Tag: Saipem

  • Police arrest 11 kidnap suspects in Port Harcourt

    The Inspector-General of Police Intelligence Response Team (IRT) has arrested 11 kidnap suspects in Port Harcourt.

    The suspects include Anthony people, who is also known as “Urban Gorilla” and a suspected member of Niger Delta Avenger, a militant group in the Niger Delta.

    The Commander of the IRT, ACP Abba Kyari, disclosed this to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos on Tuesday.

    Kyari gave the names of the other suspects as Sahhed Adekunle (Black Devil), Hillary Wogu, 41, Ogbungbada Chima, 36, Chief Aghara Lobito, 31, Lucky Marako, 36 and Igbiki Sokari 38.

    Others were Dokubo Ipalibo, 28, Okwudili Pascal, 41, Candy Nwankwo, 30 and Tony.

    He said that People was well educated and was a staff of SAIPEM, a multinational oil servicing company, adding that he had worked in the company’s offices in Nigeria and Abu-Dabi, UAE.

    “Upon his arrest, Anthony people confessed to being a key member of the Niger Delta Avengers and the mastermind of the cold-blooded murder of one Saboma George, a militant commander, in 2009.

    “He also confessed to being the kingpin of a kidnap syndicate that was known for targeting medical doctors, pharmacists and other unsuspecting residents of Port Harcourt since 2015.

    He listed some of the victims of the kidnap gang to include Mr Onomake Monday, a pharmacist,
    Prof. Rosemund Osahogulu, a former Vice Chancellor and Mr Ignatuis Ajuru of University of Education, Port-Harcourt.

    “Exhibits recovered from the syndicate were one AK-47 rifle with bridge No. 4398, two SUV cars and a Volkswagen Golf car used for their operations,” he said

     

  • Saipem’s confined space welding technology excites NCDMB

    The Executive Secretary of Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), Simbi Wabote, has expressed his surprise at the size of Saipem’s facility and the amount of work being done by Nigerians at Saipem Fabrication Yard in Rumuolumeni, Port Harcourt.

    Addressing workers of the company when he led members of the NCDMB and other stakeholders on a tour of the Saipem fabrication yard, which also coincided with the unveiling in Port Harcourt of a logo to commemorate Saipem’s50 years of operations in Nigeria,  Wabote described the facility as a world-class fabrication yard which has given Nigerians an opportunity to show that there is nothing they could not do.

    His words: “When I went through this site with my colleagues, what was on my mind was that there is nothing Nigerians cannot do. I have been in the oil and gas industry for 25 years and I know when we started how everything that was utilized in the oil and gas industry was imported. Fabrication of things as easy as even spools were all imported. What they told us then was that Nigerians did not have the capacity to fabricate those items, hence they were imported.

    “But going through this yard today, I am encouraged more than anything else to reaffirm my belief in this country to do greater things. Today, this yard has direct employment of 3,500 people. Indirectly, that creates about 20,000 jobs within the immediate community and within the Niger Delta itself. We are not talking about the induced employment this will create within the immediate vicinity of Rumuolumeni community.

    “Our hope is that we will continue to keep this yard busy. Our desire is that we will increase the number of employment opportunities that this yard will create. I am sure you should be very proud of what you have done in building these magnificent structures I am seeing here and I know future generations will be proud of you.”

    He stated that it is the desire of the present administration to “internalize most of the things we are supposed to do in this country to ensure that we continue to create meaningful jobs for the teeming Nigerian youths, and this is a great example that we are achieving that in the oil and gas industry. As you can see, 95 per cent of what we need in the oil and gas industry is fabrication; all you see in the oil and gas industry is iron and steel and you people have demonstrated that if there is an opportunity you can overcome.”

    He added: “We hope and pray that other projects that are in the funnel currently will immediately come on the back of EGINA. Today, Saipem fabrication on EGINA project is about 40,000 tonnes. That is huge amount of steel. One day I believe we will perhaps do 100 per cent of the tonnage that is required in an FPSO construction. The onus is on us to encourage this facility to grow.”

    Wabote  hailed the confined space welding technology developed by Saipem Contracting Nigeria Limited in the EGINA project and described the technology as a great innovation that should be shared in the oil and gas industry.

    He disclosed that the Board would hold a knowledge-sharing session with international oil companies (IOCs) to enable the companies “share experiences on their challenges, costs and local content” so that they could learn from each other.

    Wabote said: “This visit has made us realise the need to categorise fabrication yards in Nigeria so that potential investors will know the capacity of each of the yards.This is a world-class fabrication yard. We were in South Korea two weeks ago and what we saw there in terms of fabrication is not different from what we are seeing here.”

    The Managing Director of Saipem Contracting Nigeria Limited, Mr. Guido D’Aloisio, said the company owed its success in the country to the loyalty and hard work of its staff.

  • Saipem nears completion of Egina FPSO project

    Saipem Contracting Nigeria Limited (SNCL) has completed the fabrication of some components of the floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel for the Egina field operated by Total Exploration and Production Nigeria Limited.

    The completion of Umbilicals, Flowlines, Risers (UFR) works by Saipem further confirmed that the 200,000 barrels per day capacity floating vessel would be ready for use next year. The contract was awarded to Saipem in 2013.

    Egina field located in Oil Mining Lease (OML) 130 is slated to begin production next year, and the FPSO is scheduled to arrive in Nigeria in April 2017 from the Samsung Heavy Industries fabrication yard in Korea. The cost of the FPSO is estimated at $3.3 billion.

    Speaking at the load out ceremony of the Umbilicals, Flowlines, Risers held at Saipem yard, Rumuolumeni, Rivers State, the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Dr. Maikanti Baru, commended Saipem for doing majority of the engineering and fabrication work of the UFR project in Nigeria, particularly the fabrication aspect that was carried out at Saipem’s yard.

    “Millions of man-hours were expended on this project, new local vendors and sub-contractors emerged, an appreciable number of young engineers (75) have been trained, artisanal skills have been improved and new skills sets have been developed by way of the Egina UFR project,” Baru said, stressing that the feat would be replicated on a larger scale in similar new projects expected to come on stream in the near future.

    The NNPC chief, said: “I am aware that the Egina UFR component involves the engineering, procurement, construction, installation and commissioning of 52km of oil production and water injection flow lines, 12 flexible jumpers, 2km of oil export line, 20km of gas export pipelines alongside the installation and commissioning of 80Km of steel tube umbilicals and mooring of the FPSO and offshore Oil Loading Terminal (OLT) buoy. The local scope includes 6.3 million man-hours or 90 per cent of the entire package without Lost Time Injuries (LTI), 15,514 tonnes of fabrication (86 per cent of the package) and other procurement scope.

    “I recall that Saipem also handled the UFR modules for both Usan and Akpo fields, which are currently in production. I have full confidence that the lessons learnt in the execution of both Usan and Akpo UFR and recent technological advances have been incorporated in the Egina UFR,” he said.

    The Managing Director of Saipem Contracting Nigeria Limited, Guido D’Aloisio said he was pleased to see the firm reach the point  of load out of the UFR, adding the project consumed 14 million man-hours without Lost Time Injury (LTI).

    The Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Total, Nicholas Terraz, said the UFR project was tangible indication that the company was moving towards its target of delivering the project.

    He said the Egina project was the largest oil and gas project ongoing in Nigeria. “Egina UFR project is a project of record setting, together with all our contractors we say that it is a project with the highest Nigerian content, technology transfer and capacity development involving the fabrication of over 60,000 tonnes of equipment,” he said.

    The Executive Secretary, Nigerian Content Development & Monitoring Board NCDMB, Simbi Wabote who was represented Mr. Daziba Patrick Obah, expressed delight with the level and quality of job done, saying they were made possible by policies fashioned by the NCDMB.

    The Chairman, House of Representative Committee on Local Content, Emmanuel Ekon, said he was satisfied with Saipem because Nigerians undertook the sophisticated welding jobs in the firm.

  • Lawmakers commend Saipem on local content 

    Lawmakers commend Saipem on local content 

    The Chairman, House Committee on Local Content, Emmanuel Ekon recently led other members of the Committee on a working visit to some multinational companies operating in Port Harcourt, Rivers State . Adetutu Audu reports 

    The House of Representatives Committee on Local Content has declared Saipem Construction Nigeria Limited a success story in the implementation of the Nigerian Local Content Act.

    This commendation came as the committee slammed Hyundai Heavy Duty Industries (HHI) and Samsung for failure to implement the provisions of the Act.

    Addressing journalists in Port Harcourt, Rivers state capital over the weekend, after an oversight visit to Saipem to assess the local content compliance of Egina Deep Sea Project being executed by the company for Total E & P Nigeria, the Chairman of the House Committee on Local Content, Hon. Emmanuel Ekon, said the Committee was impressed that Nigerians were fully involved in the execution of the project.

    An elated Ekon said: “We have gone to Ladol-Samsung yards. What we saw there was just an off-shoot of what is going on here. What we saw here is nothing compared to what we saw in Lagos. But my biggest joy today is that comparing both Ladol-Samsung Yard and what we saw here at Saipem is that if it were to be Ladol-Samsung Yard, you would have seen more than 100 Koreans and Filipinos working.

    “But going through this yard, going through this workshop, with the massive very highly technical fabrication that is done here, we hardly saw five foreigners working there. That is impressive and I am very happy and I believe committee members here are very impressed with what Saipem is doing.

    “This goes to prove to the whole world that these things can be done here. The idea of multinationals or service companies coming to tell us that some of these things cannot be done here does not even arise. Everybody is convinced what Nigerians are doing here.

    “This is massive. This is very appreciable by the committee. I lack better words to explain what Saipem is doing here in Nigeria. But I want to commend them. This is another success story of the Local Content Act.”

    He said the committee decided to embark on the facility tour to have first-hand information of what is going on around the different fabrication yards, servicing companies around Nigeria.

    He said the committee had visited Samsung yard three weeks ago. “What we saw there was a complete departure from what you are seeing here today,” lamented.

    He recalled that the Committee had three weeks ago frowned at the attitude of Samsung in bringing over a hundred welders and fitters that are in abundance in the country, stressing That it’s a complete violation of Section 53 of the Local Content Act. “The essence of our touring these facilities is to see where these companies have violated our law and then try to enforce those companies to comply with our laws.”

    Ekon said the House of Representatives would not spare any multinational or servicing company that violates the local content act, saying the House had already taken steps against identified companies.

    Speaking further, he noted that the Committee started engaging Hyundai Heavy Duty Industries (HHI) and found out that HHI violated the law by bringing in expatriates without valid papers.

    “How they came into the country we do not know. And these are people that are coming in to take jobs that are meant for Nigerians. What we did was to invite the Immigration Services into HHI. They started their investigation that lasted about a month. At the end of it all, HHI was found guilty. As I am talking to you now, the MD was deported last week Thursday; the country representative was deported and another officer was deported for 10 years. That means they cannot come into this country for the next 10 years.”

    About 31 more of these HHI expatriates are working in Chevron Excravos still, he said. “They under investigation right now; their passports have been seized and by Tuesday next week, Immigration Services will also come out with result of their investigation. If they are found guilty, all of them will go the same way.

    “So, my advice to multinationals and service companies working in Nigeria is that we have a new Sheriff in Town and things just have to be done the right way. We are not here to with-hunt any company. We want them to come to Nigeria to do business; we appreciate their investments (especially look at what Saipem has done, we appreciate the level of investment Samsung brought into the country; the training, manpower development, the technology transfer. But in doing all that it is not a license for them to come in here and violate our laws.”

    Also addressing journalists, the Managing Director of Saipem, Mr. Guido D’Aloisio, said the visit had afforded the house Committee to see that his firm had been complying with the relevant laws.

    Upbeat, he said, “We are very humble to say that Saipem is proud of these achievements in Nigeria. Again, this is an example of our Nigerian project made and executed by Nigerians. We have a lot of technology here which has now become the property of the Nigerian group in Saipem here. We are setting up a first class yard, exporting from Nigeria some of our technology like in the area of safety and we were discussing our first class training course in working in confined space. All these are our commitment in Nigeria.

    “It is not by chance that we have been here for 50 years and consistently trying to grow with Nigerians in Nigeria.  We are for sure in the right path of growth with Nigerians in Nigeria.”

    Saipem, he recalled, had been working with Nigerians even before the Local Content Act was passed.

    “For us the Nigerian Act was not something new or something which changed our lives. We started working with Nigerians well before the Act became law,” he said.

  • Eni, Saipem to be tried in Algeria corruption case

    Italian oil major Eni, oil services group Saipem and former Eni CEO, Paolo Scaroni have been ordered by an Italian judge to stand trial in an Algerian corruption case.

    The long-running case revolves around allegations Saipem paid intermediaries around 198 million euros ($218 million) to bag contracts worth 8 billion euros with Algeria’s state-owned Sonatrach, Reuters reports.

    Saipem has previously said the allegations relate to events that took place around 2010.

    In statements on Wednesday, Eni and Saipem said they were confident they would be able to prove the allegations were groundless.

    A lawyer representing Scaroni, CEO at Eni for nine years, said his client was innocent.

    “We are sure the court will recognise this as the judge in the first preliminary hearing had done,” said Enrico de Castiglione.

     

  • Dangote, Saipem sign Joint Venture in Central, W/Africa

    Dangote, Saipem sign Joint Venture in Central, W/Africa

    Africa’s leading indigenous conglomerate, Dangote Industries Limited has announced a multi-million dollar Joint Venture (JV) agreement with Saipem, the Italian engineering and construction giants.

    The agreement has given birth to a new company called Saipem-Dangote E&C.

    Dangote Group said in a statement that Saipem-Dangote E&C is a significant new player in the Nigerian and Central/West African market, with high technical and financial capabilities.

    Group Executive Director at Dangote Group, Mr. Devakumar Edwin was quoted as saying that the new company aims to secure complex engineering & construction projects and to execute them at the highest levels of efficiency in terms of costs and timing, while maintaining sufficient flexibility to adapt to different project requirements.

    Saipem and Dangote Group have a track record of successful collaboration, drawing on the strengths and competences of both companies. Dangote’s financial strength, expertise and standing in the Sub–Saharan African market will complement Saipem’s unique capabilities in E & C

    This new partnership confirms the shared commitment of the two groups to both the Nigerian market and sub-Saharan Africa more widely.

    “We are confident that our partnership with Saipem will position us as a major player in the oil & gas sector.

    “Dangote’s financial strength, expertise and standing in the sub–Saharan African market will complement Saipem’s unique capabilities in E & C in developing new business. Saipem values the satisfaction of its clients in the energy industry, tackling each challenge with safe, reliable and innovative solutions. Dangote Industries and Saipem shall gain mutual benefit from this partnership,” Edwin was quoted to have said in the statement.

    Commenting on the development, Saipem Central Africa Regional Manager, Giuseppe Surace said: “The combination of two excellences like Saipem and Dangote in Central Africa creates a new efficient and sustainable (business entities).”

  • Saipem wins $3b Nigeria contract

    Saipem has won a $3 billion contract to develop an underwater field around 100 kilometers off the coast south of Port Harcourt in Nigeria, the Italian oil services group said on Tuesday.

    Saipem, under mounting pressure after issuing a second profit warning in less than five months last week, said the contract covered engineering, procurement, fabrication and installation of 52 kilometers of pipelines and other mooring and loading systems.

    Reuters says the work is due to take place in 2016, continuing into the second quarter of 2017.