NOGEC, NUPRC pressure FG to Declare state of emergency in Oil, Gas sector
By Fatima Saka
The head of the National Oil and Gas Excellence Centre (NOGEC), Department of Nigerian Upstream Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), Abel Nsa said there is urgent pressure on Nigeria government to declare state of emergency in the oil and gas sectors as a result of continuous sabotage of oil and gas pipeline in the Niger Delta region.
Nsa disclosed this over the weekend in Lagos.
According to the Head of NOGEC, sabotage of oil and gas resources is taking a toll on the industry with investors unwilling to commit resources to new projects while increasing pollution in the region.
Situation reports from State oil firm NNPC Ltd stated that 200,000 barrels of oil were stolen in 2021 with the operation now assuming industrial-scale theft.
He also acknowledged that the challenges of seamless production in the form of rampant crude theft and sabotage of critical infrastructure were still with us.
Nsa revealed that the commission has developed key initiatives aimed at reducing the menace to the barest minimum in a short while and eventual elimination in the long-run, that some of the measures will be implemented by the government while others will be implemented by the operators.
“Some of these include a roadmap for tapping the challenges in the industry and implementation of areas between government and operators,” he said.
The government will be tasked with providing security as the commission is liaising with the top security echelon of the Nigerian security network to ensure that government security forces provide pipeline and asset security.
The commission will promote the implementation of surveillance technologies on main trunk lines at each manifold for real-time loss detection that
Nsa also said the regulator will enforce the installation of tamper detection technologies as part of the design for pipelines and related oil and gas production facilities.
He also said the commission will ensure that operators implement approved security protocols in areas within their control and properly identify and remove illegal connections and conduct remedial works in record time.
Nsa said the commission was working to implement the provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) and has developed six regulations to aid the proper implementation of the law, in line with the provisions of the Act, several stakeholder engagements were held to get the buy-in and sensitise the industry players
He said that the commission has issued six regulations which comprise the Nigerian Upstream Host Community Development Regulation, Nigeria Upstream Fees and Rents Regulations, Nigeria Royalty Regulations, and Conversion, and Renewal Regulations.
He said the commission was also in the process of issuing additional seven regulations in phase two of the exercise in consultation with stakeholders in line with Section 216 of the PIA.
“While the passage of the PIA has brought an end to marginal fields, operators have now been issued Petroleum Prospecting License (PPL) to local operators who are developing previously abandoned fields.
“A breakdown of the allocation of the fields to indigenous operators is as follows: two fields awarded in 1999, 24 in 2003/2004, one each in 2006 and 2007, and two in 2010. Ten years after, in 2020, 57 fields were put up for bidding,” he said.