By Teddy Nwanunobi
Half of the Train 7 gas project (50 per cent) would be executed locally, the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) has said.
The project, valued at almost $12 billion, includes the net cost of the project, estimated at $5 billion, and an identical expenditure to be incurred on the company’s operational base in Bonny.
NCDMB’s Executive Secretary, Simbi Wabote, who said this while addressing plans by the Board for this year’s Nigerian Oil and Gas Opportunity Fair (NOGOF), assured that Nigeria would record an impressive local participation in the Train 7 project.
“When we executed Train 1-6, there was minimal Nigerian participation. But today the Nigerian content and out-country scope is split 50/50. Most of the cryogenic areas would be done outside the country because we do not have capacities in those areas. But 50 per cent of the whole project activities would be done through Nigerian business and must be in-country. That is the value that would be retained in the Nigerian economy. We would achieve more in the upstream sector of the project because we have developed capacities in that area,” he said.
Wabote indicated that the COVID-19 pandemic was the biggest test and confirmation of the need to develop local capacities in the oil and gas and other key sectors of the economy.
He said the pandemic forced nations to depend on their local productions to survive, expressing delight that local capacities developed in the oil and gas industry proved capable of sustaining crude oil productions.
He added that First E&P Company, an indigenous operating firm, completed its project and started producing oil during the pandemic because of local content.
“NCDMB insisted that they must build a platform in-country. They thanked us later for that decision because their platform was completed even during the pandemic and deployed to work. If the project were being executed overseas, it would have been suspended during the period,” Wabote said.
He, however, clarified that local content implementation was not at all cost.
He maintained that every project has its economics and the return on investments must be viable, which was why the Board adopted pragmatism in its implementation of the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development Act 2010 (NOGICD Act).
He added that building local capacities takes some time and that Nigeria Content was not about Nigerianisation of personnel, rather it focuses on domestication and domiciliation of industry activities.
According to Wabote, the virtual NOGOF 2021, with the theme ‘Leveraging opportunities & synergies for post-pandemic recovery of the Nigerian oil & gas industry’, would be held in Lagos State, in compliance with the Federal Government’s guidelines on curtailing the COVID-19 pandamic, as well as the subsisting travel restrictions in some countries.
He expressed optimism that it will offer opportunity for participants to join from anywhere in the world without incurring logistics costs, thereby recording increased participation.
He explained that the core objective of organising NOGOF is to showcase the opportunities that are likely to emerge from the short to medium term plans and activities of operators and project promoters operating in the upstream, midstream and downstream sectors of the Nigerian oil and gas industry.
“We must as NCDMB continue to give hope to Nigerians and the industry and show them that even when you have a pandemic like this, there are still opportunities for people to look forward to and invest,” he said.
He added that the showcase of upcoming projects by operating companies gives Nigerian service firms ample opportunity to build relevant capacities that might be required to execute the projects in-country, thereby creating employment opportunities and retaining spend in-country.
“Hosting NOGOF is line with the key thrusts of the NOGICD Act, which charged the NCDMB to build and support the development of local capacities and capabilities in the oil and gas industry, to foster institutional collaboration, maximising participation of Nigerians in oil and gas activities, linking oil and gas sector to other sectors of the economy, maximising utilisation of resources, among others,” he said.
He said the theme acknowledges the industry wide disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and it encourages constructive discussions on recovery and the way forward, especially within the context of energy transition.
He said the fair would feature technical and opportunity sessions from various stakeholders, virtual networking opportunities, an awards in recognition of distinguished industry players and a virtual exhibition opportunity for registered organisations to present their activities and products to delegates.
He recalled that the maiden edition of NOGOF in 2017 in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital had over 1,200 delegates and 33 exhibitors, while the 2019 edition in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital had over 1500 delegates and 52 exhibitors and more delegates would likely partake in this edition.
On the impact of NOGOF on the industry over the years, Wabote said some of the projects unveiled in the previous editions were underway like the Nigeria LNG Train 7, while others were delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic and would soon be executed.
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