Tag: Oil

  • Why Nigeria should lose sleep over oil price crash

    Why Nigeria should lose sleep over oil price crash

    As some economies are angling to reap bounteously from declining crude oil price, Nigeria and a host of other economies that depend almost solely on proceeds from crude sale to stay afloat may be fatally hurt by a prolonged regime of cheaper oil, fuelling concerns that the price war among giant producers and consumers may ultimately unsettle the still fragile global economy, writes Assistant Editor ADEKUNLE YUSUF 

    Although it is no longer news that oil prices have tumbled, the gloomy prospects this portends for some economies seem to be causing sleepless nights in many countries. From about $115 for a barrel of Brent crude, the price fell to about $86, a reduction huge enough to send jitters down the spine of some major economies. Since then, panic seems to have gripped many countries, with fears that inability to rake in enough funds to fuel the economy may undermine serious government programmes that have direct bearing on the welfare of the citizens. Without mincing words, this is spewing grave concerns around the world, for if low oil prices last longer than expected, as all available indices show it will, the bill for oil consumers will be about $1 trillion a year lower, amounting to a shot in the arm for a stagnating world economy.

    But it is also a scenario that is laced with mixed consequences for the struggling global economy. Since the price of oil is of critical importance to the world economy, given the fact that oil is the single largest internationally traded good, both in volume and value terms, creating a hydro-carbon economy, the prices of energy-intensive goods and services all over the world are also linked to energy prices. Therefore, any abrupt changes in the prices of fuel are laden with far-reaching consequences for both oil-producing and oil-consuming countries. So, for some governments, especially powerful ones such as the United States and its major allies, a new regime of cheaper fuel would be a rare opportunity the more product while its lasts, if not a boon for millions of its citizens who depend on oil to power their industries. However, for others, especially Nigeria and a host of other economies, mainly critics of the US diplomatic interventions, it is a formidable threat to their national economic survival.

    A tracking of main factors that caused low oil prices in the last seventeen years shows four things: increasing Iraqi oil exports, reduced oil demand due to severe economic crisis in East Asia, a warmer-than-normal winter (1997-1998) in the Northern Hemisphere, and the agreement by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) (1997) to raise the group’s production quota by 10 per cent. According to analysts, if low oil prices continue for a prolonged period of time, it could result in long-term reductions in OPEC oil exports, which would also force member countries to embark on difficult economic, social and political trade-offs.

    Many losers, few winners

    According to experts, the continued fall in the price of crude oil in the past three months is largely traceable to unexpected developments in chaotic Libya, which pumped 40 per cent more oil in September than it did in August, and Saudi Arabia’s boosting of its output as its own way to bulwark its market share and reduce the influence of American shale oil producers. Though no one would have thought that the emergence of Islamic State (IS) would have increased oil prices, Brent crude oil prices have plummeted since July, trading at its lowest price since 2012, all due to surging supply led by U.S. fracking production, stagnating European demand, and a strengthening dollar. While declining prices could have a negative impact on oil-producing economies around the world, some have significantly more risk than others. In a capsule, countries feel the effects of oil prices in radically different ways.While every major producer is likely to suffer as a result of the price decline, countries with lower production costs and budgetary expectations are expected to fare better than those with higher costs and expectations. At $115 per barrel, the world produced about $3.9 trillion a year at 90 million barrels per day. But at $85, the total amount is $2.8 trillion. So any country consumes more than it produces gains from the $1 trillion tranfer, mostly importers. Here are the like scenarios that may emerge if the cheaper oilregime lasts longer than envisaged:

    Nigeria

    A steep decline in oil prices is straining the budgets of Nigeria, where the economy is almost totally dependent on proceeds from oil exports, posing a potentially grave security challenge for a country that is already struggling to finance its major projects. Though a major oil producing country (Africa’s largest producer), Nigeria is not a major force in determining the prices of oil, which is responsible for a huge chunk of its revenue. In other words, Nigeria is not immune to oil price shocks. The plummeting price of oil has exacerbated the dwindling oil revenue accruing to the country, a situation exacerbated by rising oil theft the country is battling with. This has resulted in a decline in what accrues to all the tiers of governments from the Federation Account, a negative trend that started last year but which the federal government hardly wants to talk about, ostensibly in order not to create fears that the country is broke. Already, some states are at their wits’ end on how to pay salaries, let alone finance development projects or provide services that can impact meaningfully on the citizenry.

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha, speaking on behalf of his colleagues in the All Progressives Congress (APC), lamented recently that the dwindling resources coming to the states from the Federal Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) on every month mean that most states may be unable to afford to pay salaries.

    “This has become a very serious concern to us as governors and we felt that issues that affect the lives of our people must never be politicised. We refuse to accept that this nation is broke. I thank God that the Federal Government is not broke, if the nation is not broke, what is due to states as revenue should be paid to the states. This idea of cutting down what should go to states does not in any way promote democracy and democratic dividends and so we, as progressive governors, do call on the Federal Government to look into the issue of dwindling resources or convince us as to why the states should not get what is due to them,” Okorocha said recently.

    Although spin doctors in President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration have often played down the effect of crash crunch, maintaining that Nigeria will not be affected by the shocks in the global market, government is said to be quietly scrambling to confront the plunge in prices. Barely a week after insisting that its economy was immune from fluctuations occasioned by the continued slide in the international price of crude oil, the government made a volte-face, admitting it is affecting the revenue base of the nation. The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, announced last week that the country would have to draw down on the Excess Crude Account (ECA) if oil price dips below $78.

    “Nigeria has two to three months of rainy day savings to cushion it while contingencies are put in place should world oil prices continue to fall. Our intention is not to run in there and raid it, but even if prices continue to go down we can survive sufficiently for two to three months. That is the time needed to get other measures in place. What you don’t want is a hard landing. Our buffers are slimmer this time,” she said.

    The minister also promised, rather nebulously, that the federal government is already putting in place stricter measures to cushion the effect of the drop on the economy. She also disclosed that there is about $4 billion in the ECA at present, $2billion short of what the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had recommended, adding that the country needs to ramp up our non-oil revenues on the fiscal side. According to her, McKinsey, a global consulting firm, has been engaged to carry out an extensive review of revenue services in order to identify potential gains.

    “In an oil country, you can never feel at ease exactly. But I feel we can master this situation because we have a diverse base. We will have to look very hard at recurrent expenditure, and identify overlapping agencies. When the price is heading down, everyone sees the necessity but that doesn’t stop them hating you,” she said. The minister was, however, hopeful that lowers oil prices may even provide a stronger incentive for the government to breathe life into efforts to revive the stalled oil sector legislation to stimulate production, and rein in oil theft, which has cost billions of dollars a year.

    Last week, India led the way by announcing an end to diesel subsidies. Fears are rife that other countries may soon follow the Indian example. In Nigeria, for example, attempts to remove the fuel subsidy, a scandalous sum supported through the Petroleum Support Fund, managed by the largely unaccountable Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA), have been met with stiff resistance from many segments of the Nigerian society because of varied interests.

    In this year’s budget alone, a whopping N971.1 billion is earmarked for oil subsidy, while record shows that subsidy payments in the last ten years have gulped more than N10 trillion – all shrouded in controversy and corruption.

    So if the low price persists longer than anticipated, Eze Onyekpere, lead director, Center for Social Justice, says the economy is in for a crisis of its life. While United States and other big global economies are re-evaluating to stem the tide of the looming economic crisis, Nigerian leaders, who appear not to be bothered by the danger signals, are busy strategising for political relevance ahead of the forthcoming 2015 polls. According to a recent survey, seven of the 12 OPEC members, including Iraq, Iran and Nigeria, now need far higher oil prices to cover their budgets.

    In July this year, OPEC had cut down on its prediction of future demand for crude oil from the 12-member cartel next year by 300,000 barrels per day against the backdrop of surging supply from non-OPEC producers, particularly the United States. The U.S. overtook Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the world’s biggest producer of oil as extraction of energy from shale rock strengthens the nation’s economy, Bank of America Corporation said in a report. For this year, Nigeria had projected a budget of N4.5tn, while setting the benchmark at $74 per barrel. The government had projected oil production of 2.383 million barrels per day in the 2014 budget, but the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) put the actual production figure for the second quarter of the year at 2.21mbpd.

    And with Nigeria’s economy, estimated to be over 80 percent dependent on imports, economic experts say fiscal deficits seem very likely in the months ahead. According to them, chances are that this will have a serious effect on Nigeria’s short-term economic and fiscal growth.

    Already, government has hinted at a cash crunch, with an appreciable decline in the revenue accruing into both the Excess Crude Account (ECA) and the Federation Account. Onyekpere says there may also be delays in salary payments across the states as a result of dwindling revenue from oil, a problem he blames on government, which has paid lip service to the diversification of the economy. Revenue statistics show that the non-oil sector accounts for only 10 percent of total revenue, which means the impact of declining oil prices on monetary policy and foreign capital inflows may be huge, if the slide persists. As regards monetary poli­cy, since the traditional disposition of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is to defend the nation’s currency through increased supply of foreign exchange, there may wrenching impact on Nigeria’s external reserve, which has also experienced a decline in recent months.

    If new economic realities force the CBN to respond to the current dip in oil prices by tightening monetary policy, it may further push up interest rates, up the cost of funds to investors in the economy and limit access to investible funds. Already, reports indicate that the falling oil prices have unnerved global investment markets, with many investors already seeking the relative safety of government bonds, driving their prices higher and their yields lower – leading to a slump in business activity and weak consumer spending. But there is good news: it will bring down the cost of fuel importation, which has always taken a big chunk of the country’s revenue. Overall, government at all levels may be constrained to embrace the new realities as another wake-up call to diversify the economy, seek alternative sources of revenue and ensure better management of national income.

     

     

     

  • Oil giant lifts community

    Oil giant lifts community

    Impressed with the result of the Global Memorandum of Understanding (GMoU) with the NNPC/Chevron Joint Venture in Kula Community, Akuku Toru Local Government Area of Rivers State, Chevron Nigeria Limited has said that it would now advance to a new phase of the agreement known as GMoU+.

    This new GMoU+, Chevron said would focus on business development and economic empowerment; third party partnership and collaboration; delivery on the Millennium Development Goals [MDGs]; Operational Excellence and Human Rights.

    The General Manager, Policy Government and Public Affairs (PGPA) of Chevron, Mr. Deji Haastrup disclosed this during the inauguration of 30 housing units worth about N530million built in Kula built by the  Kula Regional Development Committee (KRDC) under the GMoU with the NNPC/Chevron Joint Venture.

    Haastrup said: “The successful completion of the projects reinforces the GMOU Community Engagement model as a vehicle for sustainable socio-economic development in communities around Chevron’s operational areas in Nigeria.”

    The PGPA General Manager of Chevron also said : “The successes recorded in the implementation of the GMOU in Kula and in other cluster communities bordering the company’s operations in the Niger Delta region have shown that with adequate support, the communities can drive their development process.”

    The GMoU Community Engagement model, established by the NNPC/Chevron Joint Venture in 2005, Haastrup said is a long-term stimulus for sustainable expansion of the economies of the communities in the Niger Delta.

    The model, he also noted would help provide youths of the Niger Delta with opportunities for meaningful engagement and enhance peace in the region through constructive dialogue and respect for the Rule of Law.

    He further confirmed that the GMoU has continued to meet its objectives of making communities take the driver’s seat in their development and ensuring that huge empowerment and capacity building opportunities come to the people.

    While restating the company’s commitment to enhancing the partnership with all the Regional Development Committees including KRDC, he urged the people to continue to ensure peaceful environment for business activities so that all the stakeholders would continue to benefit from NNPC/Chevron’s operations in Rivers State.

    Also speaking, the representative of the Rivers State government, Chief Charles Opurum thanked the NNPC/Chevron Joint Venture for its development efforts in the State and urged other organisations to emulate the company’s social responsibility outlook.

    The KRDC Chairman, Mr. Stanley Benibo, thanked the NNPC/Chevron Joint Venture for establishing the GMoU noting that the community engagement model has benefited Kula communities by enhancing sustainable development of the area.

    The housing project incorporates distribution of low-tension electricity lines, reticulation of water supply, and construction of link roads/kerbstones and interlocking stones on the walkway.

    Through the joint venture agreement, the Kula RDC had before now executed several projects such as the construction of four housing units in Boro; Offoin-ama; Robertkiri and Luckland villages, including the construction of standard generator house, purchase of 500KVA generator, potable water projects as well as the electrification project in Boro.

  • Coconut Oil  wonder

    Coconut Oil wonder

    HAVE you ever used coconut oil in your beauty routine? Never mind that it’s found in the kitchen, coconut oil has become the moment’s most obsessed about natural beauty staple and it  has amazing beauty benefits. Below are ways to incorporate it into your beauty routine.

    Ways you didn’t know you could use coconut oil

    *Make-up remover: Coconut oil will gently remove your make-up. Just make sure to rinse it off after. Place some on a cotton pad and rub gently in circles around your eye area to get rid of make-up.

    * Hair softener: Use coconut oil as a DIY hair mask to soften your hair and add moisture.  Just scoop it out and apply to your hair, focusing on the ends.  You can leave it in for 30 minutes or even sleep with it in, rinse it out in the shower and shampoo and condition as usual.

    *Shaving cream: Give yourself a smooth shave by using coconut oil in place of your normal shaving cream.  This is a great idea for those of you who have sensitive skin and may be sensitive to all the chemicals in normal shaving creams.

    * Frizz-tamer: Use a tiny amount of coconut oil to smooth down flyaways and add shine to your locks.

    * Moisturizer: The fatty acid in coconut oil helps lock moisture into the skin, so smooth some over your elbows and other rough spots to soften and heal.

    * Cuticle oil: If your nail beds have been looking a bit dry and ragged, just dab some coconut oil on them.  Do this before bed and put on gloves. You will wake up to soft, smooth nails.

    *Body scrub: Make your own body scrub by combining coconut oil with brown sugar.  Coconut oil also has anti-fungal properties, so it makes a great foot scrub too.

    *Face scrub: Add some baking soda to your coconut oil for a gentle face exfoliator.  You might feel a bit of residue after rinsing, but the oil will absorb into your skin after a few minutes.

    *Eye cream: Coconut oil is great for hydrating the gentle skin around your eyes . It will leave your eye area baby soft and decrease signs of wrinkles.

  • World Bank to Nigeria: plan for drop in oil prices

    World Bank to Nigeria: plan for drop in oil prices

    •Nigeria won’t borrow to fund shortfall, says Okonjo-Iweala

    The World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), have urged Nigeria to take proactive steps in readiness to match the expected drop in revenue, arising from the continuous drop in the prices of crude oil.

    The Minister of Finance and the Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who made this known yesterday in Washington DC, said the drop in oil prices is of great interest to Nigeria, since the economy is largely driven by revenue from oil.

    Mrs Okonjo-Iweala, who addressed the Nigerian press at the World Bank Group headquarters, said the development will naturally arouse interest and lead to questions being asked as to how Nigeria would manage if oil prices continue to decline.

    She said as a consequence of these developments, the IMF and the World Bank Group are asking that countries, especially like Nigeria, the emerging markets and lower income countries, should be ready with contingency plans to be able to continue to manage their economies, “should the mediocre growth continue and oil prices continue on the decline trajectory.

    She said the World Bank Group President, Dr.Jim Yong Kin and his IMF counterpart, Christine Largard, have urged that “we should have the right mix of policies, including building up our buffers to be able to sustain the economy,” adding that the Nigerian team to the conference, including the Central Bank Governor, Godwin Emefiele, Director of Budget, Dr. Bright Okogu, the Central Bank Deputy Governor, Economic Policy, Dr.Sarah Alade, and others on the Nigerian team to this year’s meetings, have been strategising and articulating the options open to Nigeria, in conjunction with the global financial institutions so as to be able to come up with strategies on how to manage the economy.

    They said we should be ready with contingency plans and that we need to continue with our structural reforms, as well as “build up buffers and be ready with a contingency plan,” Mrs Okonjo-Iweala, stated.

    But the Minister ruled out any recourse to borrowing from the Brettenwood institutions to manage any fiscal shocks and vulnerabilities arising from  the declining crude oil price at the international market.

    She gave the assurance against  the backdrop of anxiety in some quarters that the nation’s rising external debt profile and declining revenues may cripple the business of governance,even as the two development finance institutions have advised governments of developing and frontier economies to adopt contingency plans to manage downside effects of expected revenue shortfalls.

    Nigeria’s crude Bonny Light like the Brent crude fell from about $100 per barrel to about $84 per barrel over the last few days raising fears that the 2014 and 2015 budget implementation may suffer a setback.

    But responding on options for these contingencies in the light of falling revenues, Okonjo Iweala said that Nigeria would not take further external borrowings from the Brettenwood institutions, but may tighten government expenditure profile and build up the country’s buffer.

  • Oily bribe

    Oily bribe

    •Another oil contract scam: This time, will the Jonathan govt punish Nigerians involved?

    It is a familiar story, and this reality makes it even more intolerable and condemnable because of the suggestion that corruption is alive and well in the country. News that Nigerian politicians were implicated in an investigation by Italian prosecutors into an alleged bribe scandal involving ENI, which is Italy’s biggest company by market capitalisation, and the state’s biggest asset,  has once again exposed the dark underbelly of  the powerful.

    While it may no longer be news that individuals in the country’s corridor of power engage in underhand dealings with international firms to the country’s detriment, the negative implication of this latest development is nevertheless troubling. It is alleged that in connection with the purchase of a Nigerian oil field three years ago by ENI and Royal Dutch Shell, at least half of the $1.1 billion paid, meaning $533 million, was used to bribe local officials and intermediaries who helped to secure the sale. Particularly disturbing is the allegation that some of the beneficiaries of the bribes, which ranged “from thousands of dollars to millions of dollars”, used the money to buy aircraft and armoured cars. Indeed, to some extent, deals like this one may help in explaining the obscene levels of unjustifiable affluence among members of the ruling elite.

    Considering the alleged volume of the bribe, it is noteworthy that production from the deep-water oil field in question, OPL 245, is expected to begin in 2016; and the field is estimated to hold up to 9.23 billion barrels of crude, which is reportedly equivalent to nearly a quarter of the country’s total proven reserves.

    It stands to reason that as a result of this oil deal, the country must be bearing the brunt of the corruption of its leaders. The inflation of the cost of the oil field, which the bribe brought about, and which benefited just the pockets of some individuals rather than the state coffers, ultimately amounted to a loss for the country. There is no doubt that such money paid as bribe to the individuals who short-changed the country would have been useful for its developmental purposes.

    However, beyond the alleged malfeasance of local public officials in this matter, the angle of foreigners and their role in international corruption deserves examination. It is perhaps a reflection of the apparent universality of shady inclinations that this oil deal involved locals and foreigners. But it is, at least, reassuring that the Milan prosecutors have placed ENI, its former chief executive Paolo Scraroni and CEO Claudio Descalzi under investigation for alleged international corruption, a development that has been interpreted as a setback for the Italian government because the company is state-controlled.

    It remains to be seen whether the Goodluck Jonathan administration would take a cue from the Italians and probe the issue, which is certainly the path to follow, given the approach of the investigators who have asked the UK’s Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) to freeze $85 million in assets related to a Nigerian company, Malabu Oil & Gas, said to be involved in the sale.

    It is worth mentioning that the controversial OPL 245 block licence was first awarded to Malabu in the 1990s by military dictator Sani Abacha for a reported $20 million. After Abacha’s death in 1998, a new government voided the deal; but Malabu’s licence was restored in 2006.

    Given Malabu’s background and the move against it by the Italian investigators, the allegations of wrongdoing in the sale of the oil field should prompt a serious response from the presidency, and the guilty should be punished. The perception that Nigeria is a country where corruption is accommodated and treated with respect must not be allowed to endure.

  • ‘Tourism can earn more revenue than oil’

    ‘Tourism can earn more revenue than oil’

    Amid dwindling economic fortunes of the Federal Government, experts in the hospitality industry, under the aegis of Association of Hotel Owners in Kwara State, have said the tourism sector has the potential of generating more money to government’s coffers than crude oil, if properly harnessed.

    Therefore, the association canvassed a synergy between the state and the federal governments in the development of tourist sites in various parts of the country.

    The chairman of Kwara State chapter of the association, Chief Michael Oyeyipo, disclosed this to reporters in Ilorin, the state capital, while briefing them on the activities lined up by the association to mark this year’s World Tourism Day.

    “If you go to Obudu Cattle Resort, you will be surprised at what you find there. International tourists come there as a matter of cause; sport enthusiasts from all over the world come there. I believe if the Federal Government allocates enough funds for the development of the sector, huge revenue will accrue to its coffers.

    “The federal and state governments can jointly establish such a place all over the country and develop them. Dubai in the United Arabs Emirate was developed within a short time and it has become such a tourist attraction all over the world. Such feat can be achieved in Nigeria,” he said.

    He also challenged the National Assembly to advise state governments to pay more attention to tourism development, adding that state governments should make tourism one of their policy thrusts.

    He further said tourism had contributed immensely to enhanced internally-generated revenue (IGR) of many state governments. He cited Cross River’s Obudu Cattle Ranch, Bauchi’s Yankari Games Reserve and its Warm Springs, Ekiti’s Ikogosi Warm Springs and Holiday Resort and Yobe’s Argungu Fishing Festival as some of the tourists’ sites that yield huge revenues for the respective states.

    The hotelier, who said tourist sites abound in Kwara State, which he said include Esie Stone Image Museum, Patigi Regatta, Awon Festival, Owu Waterfall and Owa Kajola Warm Spring. He added that genuine effort towards developing them would boost the revenue profile of the state.

    Chief Oyeyipo, who identified inadequate infrastructural facilities such as access roads, provision of potable water and inadequate electricity supply as some of the challenges the industry is experiencing in Kwara State, called on government to address them urgently to help business growth.

    “To worsen the already very difficult operating conditions faced by the hospitality industry, the rates and tax regime in the state have not been friendly. More often than not, multiplicity of taxes has almost crippled the industry,” he said.

    He maintained that operators in the industry remained undaunted in carrying out their businesses despite the challenges, adding that they are determined to meet the aspiration of government which regards them as the engine of growth for the state’s socio-economic development.

  • ‘Talks between Shell, oil communities not deadlocked’

    Talks over compensation between Shell Petroleum Development Corporation (SPDC) and Bodo communities in Gokana Local Government of Rivers State, are yet to achieve the desired results, Chairman of Bodo Council, Sylvester Kogbara, has said.

    Bodo communities in Kogana, are among the five kingdoms in Ogoniland. The community and others in Ogoniland have a long history of environmental pollution, occasioned by exploration activities carried out by Shell and other International Oil Companies (IOCs) operating in the Niger Delta region.

    Kogbar, said Bodo and the other communities in Ogoniland have not arrived at a particular compensation fee with Shell.

    He said the communities are still meeting on the issue, adding that they would come out with their own position soon.

    He said: “Neither have we arrived at an agreement over a particular compensation fees nor accepted the proposed $1billion for the cleaning of oil polluted communities in the region. We only agreed that Shell, and other relevant stakeholders should come and clean our land, and not clean up fees.”

    He said the negotiation between Bodo community and Shell has not collapsed as is being reported in some quarters, adding that all hands are on deck to successfully resolve the issue.

    He said: “It is a great shame that the negotiations have not led to a settlement. I had hoped that this week would have seen the end of the litigation and enable us to start the process of rebuilding the community. However, Shell has continued to treat the people of Bodo with the same contempt as they did from the start when they tried in 2009 to buy us off by offering the community the total of £4,000 to settle the claims.

    “We told them in 2009, and we tell them again now, the people of Bodo are a proud and fiercely determined community. Our habitat and income have been destroyed by Shell oil. The claim against Shell will not be resolved until they recognise this and pay us fully and fairly for what they have done.”

    In a related development, a senior partner of the legal firm that represented the Bodo community, Martyn Day, said a post-impact ecological assessment study carried out on the Bodo creek in September 2009 showed severe reduction in the abundance of marine life, with shell fish no longer present and fish numbers dramatically reduced.

    The United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP) Environmental Assessment of Ogoniland 2011, had backed up these findings following a survey of the pipelines and visits to all oil spill sites, including the Bodo creek, which showed they had hydrocarbon contamination in water, with some sites to about 1,000 times higher than permitted under Nigerian and international laws.

    Efforts to get Shell’s spokesman, Precious Okolobo, to speak on the issue were unsuccessful as calls made to him were not picked.

  • Not yet good news

    Not yet good news

    • We hope the discovery of oil in Lagos will be a blessing

    From all indications, Lagos State is set to join the league of oil-producing states in Nigeria next year. The  Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) had reportedly approved, early this year, the Field Development Plan (FDP) for the take-off the project. On this basis, the Final Investment Decision (FIT) is expected to be taken anytime from now, with first production scheduled for the end of 2015.

    The area where oil has been proven to exist in commercially viable quantities is the Aje Oil Field located in OML 113, approximately 24km offshore in Badagry, Lagos. The joint venture partners involved in the project – Yinka Folawiyo Petroleum, Jacka Resources, New Age, First Hydrocarbons Nigeria, Energy Equity Resources and Panoro Egypt are understandably excited about the prospects of the business.

    They anticipate an initial field production rate of approximately 10,000 barrels of oil per day, using solution gas as fuel. And the Cenomanian variety of crude available in the Aje Field is light, sweet under-saturated oil with a gas-oil ratio of 375-480 standard cubic feet per barrel. A spokesman of the joint venture partners thus enthused that although “No crude sales agreements have yet been entered into for the project, but as the Cenomanian oil is light crude and the project is located on major shipping routes to and from Nigeria’s main oil-producing areas, sales and access to transport is not expected to be a problem”.

    Ordinarily, this development ought to be good news both for the economy of Lagos and Nigeria as a whole. But we are hesitant to come to any such conclusion because of the sordid realities of the country’s petroleum sector.

    Yes, petroleum has generated humongous revenues for Nigeria over the last five decades. But this has not translated into development for the country or better living standards for the majority of her people. For one, oil revenue has spawned reckless corruption that has enriched a small minority while impoverishing the larger populace. Again, a critical sector of the economy that blossomed before the discovery of oil, namely agriculture, has been neglected because of oil, with the country becoming dependent on food imports.

    Moreover, oil has perverted the structure of our federalism with the component parts of the country failing to develop their natural potential, including solid minerals because of access to easy oil money. Indeed, oil has become a veritable ‘resource curse’ to those states where the commodity is found, leading to massive pollution of their environment with negative consequences for their health and sources of livelihood.

    The country’s petroleum industry is plagued by so much criminal malfeasance, illegality and self-inflicted inefficiency that the discovery of new sources of oil can have no positive impact without drastic reforms in the sector. Yet, the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) designed to achieve this objective has remained stalled at the National Assembly for years now. It remains a mystery, for instance, why the country has for decades been unable to refine crude oil locally.

    The existing government-owned refineries have perennially operated substantially below capacity despite billions purportedly spent on their Turn-Around-Maintenance (TAM). To compound matters, the country has been unable to attract the necessary private investment to eliminate or drastically reduce her dependency on imported refined petroleum products. The implication is an intricate and massive fraud network built around purported subsidies on imported petroleum products.

    Lagos has over the years been able to build a robust internally generated revenue base that has significantly reduced her dependence on oil revenues from the centre. We hope that the prospects of oil revenues will not lull the state into complacency and the abandonment of the virtues of fiscal innovation, discipline and self-reliance.

  • Vegetable oil wins award

    The Nigeria Heart Foundation (NHA) has endorsed Sunola Vegetable Oil as Heart Friendly Oil. The company said the oil is cholesterol free and it contains good unsaturated fat which is good for the body. The oil is said to contain good ration of Mufa (Mono Unsaturated Fatty Acids) which reduces bad cholesterol in the body and increase good cholesterol. The heart logo was received on behalf of Sunoa Foods Ltd by Mr. Tarun, Das and Manoj Nambair.

    Speaking while receiving the award from NHF Mr. Manoj Nambair said: “We are really proud to receive this award from the Nigeria Heart Foundation and promise Nigerian Consumers that Sunola will be giving healthy products to consumers in future.”

    He also promised to meet the nation’s needs. “Sunola is indigenous oil. Sunola has been producing Soya bean oil for about 30years in Nigeria. NHF is recognized by NAFDAC.”

  • Bayelsa communities shut oil wells

    Members of the Egbebiri communities in Biseni clan, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, have seized the Idu oil field belonging to the Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC).

    It was learnt that the field is made up of about five oil wells numbered as 3, 6, 8, 11 and 12.

    The Egbebiri communities were said to have shut the oil wells over the failure of Agip to satisfy some of their demands.

    “Five oil wells operated by Agip in the company’s Idu field in Biseni have been shut down by community folks. Wellheads 3, 6, 8, 11 and 12 have been shut since Sunday night,” a source who pleaded for anonymity said.

    The communities reportedly took the decision after their entreaties to the company fell on deaf ears.

    They were said to have written letters to the Joint Task Force (JTF), Operation Pulo Shield and the Department of State Security (DSS) to inform them about their disagreement with Agip.

    One of the community leaders, who identified himself as Solomon, confirmed that the communities shut down the wellheads because of the company’s inability to meet their demands.

    “We shut down the wellheads because they refused to meet our demands,” he said.

    Solomon said they asked Agip to solve lack of electricity in their communities by giving them a generator.

    “The generator they gave us since 2003 has spoilt. Our community has been thrown into darkness since then,” he added.

    According to him, they also wanted Agip to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with them and to change the name of the oil wells to their community’s name.

    Said he: “We have been talking to them about this, but they have done nothing. They should call for real meetings with the manager of Agip.

    “Our wellheads are numbered in Idu name. They should change it to our community’s name.

    “They are paying for only four wellheads instead of six. We won’t release the wellheads until they call us to a meeting and resolve the issue.”