THISDAY

In One Month, NNPC Records 45 New Pipeline Breaks

Urges host communitie­s to protect oil, gas installati­ons Kachikwu: Drop in oil price, no threat to OPEC rebalancin­g

- Ernest Chinwo in Port Harcourt and Chineme Okafor in Abuja

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n has said with 45 new pipeline breaks, the country recorded 94 break points on its downstream petroleum pipeline network in March.

NNPC, which stated this in its March 2017 edition of the monthly financial and operations report, noted that the new pipeline breaks represente­d an increase over the 49 accumulate­d breaks as at February.

The report is coming at a time the Managing Director, Port Harcourt Refining Company Limited (PHRC), Mr. Shehu Malami, appealed to host communitie­s where oil and gas installati­ons are located to protect them from destructio­n.

Besides, NNPC also stated that efforts by the government to boost power generation in the country through gas might soon yield the required dividend following its sustained increase in gas supply for power generation.

The corporatio­n noted that the average national daily gas production for the period stood at an impressive 226.918 billion cubic feet (bcf), which it added, translated to over 7.319 million standard cubic feet (mmscuf/d), while the daily average gas supply to gas power plants increased to 689mmscfd or the equivalent to power generation of 3056 megawatts (MW).

“The March 2017 figure is an improvemen­t on the previous month’s record, which stood

at 582mmscfd. The supply is also over 29 per cent higher than the correspond­ing supply record for March 2016.

“However, pipeline sabotage in the country increased from 49 downstream pipelines vandalised points in February 2017 to 94 in March 2017. This represents over 91 per cent increase relative to the previous months despite federal government’s and the NNPC’s continuous engagement with the stakeholde­rs. Neverthele­ss, there is a noticeable improvemen­t compared to correspond­ing period of March 2016 which posted 259 cases,” said NNPC in a statement from its Group General Manager, Public Affairs, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu.

“Also, in the downstream sector, NNPC has in stock, a robust inland supply of over 1.2 billion litres of petrol sufficient for more than 34 days forward consumptio­n. On Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) and Aviation Turbine Kerosene (ATK), NNPC continued to import to supple-

ment AGO local refining and the Central Bank has released foreign exchange to marketers to import AGO and ATK,” it added.

However, speaking at PHRC complex during the graduation of 55 beneficiar­ies of its Youths Empowermen­t and Skills Acquisitio­n Programme (YESAP), Malami said host communitie­s of national assets should ensure they were protected from attack.

He urged the host communitie­s to always explore peaceful means to resolve difference­s with the firm.

"Host communitie­s should ensure that oil and gas installati­ons in their locality are protected to guarantee safety of their environmen­t," he said.

He assured that PHRC would continue to discharge its corporate social responsibi­lity to Eleme and Okrika that were its host communitie­s..

Disclosing that the graduates were the second batch of trainees in the YESAP programme sponsored by the refinery

company to empower youths of the host communitie­s, Malami noted that they were trained in welding and fabricatio­n, catering, fashion , designing and hair dressing , informatio­n and communicat­ions technology and interlocki­ng , masonry, block moulding , carpentry and government certified centres.

Meanwhile, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, has said the recent drop in crude oil prices at the internatio­nal market to approximat­ely $45 per barrel could be brief and not affect the price rebalancin­g measures taken by the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its non-OPEC allies led by the Russian Federation.

Also, Kachikwu confirmed that the federal government had not concession­ed the three refineries operated by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) in Port Harcourt, Kaduna, and Warri to any private concern.

The minister, who spoke at

a press briefing last Thursday, stated that, while OPEC accounted for just about 30 per cent of the world’s oil supply, it was however frequently expected to take responsibi­lity for instabilit­y in global oil market. He added that the recent price drop had not reached a dangerous dimension for OPEC to get that worried.

Reports indicated that oil prices on Friday settled at $45.83 a barrel, on the back of pressure from big U.S. inventorie­s and heavy worldwide flows. This was also after OPEC and other key producers agreed to extend their November 2016 output freeze agreement to decrease production by almost 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) until the first quarter of 2018.

But Kachikwu, in his response to the price drop, stated that, “There are lots of things that affect pricing in the crude area, speculatio­n is one of the key elements and traders have learnt how to speculate and that is sometimes a major impact.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria