NNPC, Oil companies sign pact to boost crude oil production

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The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited and international oil companies operating in Nigeria, have signed agreements that would ensure the production of about 10 billion barrels of crude oil and generate over $500bn revenue to all parties involved.

NNPC officials and their counterparts from the IOCs including Shell, Chevron, Texaco, Sinopec, Sapetro, Esso Exploration and Production Nigeria Limited, among others, renewed their agreements in five Oil Mining Leases, OMLs, that included OMLs 128, 130,132, 133, and 138.

The agreements renewed by the parties were Production Sharing Contracts as well as Dispute Resolution Agreements, among others, at a signing ceremony held at the Abuja headquarters of NNPC.

Speaking at the event, the Group General Manager, National Petroleum Investment Management Services, Bala Wunti, said, “cumulatively we hope to produce and monetise over 10 billion barrels of oil with these signatories that we had today.

“And this by no means will give significant revenue to all the parties. We expect over $500bn of revenue for all the stakeholders.”

 

Legal Backing

Earlier, the Group Chief Executive Officer, NNPC, Mele Kyari, had explained that the Petroleum Industry Act 2021 gave NNPC the legal backing to renegotiate all its existing PSCs in conformance to the provisions of the new Act within a one-year period.

The PIA became law on August 16, 2021 after it was signed by the President Muhammadu Buhari.

Section 311(2) of the PIA stipulates that new PSC agreements under new heads of terms will be signed between NNPC Ltd as concessionaire and its contracting parties within one year of signing the PIA into law, giving a deadline of August 15, 2022.

Kyari noted that this provision paved the way for the resolution of lingering disputes which created investment uncertainty and stifled new investments in the nation’s deep offshore assets.

To achieve this, he said NNPC leveraged the near end-term of the PSCs and the parties’ interest to renew the PSCs as a negotiation currency in bringing the contractors to work towards trading the past for the future.

“These renewed PSCs would provide several benefits such as improved long-term relationships with contractors, elimination of contractual ambiguities especially in relation to gas terms, enablement of early contract renewal, among others,” he stated.

Kyari added, “The signing of the new PSCs is a key milestone achievement by NNPC Ltd which would ultimately unlock opportunities within the Nigeria upstream sector.

“The execution of the PSCs will deepen investment and development of Nigeria’s rich petroleum resources and ensure that the trifold mandate of the NNPC Ltd to ensure energy availability, sustainability, and accessibility is achieved.”

 

 

 

 

 

Punch/Hauwa Abu

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