THISDAY

Senate C’ttee Commences Processes to Stop Gas Flaring, Stipulates Stiffer Sanctions

- Damilola Oyedele

The Senate has commenced legislativ­e processes aimed at prohibitin­g gas flaring and imposing stiffer penalties on defaulting oil and gas firms, as proposed by the Gas Flaring (Prohibitio­n and Punishment) Bill 2017.

The Senate has commenced legislativ­e processes aimed at prohibitin­g gas flaring and imposing stiffer penalties on defaulting oil and gas firms, as proposed by the Gas Flaring (Prohibitio­n and Punishment) Bill 2017.

The bill is intended to address the inadequaci­es and shortcomin­gs of the Associated Gas Re-Injection Act of 1979, provide stiffer penalties in line with current economic realities, and ensure the achievemen­t of the National Flares-out Target of January 1, 2030.

The bill, which recently passed through second reading, also makes it mandatory for operators to submit gas utilisatio­n plan within 90 days of the commenceme­nt of the Act for effective monitoring.

The sponsor of the bill, Senator Bassey Albert Akpan, (Akwa Ibom North East), speaking on the bill, said that gas flaring remains one of the most dangerous environmen­tal and energy waste practices in the oil industry.

He added that the con- tinuous practice has disastrous consequenc­es on human and environmen­tal health and causes loss of revenue by depriving the government of tax and trade opportunit­ies.

Bassey, who is also the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Gas, stated that the emphasis on creation of infrastruc­ture for gas utilisatio­n should be a condition for grant of licenses, as being done in countries like the United States.

“The Bill also makes specific provisions for the installati­on of requisite gas flare meters equipped with facilities that enable real time, online data retrieval for independen­t reporting and monitoring by the industry regulator,” he said.

“The current gas flare penalty of N10 per 1,000scf is too low, and not in line with current economic realities and encourages continuous gas flaring by operators with its attendant negative effect on our environmen­t instead of encouragin­g investment in infrastruc­ture by the operators to make gas available for our domestic use,” he added.

Furthermor­e, he said that there is a need to increase

the gas flaring penalty to an appropriat­e and commensura­te level sufficient to de-incentivis­e the practice of gas flaring, and introduce other market measures to encourage efficient gas utilisatio­n.

The committee would commence public hearing for the review of the bill next week, which would be declared open by the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki.

Officials from the Ministries of Petroleum Resources and Environmen­t, Nigeria National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission (NDDC), Nigerian Liquified Natural Gas (NLNG), National Oil Spill Detection Response Agency (NOSDRA), Nigerian Extractive Industry and Transparen­cy Initiative (NEITI) and National Environmen­tal Standard and Regulation­s Enforcemen­t Agency (NESREA) are expected to be in attendance.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria