The Federal Government has disclosed yesterday that it has plans to extend oil and gas exploration
into new fields in the Lake Chad Basin in the North East and in the coastal
states, like Lagos, where oil has been discovered in commercial quantity.
The president, who was represented by
Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, disclosed that, as part of strategies to
reposition the Nigerian oil and gas industry, his government had commenced the
process of implementing carefully conceived initiatives which would see the
country hitting a production target of 2.8 million barrels per day (bpd) of
crude oil.
The president made these disclosures
yesterday while declaring open the 6th African Petroleum Congress and
Exhibition (CAPE VI) being hosted in Abuja.
The measures, he explained, would
come in the form of reduction in production costs and increased efficiency in
oil exploration so as to achieve a 30 per cent increase in daily production.
The president also asserted that it
was unacceptable statistic for Nigeria to be responsible for 23 billion cubic
meters of the 40 billion cubic meters of gas flared annually in Africa, even as
he declared his resolve to partner with the legislature to ensure the signing
of the United Nations Agreement of ‘Zero Routine Flaring by 2030.’
He said, “In Nigeria, gas flaring
amounts to about 23 billion cubic meters per annum in over 100 flare sites,
constituting over 13 per cent of global gas flaring. Nigeria is a member of the
World Bank Global Gas Flaring Reduction (GCFR) Partnership and with the support
of our legislature; we will sign the United Nations Agreement of Zero Routine
Flaring by 2030, although our national target is 2020.”
The administration, he said, also
plans to strengthen the institutional framework on policy formulation through
legislation on the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) as a prerequisite for the
development of the sector and attraction of foreign investment.
He also listed the strategies to
include unbundling the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) into lean,
efficient and profitable components that will operate as a business venture and
deploy existing manpower to areas of competences without attendant job losses,
develop stronger policies on local content so as to reduce capital flight in
the industry and the reduction of gas flaring through Joint Venture (JV)
contracts that will expand infrastructure and deploy Liquefied Natural Gas
(LNG) for domestic and industrial uses.
While noting that the event comes
just before the 33rd Ordinary Session of the Council of Ministers of African
Petroleum Producers Association (APPA), which holds in Abuja today, the
president stated that African oil producers are confronted with huge challenges
that require urgent changes in the managerial strategies deployed within its
economies.
APPA was inaugurated as a regional
economic association in January, 1987, and it has grown to 18 member countries,
namely, Ghana, Cameroon, Algeria, Mauritania, Gabon, Cote D’Ivoire, Equatorial
Guinea, Congo DR, Congo Brazzaville, Chad, Benin, Niger, Libya, Egypt, Sudan,
Angola, South Africa and Nigeria, which currently chairs the association.
This year’s event has the theme,
“Positioning African Petroleum for Global Development and Value Addition.”
The president noted that CAPE VI provides
a unique opportunity for Africa to look beyond the exploitation of oil and
chart a new course in the use of other natural resources to upscale national
revenues.
According to him, “Current volatility
in the oil sector allows lessons to be learnt, synergies to be built and new
approaches to be adopted to enable Africa expand its economy, infrastructure,
manpower base, maintain domestic and regional peace and protect the
environment.”
He added that the use of gas in
Africa’s future energy mix has become imperative, and that if Africa must meet
her future energy needs, the issue of the development of a robust gas
infrastructure must be jointly addressed.
While inviting all APPA member
countries to enter into natural gas business with Nigeria, which currently has
the 7th largest gas deposit in the world, Buhari, however, stressed that in
processing Africa’s hydrocarbon resource, environmental issues must be accorded
huge priority.
He explained that “globally, over 150
billion cubic meters of associated gas is flared annually. Of this figure,
Africa flares an estimated 40 billion cubic meters annually. I urge all APPA
member countries to set realistic targets for gas flare-out in the region.”
Noting that the development of
domestic refining capacity in oil and gas is critical to sustainable economic
growth, Buhari challenged African ministers of energy to further explore
cooperation mechanisms to expand regional refining capacities in an efficient
and cost effective manner.
In his remarks, minister of state for
petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, called on African governments to develop policies
that will enable backward integration.
He said, “It is a new dawn for Africa
and we are excited about the development. We will continue to work
collaboratively because there is a lot happening in the space but also a lot of
challenges that we have to overcome.
“The major challenge is funding.
Obviously skillsets are there already and technology is not an issue but
funding remains key. Policies are also key because African governments have to
develop policies that will enable backward integration into their own systems.”

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