Host communities of oil and gas
resources and assets will, henceforth, be penalised for cases of
vandalism if the current Petroleum Industry Bill before the National
Assembly is eventually passed into law, the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation has said.
This, according to the corporation, will
be implemented through the Petroleum Host Community Fund, which will be
created by legislation and will coordinate conditional participation of
host communities in the petroleum industry by enforcing security of
infrastructure and consequences for vandalism.
Addressing journalists in Lagos on
Friday, NNPC’s Group Executive Director, Exploration and Production,
Mr. Abiye Membere, said the PIB would incorporate lessons learnt from
the Niger Delta on all new frontiers and increase freedom to operate by
including host communities as stakeholders.
He said the PIB would assign oil and gas
infrastructure security to the host communities and minimise
environmental degradation due to vandalism and crude oil theft.
“There is the flexibility to make
changes depending on the existing environment; and the PIB provides
environment to consult host communities widely prior to making
regulations for the management of the fund,” Membere said.
Also in a fresh move, the NNPC said it had initiated new ways of reducing the high cost of operation in the oil and gas sector.
According to Membere, the corporation is
working towards achieving the standardisation of processes and
evaluation mechanisms for estimation of drilling and drilling services
costs, using a common template across all the International Oil
Companies.
The NNPC, he said, had also moved to benchmark major costs of players in the sector.
The NNPC GED said another new agency
would be created from the PIB, to be known as the National Frontier
Exploration Services Department.
According to him, it will be vested with
the responsibility of promoting front end data acquisition of
hydrocarbons in the frontier basins in the hinterland.
When passed into law, he said the bill
would deliver needed reforms within 36 months, which would be driven by a
special task force on the PIB and an implementation committee.
Listing the objectives of the PIB,
Membere said it would enhance exploration and exploitation of petroleum
resources; significantly increase domestic gas supplies (especially for
power and industry); create competitive business environment and
establish fiscal framework that was flexible, stable and competitively
attractive.
According to him, it will also create a
commercially viable National Oil Company, create efficient regulatory
institutions; engender transparency and accountability; promote
‘Nigerian content’ and promote and protect health, safety and
environment concerns.
Membere said the draft PIB recommended a
fiscal policy framework derived from a strategic national interest,
with incentives for attracting sustainable investment to the region, as
well as achieving the unbundling of the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation.
“It recommends the creation of a
National Oil Company that promotes indigenous operational capacity
development, as well as the creation of an asset management company, and
a gas market and gas infrastructure development company,” he said.
According to him, the PIB will
strengthen regulatory and inspectorate institutions that promote
transparency, safety, consumer rights and safe environments.
Membere added that a department in the
Ministry of Petroleum Resources charged with frontier exploration
services would be established courtesy of the PIB.
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