The
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources has disclosed that the
Federal Government would soon be a major overhaul of the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) will soon be
broken up into 30 profit-making companies, according to Ibe Kachikwu,
Nigeria’s Minister of State for Petroleum Resources and Group Managing
Director of the NNPC.
The minister also disclosed that each of the thirty companies would have its own managing director.
“For the first time, we are unbundling the subset of the NNPC to 30 independent companies with their own Managing Directors,” Mr.
Kachikwu said in his address at the 25th Oloibiri Lecture Series and
Energy Forum in Abuja. The theme of this year’s Forum was, “Technological Advances in Hydrocarbon Exploration and Exploitation: Solutions to Global Oil Price Stability”.
The Minister of State added: “Titles like Group Executive
Directors are going to disappear and in their place you are going to
have Chief Executive Officers and they are going to take
responsibilities for their titles. At the end of the day, the CEO of an
upstream company must deliver an upstream result.”
The Federal Government’s plan to unbundle the NNPC is expected to happen in a matter of weeks “as part of the ongoing transformation of the national oil company,” according to a press release signed by Ohi Alegbe, group head of the NNPC’s public affairs division.
Speaking at yesterday's Oloibiri Forum, Mr. Kachikwu announced that
the NNPC’s operating loss had been reduced from N160 billion to N3
billion in January 2016, adding that the corporation should start
generating some profit by the end of 2016.
Mr. Kachikwu also revealed that some members of the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) are scheduled to meet with
Russian officials in Moscow on March 20, 2016, in a bid to stabilize
tumbling crude oil prices. OPEC is seeking to enlist Russia’s
cooperation in the adoption of joint strategies that would help
stabilize crude oil prices.
According to Mr. Kachikwu, President Muhammadu Buhari’s
administration was focused on developing Nigeria’s gas resources “in
order to boost revenue as part of the diversification policy of the
Federal Government,” according to Mr. Alegbe’s statement.
The minister praised the National Assembly for its fresh attention
to the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), adding that the bill would promote
efficiency in the oil sector. He stated that the government was working
to reduce the contracting cycle of projects from two years to six
months in the upstream sector, adding that the current production
sharing contracts were also overdue for review.
Mr. Kachikwu urged all the players in Nigeria’s oil and gas
industry, whether in the upstream, midstream or downstream sectors, to
work together in order to achieve results in cost control, contracting
circles, technology and environmental issues. He declared that
stakeholders in the petroleum sector must adopt an integrated approach
to enable them to address the challenges facing the industry.
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