy day. Unfortunately, Nigeria’s attitude was otherwise. We tried to change the trend through various price regimes until ‘superior’ wisdom prevailed. As if to make matter worse, it was also said that the nation has to take money largely from the petroleum sector to subsidise consumption and that is still going on.

    So in effect, you’re saying subsidising petroleum products is wrong?

    Absolutely! If you want to continue to consume today you won’t leave anything for your children. What you need to do is build infrastructure, be as open as possible. Tell our people the issues at stake. I don’t know who to blame? It’s us collectively. I feel very sorry for us. Someday those oil wells will dry up. I hope and pray I would have been dead by then because it is going to be horrifying. In fact, I’m yet to know any economic proposition that says you can use the streams of income of today to subsidise what you shouldn’t do (current consumption). What economics teaches is, let today pay for itself and do not overburden the coming generation. Unfortunately, we labour hard in Nigeria to create problems for our future generation. We’re just piling up debts on their behalf. The funds that should be conserved to develop electricity, fix roads, railways and other key economic infrastructure are used up in subsidy. That is what I find wrong in the whole thing.

    Other countries are developing their resources but we are just busy consuming. Countries like America have produced enough quantity of oil to last them a lifetime and so are others out there. A time would come when these people will say ‘go, we don’t need your oil.’ So, what do you do then? Will you go and drink the oil?

    There is a lot of rent-seeking and patronage among those sitting in positions of responsibility. It is believed that once you are there, you have to spend the resources to look after your pockets and all that, and not for developing Nigeria. I can’t exist in that kind of environment at all. I’m totally tired.

    How will you describe your experience in government over the years?

    I recall writing several articles on everything from budget, economic management and all. Intellectual activism on my part was probably what brought me attention out there. ‘All these economics you have been preaching, national planning and everything, come let’s see what you can do’.

    I remember at 29, I was appointed a commissioner of Lagos State under Major General Mobolaji Johnson during General Gowon’s regime. The second time was when I was invited by General Abdulsalami Abubakar to serve in his transition government as Minister of National Planning. I was there for close to one year before he relinquished power to a democratically elected government. Both experiences were eventful for me because they brought me closer to the corridors of power, and gave me first knowledge of how things run. But I would rather leave others to assess my performance out there.

    Although your governorship ambition was abruptly truncated by your dad, people still believe that you’re nursing a political ambition? Can you clear the air on that?

    Yes my dad truncated it because he was wiser than me. For a 69 year old man going to 70, what future political ambition can I still be nursing by now? No, there is nothing like that! (Laughs)

    As an ardent patron of the arts do you think Nigerian artists have what it takes to compete favourably with their peers abroad?

    Look, generationally, there is always a change. Those we are lionising today won’t be there tomorrow. I just like enjoying myself and I pray I don’t go bankrupt doing what is essentially my unbridled passion for the arts. Right now, a friend of mine, who is a drama enthusiast, has suggested that I should make one of my plays, “Behold My Redeemer”, one of my plays which I wrote in-between London and Nigeria, into a film.

    How soon should Nigerians look forward to it?

    It’s not easy! We are still trying to put the money together.

    On a lighter note, it was believed that your closeness to Fela in those days made you live a rather carefree lifestyle and all that?

    (Laughs) We had a very middle class background. If your parents could send you top Europe to go and study, it meant they had a few naira. They doted on us. We never had to scratch our fingers to feed. Life was our oyster. Fela’s mother was political, my father was political. My father told me the story of pioneering as a young politician, his role in the reinstatement of Alake, Oba Ademola, back to the throne. He was very young at the time and people cast aspersions on him, saying “Ewo ni ti Gbadamosi (what concerns this overbearing Gbadamosi) Ah, awon olowo ilu niyen (Don’t dare him, he is one of the weathly men around) He did all these things with the governor at the time. Nigeria was small, everybody looked after everybody else. They had interactions. Whenever I went to Fela’s house, his mother would say, “Omo Baba Ikorodu” (son of the man from Ikorodu). She belonged to NCNC, and my father belonged to the Action Group. But not that it mattered. Fela was in Abeokuta Grammar School while I was at Methodist Boys High School, Lagos. Rebelliousness is a factor of growing up; it made it easy for us in our London days. The late Beko was my senior at the University of Manchester. He was reading medicine and I was reading economics. We used to play table tennis during lunch break. During lunch break he would come to the Union Building. I have very great memories of him. When I finally met Fela, it was at the London underground train. He was wearing this all-white suit and he had his trademark sax box. But when I returned to Nigeria in 1969, I had to seek out where the action was. So, naturally, I gravitated towards him (Fela) because I was leftwing (boisterous laughter). I joined him in his radicalism, though I was working with my father at the time, who was rightwing (laughter). The likes of Kanmi Isola Osobu, late Wole Bucknor set up an association where we discussed everything from literature, music to jazz and society and all. We were going to Idi Oro to the night clubs and fooling around. There were days we had night of awareness at the University of Lagos or Yaba College of Technology, where we talked truth to power; we were enjoying ourselves. Anyway, I invited Fela to MUSON and people sneered that what’s this amu’gbo (marijuana smoker) doing in this kind of place? People like me said ‘ah ah, no, Fela is good’. He trained musically; he started with jazz at Kakadu. Before then, it was all about Bill Friday and Bobby Benson and highlife. There are several anecdotes about that.

    Fela’s dying days…

    I took him from one point to the other to escape the prying eyes of journalists like you (laughs). Then at the middle of the night, Yeni called to say that Fela wanted to eat jollof rice. I rushed to the hospital quickly. By then I told my wife ‘look, Fela wants to eat jollof rice’ and she quickly prepared it and we took it. By the time I got to the hospital he was in coma. But when he saw me he made feeble attempts to recognise me by throwing up his clenched fist as a symbol of the struggle. That single act shocked me to my marrows. That was Fela for you, demonstrating his belief in the struggle until the very last breath. And when he died, I had to be part of the funeral all the way. I slightly moved away because I had become bourgeois, but I could never have forgotten the good time we spent together. And that was why I gravitated towards Seun, Femi, Yeni.

    So you’re still in touch with Fela’s family?

    Yes, very much so. They are adults in their own right but must be assisted.

    What was the motivation for building the Yusuf Grillo Pavilion?

    When I did follow-follow Fela, I said to myself, what next can I do and I decided to build a gallery within my premises in Ikorodu. I built the gallery and named it after one of the Zaria ‘Rebels’, Yusuf Grillo. So far, we had hosted Bruce Onobrakpeya, Demas Nwoko, Uche Okeke and David Dale. We are trying to pick a date for the next occasion in April. It has been eventful.

    How can you explain your interest in culture and customs?

    I have tried to read about the history of various ethnic groups in Nigeria to learn what makes them tick; what accounts for their mode of behaviour, arts and so on – even the mode of worship of various people. What you call witchcraft is rubbish as far as I’m concerned. You condemn it; I don’t. I don’t buy the proposition that things are necessarily fetish. My proposition is that any science or art that has motivated man to create something and be in tune with nature is commendable. So, I don’t understand why you criticise witchcraft. Such varied knowledge enriches my life. I love nature and that’s why I collect art works, sculptures etc. In fact, Oba Adeyinka Oyekan gave me a traditional title for what he described as my keen interest in the affairs of our people. I can recite Eyo incantations; that doesn’t make me a heathen. We are not kafirs (infidels) (laughter).

    You have reached the twilight of your career.

    No, eh eh. mio ti fe ku o. (I don’t want to die now). I have retired. As for legacy, let other people be the judge. I don’t usually want to talk about it because one day I also will join my ancestors. The only legacy I want to leave is “I came, I worked very hard, I enjoyed myself, I was a friend of Fela and I took part in cultural activities. I’m the Olori Eyo Agere (leader of the Eyo Agere)! (Laughs)

     

  • Oil wells crisis about 2015 election, says Amaechi

    Oil wells crisis about 2015 election, says Amaechi

    A new twist has been added to the oil wells dispute between Bayelsa and Rivers states.

    It is all about 2015, Rivers State Governor Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi said yesterday in Port Harcourt.

    “There is rumour that they are emasculating me because of 2015. It is unfortunate. It is a non-issue,” Amaechi said at a press conference.

    He added: “For now, I have no plan for 2015. I was shocked to hear of Lamido/Amaechi 2015 campaign, with branded vehicles in the North and many people are panicky.

    “I am exhausted. I have not attended any 2015 meeting. If they are taking Rivers oil wells because of 2015, they should leave us alone.”

    Amaechi said President Goodluck Jonathan had ordered a ceasefire in the dispute.

    But, according to the governor, Rivers has just lost 46 oil wells to Abia State.

    This is besides the ceding of five of Rivers oil wells in Soku to Bayelsa State.

    It would have been worst, said the governor, but for last Monday’s protest in Abuja by Kalabari leaders from Akuku-Toru, Asari-Toru and Degema local government areas. About 71 oil wells in Abonnema, Akuku-Toru council areas would have also been ceded to Bayelsa State that day, Amaechi said.

    The Chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) said President Jonathan called and directed him and his officials to stop speaking with journalists on the boundary dispute and oil wells. The same message was to be passed to Governor Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa State, to ensure peace, according to Amaechi.

    It was gathered that both governors have been invited to the villa in Abuja by the President on Friday.

    The Abuja protest was followed by a massive protest and news conference in Port Harcourt, with the Kalabari declaring that the move to cede their communities, oil wells and Soku Gas Plant to Bayelsa would be vehemently resisted.

    Amaechi said: “46 oil wells belonging to Rivers State have just been given to Abia State. Soku is a Kalabari town in Rivers State. Mr. President directed this (yesterday) morning that we should stop addressing the press on the oil wells’ dispute with Bayelsa, if not for the journalist’s question on the issue.

    “Seventy one oil wells in Abonnema (headquarters of Akuku-Toru Local Government Area of Rivers State), would have been given to Bayelsa State on the same Monday the Kalabari people went to Abuja to protest. They were not sponsored. They protested on their own. The boundary between Degema and Brass is not in dispute.

    “If I am not the NGF chairman, I would have known what to say. As a people (Rivers) with one destiny, we will fight for our rights. Rivers people are happy with President Jonathan.”

    Amaechi said the state government had no information on the disputed oil wells, adding that lawyers and stakeholders from the communities supplied the information.

    President Jonathan is to meet next week in Abuja with stakeholders from Rivers and Bayelsa states on the boundary dispute and oil wells.

    On the controversial Rivers State Contributory Social Services Levy (CSSL), which workers have been complaining about, Amaechi, who earlier yesterday met with the civil servants at the State Secretariat Complex, said he had ordered the stoppage of deduction from their pay.

    He expressed displeasure that the deductions were made before Christmas, without considering the hardship the workers would face.

    The governor said allocations of Port Harcourt, Obio/Akpor and Ikwerre local governments areas had been seized in the last two months over their refusal not to ensure a clean environment, especially for being unable to curtail the dirt from auto mechanics.

    As soon as the mechanics’ workshops and the local government areas are kept clean, he would direct the release of the allocations, said the governor.

    According to him, the action is to ensure a clean Rivers state, especially the state capital and its environs .

    Amaechi said the government, next month, would obtain a N100 billion bond, to fund the 2013 budget.

    But, he promised not to leave any debt for his successor.

    The governor stated that the monorail project, for now, would be from the old Port Harcourt Township, popularly called Town, to Waterlines Bus Stop on Port Harcourt-Aba Expressway, which he described as economically viable.

    The dualisation of the Garrison-Trans-Amadi Road in Port Harcourt has been awarded for N47 billion. Ada-George Road and the road off Peter Odili Road, which is to link Ogoni axis and Aba Road were his priority road projects.

    The NGF chairman said Port Harcourt roads were being rehabilitated and would later have asphalt overlay to last for 15 years, with the reconstruction beginning immediately after the rains.

    Amaechi noted that he targeted the construction of 750 model primary schools, but he decided to slow down a bit to furnish the completed 250 model primary schools. New ones would be storey buildings because of land constraint.

    He assured that three of the model secondary schools in Eleme, Etche and Saakpenwa would soon be admitting students. The foreign teachers have arrived, with the local teachers being hired. He said schools would be completely free.

    On power, the NGF chairman assured that the promise of uninterrupted electricity supply in Rivers State next month would be fulfilled, stressing that his administration was having challenges with the Power Holding of Nigeria (PHCN), which did not allow the state government to hook up to its system.

    The governor said there had been improvement in the security situation in Rivers State, with no successful robbery in Port Harcourt in the last two months.

    He, however, admitted that there had been security challenges outside the state capital, especially kidnapping.

    Many policemen have been sent to Omoku, headquarters of Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local Government Area.