The Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday approved the engineering procurement construction and installation for oil pipeline contracts worth $3.7 billion.
The Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, who disclosed this while briefing State House correspondents on the outcome of the meeting, said the newly approved contracts are for Opoho Okoho flexible pipelines in OML 119 and Escravos to Lagos gas pipeline phase one for additional unforeseen works in engineering He said:
“The essence of the contracts was that in 2014, the pipeline with which we were evacuating crude in that area gave way and production became very marginal. We were operating an average of about twenty thousand barrels a day as against about thirty-seven, forty thousand barrels.
“This contract was, therefore, to replace that pipeline with a new technological flexible pipeline. The last pipeline lasted for only 50 years a lot of corrosive environment in which they operated. It is a nine-month contract. When completed, we will be able to get back production to forty thousand barrels per day.
“It is very critical and will generate close to two hundred and seventy million dollars per annum. So it is essential.
“The second approval was on the Escravos to Lagos gas pipeline phase one for additional unforeseen works in engineering, contract had been given in 2008 and it was about 83 per cent complete but additional scope has been added to that pipeline and variation of about nine million dollars was approved today added to the previous amount which was about five billion naira and $177 million.
“With the nine million added today, the new contract figure comes to about five billion naira and about $186 million one hundred and eighty-six million dollars.
“That pipeline is so critical; it is what helps us move stranded gas out of the Escravos of oil region back into the Escravos Lagos pipeline. It is two months contract.”
On his part, Minister of State for Aviation, Hadi Sirika, said the Council approved the contract for the procurement and installation of the second phase of Controller-pilot data link communications for the Kano flight information region.
It was awarded at the cost of $5,403,271 which is equivalent to N1,652,320,271.80.
The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, said the Council approved a National Public Building Maintenance Policy and Framework.
He said the new policy is meant to institutionalize a maintenance culture in the country, saying that some of the benefits of the policy would provide an inventory of government assets and job opportunities for hundreds of thousands of Nigerians.
“We have trained artisans at different levels but we haven’t created an economy for them to go and express themselves – Tilers, Bricklayers, Plumbers, landscapers, fitters etc.
“When they leave training schools what do they do? They go and ride tricycles where there is no training school because there is an economy in tricycles – this is the answer”, he added.
SOURCE: OperaNews.com