Buhari To Launch $10billion Niger Delta Reconstruction Fund.
The federal government under the watch of President Muhammadu Buhari
plans a $10 billion infrastructure development fund for the oil-rich but
restive Niger Delta, the Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe
Kachikwu, said yesterday in Abuja.
“We are launching $10
billion infrastructural rebirth investment programmes in the Niger Delta
region. This is not money that is going to come strictly from the
federal government. It is going to come from investors, individuals who
are ready to do private sector infrastructure, obviously states and
federal governments as the case may be and international organisations
who have shown interest to help,” he said at the unveiling of the
Roadmap for the Petroleum Industry tagged “7 Big Wins to Grow Nigeria’s
Oil and Gas.”
Before Kachikwu’s revelation of the
mouth-watering goodies for the long suffering region, Buhari had, while
launching the roadmap, said notwithstanding his administration’s much
talked about diversification as the main tool for putting the economy on
the path of sustainable growth, Nigeria would have to depend on oil and
gas revenue to get out of the current economic recession, contending
that despite the fall in oil price, oil and gas resources remained the
most immediate and practical keys out of the country’s present economic
crisis.
“As important as it is to ensure that agriculture,
solid minerals and other critical sectors of the economy are supported
to grow and contribute more to the nation’s economy, we still need a
virile and efficient oil and gas industry to take care of our foreign
exchange requirements,” he said.
According to him, an
efficient oil and gas sector remains a national imperative and a core
thrust of his economic policy, adding that the petroleum industry
remained critical to the Nigerian economy of today and the future,
despite current challenges.
The president also admitted that oil and
gas still remained a critical enabler for the successful implementation
of his budget as well as the source of funds for laying a strong
foundation for a new and more diversified economy.
The president
said the task before the Ministry of Petroleum Resources was to maximise
the potentials and opportunities across the whole range of the oil and
gas industry to stimulate the economy in spite of the current
challenges.
He said: “There is also a dire need to instil a
new culture of transparency and efficiency in the industry, streamline
operations along best practices by championing and implementing
strategic reforms at every layer of the industry.
“This will help
us improve oil and gas production, explore our frontier basins, improve
our local refining capacity and above all build sustainable
partnerships with the oil producing communities.”
Buhari said
that if Nigeria was able to plug the leakages, and tighten loose
systems that characterised the industry in the days of high oil prices,
the country could do more with the little that it is getting at the
moment than in the time of plenty.
The president noted that recent
developments in the Niger Delta had temporarily limited the nation’s oil
and gas production and supplies.
He however reaffirmed that, “whatever
challenges we are currently facing in the region, our resolve and
capability to work with all stakeholders to restore normalcy will
guarantee success.”
The president acknowledged the importance
of the public, the media, local and foreign investors and other
critical stakeholders in the oil and gas industry and appealed for their
support and cooperation.
Buhari said creativity, innovation,
technology and robust partnership amongst various stakeholders were
required to get the best from the industry.
He said: “This
Roadmap reflects the vision and aspiration of this administration for
this sector and urge you all to deliver on the expectations contained in
the Petroleum Industry Roadmap.”
Speaking more elaborately
on the plan for the Niger Delta, Kachikwu said the federal government
would be launching a $10 billion infrastructure rebirth programme for
the Niger Delta region, but that its implementation would be on
instalment and its funding not exclusively from the federal purse.
He
said that the Niger Delta state governors would have to meet to decide
which cross boarder infrastructure the fund would be expended on.
According to him, “What
is more important is not the number but the conceptualisation of the
process. It is a fact that governors will have to come together from the
region to begin to look at cross-state investments whether there will
be railways, whether there will be power facilities, whether there will
be specialist hospitals or whatever.
“But right now, there is a
slowing down of investment in the region and that is not helping the
region. So, we are going to be pulling in NNPC and groups like that and
ensure that we look at cross boarder investment in the region,” he stated.
He
said Buhari would also seek to review the way 13 per cent derivation
allocation to the oil producing states is applied by beneficiary states.
According
to him, the government would be appealing to the state governors, who
have now taken the allocations as their main budgeting tool, to channel
the funds to the core areas where oil is produced.
He said: “The
president is also reviewing the proposal we gave him to look at how the
13 per cent derivation is applied. Right now it is a budgeting tool for
state governments. We are going to be appealing to them to begin to put
that into the core areas of the oil producing communities. And not just
see it as a budgeting number.”
On transparency in the oil
sector, he said that the adoption of Treasury Single Account (TSA) had
assisted to tackle corruption in the industry by bringing all its funds
into one account.
The minister also spoke on the expected impact
of the new roadmap and said that investments in Nigeria’s oil and gas
sector, which took a downturn in the recent past would soon pick up
following the conclusion of a review of the country’s Joint Venture Cash
Call (JV) framework.
According to him, on the back of the review, a
lot of oil and gas investors are pushing to come back and invest heavily
in the country’s oil and gas sector.
He said that there would be an explosion of investment in the sector soon.
Kachikwu
also said there were plans by the government to review the mechanism of
securing oil and gas installations in the country to conform with
standard practices as obtained in other oil and gas producing climes.
The
launched policy document is couched in ‘The 7 Big Wins,’ theme, which
borders on policy and regulation, business environment and investment
drive, gas revolution, refineries and local production capacity, Niger
Delta and security, transparency and efficiency, as well as stakeholder
management and international co-ordination.
He said each time he
projected a rise in the country’s oil production to 2.2 million barrels
per day (mbpd) and 3mbpd, they were based on the fact that the JV
structure had been reviewed and funding issues sorted out.
“On
the issue of JV cash call. We have done a yeoman’s job. We are nearing
completion of those negotiations, it would go to the FEC and it does not
require a law. Those things are basically MoUs,” he said, adding: “We
are going to structure the MoUs to enable them find the funding they
require. There is even a budgeting process in terms of what we approved
should be done, but how you now sequence the distribution of the funding
is where the catch is.”
He said the government had made a lot of progress on funding, explaining that over $1.2 billion would be saved.
The
minister projected an explosion of investment, saying oil companies
were planning to make a big splash with projects and backed by huge
money as they return to the country.
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