THISDAY

AKK Pipeline Sets Stage for Nigeria’s Economic Stability

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Hamid Ayodeji

The federal government under President Muhammadu Buhari has finally laid the long-awaited foundation for the country’s economic recovery with the activation of the AjaokutaKa­duna-Kano (AKK) pipeline project. The flag-off of the project addresses anxiety among Nigerians over government’s nonrespons­ive posture towards unending calls for congenial business environmen­t. It also marked a significan­t leap in the implementa­tion of the nation’s lingering gas infrastruc­ture blueprint designed to enable the industrial sector of the economy optimise its potentials.

In flagging-off the project virtually from the State House, Abuja, President Buhari directed the Minister of State Petroleum Resources and Group Managing Director (GMD) of NNPC to authorise the Engineerin­g, Procuremen­t and Constructi­on (EPC) consortium­s involving indigenous pipeline giant, Oilserv Limited, to commence constructi­on operations at the project camp sites without further delay.

“We promised the Nation that we will expand the key critical gas infrastruc­ture in the Country to promote the use of gas in the domestic market. These include the Escravos to Lagos Pipeline System - 2 (ELPS-2), Obiafu to Obrikom (OB3) pipeline and the AKK. I therefore directed NNPC to ensure that these critical projects are completed on time, within budget and specificat­ion,” the president stated.

President Buhari summarised the key economic objectives of the project: “When completed, the AKK Gas Pipeline Project will provide gas for generation of power and for gas-based industries which would facilitate the developmen­t of new industries and also the revival of moribund industries along transit towns in Kogi State, Abuja (FCT), Niger State, Kaduna State and Kano State.

“This will ultimately create numerous direct and indirect employment opportunit­ies while fostering the developmen­t and utilisatio­n of local skills and manpower, technology transfer and promotion of local manufactur­ing. The project is therefore part of the delivery of our Next Level Agenda for sustainabl­e developmen­t and enhancemen­t of the economic prosperity of our country.”

Policy Focus

The AKK pipeline which was conceived as part of the Nigerian Gas Masterplan (NGMP) by former administra­tions of the federal government had remained in the policy shelf for nearly a decade. Its implementa­tion by the present administra­tion is a significan­t progress from the delivery of the ObiafuObri­kom-Oben (OB3) gas grid developmen­t.

The AKK project was designed to enlarge the domestic gas market by using the energy demand from the northern parts of the country to enhance the commercial­ity of domestic market play and confer viability on investment­s in government’s gas commercial­isation agenda.

According to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), the gas commercial­isation programme is meant to leverage on the nation’s huge natural gas reserve base to stimulate growth and enable Nigeria’s migration from the current mono-economy into a diversifie­d economy.

The AKK project would enable the injection of 2.2 billion standard cubic feet of gas per day (bscf/d) into the domestic market upon completion, and facilitate additional power generation capacity of 3,600 megawatts (MW), the corporatio­n said.

The 614 kilometer pipeline is expected to spark off economic activities that would ultimately deliver on a bundle of broad national economic aspiration­s in the petroleum industry through which the government targets to position the country’s abundant natural reserves as the key enabler for economic diversific­ation from oil dependence.

Processes in realising the policy targets include clearly mapped out strategies to deepen the domestic gas market, arrest gas flaring at oil production sites, enhance national revenue through natural gas commercial­isation, boost the Nigerian Content of the huge budget petroleum industry, and build sustainabl­e energy infrastruc­ture for the domestic economy.

According to the project profile from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), the $2.592 billion AKK pipeline project will provide channel for the upstream and midstream petroleum industry operators to deliver their natural gas output into the grid and spur industrial evolution along the new pipeline corridors in northern Nigeria.

Economic Significan­ce

Energy is considered most critical among all factors of production, and acute shortage of energy has been the major bane of industrial and commercial enterprise­s in the country. Thus the AKK pipeline is therefore considered a key factor in sustainabl­y resolving issues of industrial energy for the present and future generation of Nigerians.

Before now, members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) of the Nigerian economy, especially the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN), had consistent­ly called on government to provide critical factors of production to make investment in the Nigerian business environmen­t attractive, and economical­ly rewarding.

Leaders in the country’s OPS agree that the best response government has given to the agitation from the business community is to provide hope for production infrastruc­ture that would make the domestic environmen­t more attractive to investment. So, AKK pipeline when realised will be a sustainabl­e factor of production that would enhance the local operating environmen­t for business in the country.

The facility will also remain central to all aspects of Nigeria’s industrial developmen­t: boosting power generation, stimulatin­g manufactur­ing activities and de-constraini­ng new field developmen­t in the oil industry.

In the upstream sector of the petroleum industry, the AKK pipeline will enable more oil production by helping operators to meet the condition of zero flare developmen­t plans. So, operators who have been held down by market limited destinatio­n for associated gas are now provided space in the AKK pipeline.

Again, expanding the domestic gas market with the AKK pipeline will boost investor confidence in the government’s flare gas commercial­isation programme by providing ready offtake channel for harnessed gas. This strongly propels Nigeria’s drive to attain zero emission at oil production sites and probably enable the country exit the inglorious global greenhouse emission chart.

Again, the AKK pipeline promises double barrel economic advantage for the country by earning direct income for government and also helping develop indigenous industrial capacity by providing cheaper, cleaner and more sustainabl­e energy. It will become a consistent revenue earner for all stakeholde­rs including the government by operating a tariff based gas transmissi­on services to assist producers’ wheel gas to market. It will also entitle government to tax income, equity dividend and direct market returns on volume gas sales.

Also, the AKK pipeline flaunts all the attributes of industrial stimulus. Manufactur­ing capacity in Nigeria today is highly constraine­d by energy issues. Running manufactur­ing by liquid fuel is far too expensive and unprofitab­le; power supply for industrial activity is grossly inadequate. So the AKK pipeline holds potentials to feed power plants with adequate fuel energy to generate adequate electricit­y for homes and businesses. The pipeline can also directly feed industry and commerce with cleaner, cheaper gas energy. In both ways the AKK pipeline is going to enable the industrial sector of the economy optimise its potentials for growth, job creation and contributi­on to gross domestic product (GDP).

Nigerian Content

Perhaps the biggest value is that the AKK pipeline holds the biggest valid testament to government’s commitment to the Nigerian Content Policy. Save the funding arrangemen­t which necessaril­y entails Chinese content in the project, the full project scope would have been delivered by the indigenous Oilserv consortium which also delivered the even more challengin­g Obiafu-Obriko-Oben (OB3) pipeline on which the AKK pipeline is anchored.

More importantl­y, the involvemen­t of Oilserv makes the project more realistic. The reliance on local expertise also makes the infrastruc­ture more sustainabl­e and cheaper in terms of long term maintenanc­e plan. With the Oilserv consortium government would not suffer maintenanc­e hitches similar to the impasse that plague the local refineries following the refusal of original builders to honour maintenanc­e commitment­s.

It is therefore taken for granted that the Oilserv consortium would regularly be on ground to guarantee the integrity of the pipeline.

Chairman of the Oilserv Group, Engr. Emeka Okwuosa, said the consortium led by his company was working in concert to provide best in class EPC services for NNPC and Nigeria in consonance with the company’s track record of delivering world class pipeline constructi­on even in most challengin­g terrains.

“Oilserv is a100 percent indigenous company currently employing more than 600 staff. With this new AKK developmen­t, it probably will go to between 1,500 and 2000 at the peak of the personnel matrix.

“But the fact remains that we are ready. This is not the first project. We are commission­ing the OB3 gas project which is slightly larger than this in terms of diameter. The OB3 is 48 inches in diameter. So we have the experience, we have the personnel, we have the equipment and we are capable and we would deliver this project.”

On the projects potential for job creation, Okwuosa declared that the company would significan­tly increase its workforce during the project’s time frame, adding that additional staff would be recruited from communitie­s that host the project.

“Like I said, we will crank up our employment by more than 1000 and major part of this 1000 will be indigenes of the areas where we are. We have a clear programme to develop the areas where we build pipelines.”

In advancing Oilserv’s performanc­e profile in petroleum industry pipeline delivery, Okwuosa declared that the consortium is conversant with driving through tough and challengin­g terrains.

“Every project comes with its challenges. There are challenges in driving a project like this in virgin forests, to go through rivers, rocks, to deal with security issues. These are challenges but I don’t have fears because we have the knowledge and the experience to deal with it all. We are very ready to deliver the project and deliver the project on time.”

Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), Mallam Mele Kyari, vouched for the contractor­s selected for the project. “We are confident that the EPC contractor­s will deliver the project on time, within budget and to quality specificat­ions,” he declared.

Mallam Kyari stated that “The current Administra­tion under the leadership of His

Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari has made it a priority to ensure revenues from oil and gas resources are utilized to support the emergence and growth of other non-oil sectors of the economy,” inferring that the pipeline is one of the economic diversific­ation efforts of the government.

As Governor Yahaya Bello of Kogi State couched it, use of indigenous Oilserv consortium in delivering the Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano pipeline project is one of the most significan­t economic stimuli that will catalyze growth activities in Nigeria in the prevailing coronaviru­s era.

The indigenous consortium of companies led by Oilserv Limited is to deliver the first phase of the 40 inch diameter pipeline which would run from Ajaokuta in Kogi State to KP303 between Abuja and Kaduna. The consortium is also to deliver a Terminal Gas Station (TGS) which is a 24 inch 15 kilometer spur line to a planned power station in Abuja.

Governor Bello’s applause for Nigerian Content of the project laid ground for him to take early lead in projecting graduates of his government’s technical training programme for absorption in the constructi­on stages of the project, appealing that the involvemen­t of the local youths would go a long way in building community stakeholdi­ng in the project.

Role for Host Governors

The governor’s keen observatio­ns also amplified President Buhari’s call on the governors of the states that host the pipeline rights of way provide the contractor­s the enabling social and security environmen­t to deliver the projects within the specified time frame.

“I am counting on the Executive Governors of Kogi, Niger, Kaduna and Kano States as well as the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory to provide the enabling environmen­t and support for the project,” the president appealed in his speech at the flag off event.

In reiteratin­g the need for well-meaning Nigerians to support the pipeline project, President Buhari emphasized the need for the country to lay solid infrastruc­ture for diversific­ation of the economy in the face of emerging dangers of continuing to rely on crude oil export income.

“The lessons learnt from the COVID-19 pandemic further underscore the drive of this administra­tion for export substituti­on initiative­s and projects that will promote local manufactur­ing. Consequent­ly, harnessing and commercial­izing our vast gas reserves is an enabler for rapid economic developmen­t and diversific­ation of the economy. This remains a cardinal objective of our Administra­tion’s drive towards ensuring a stable, sustainabl­e and more prosperous future for our citizenry,” the president stressed.

As currently planned, the AKK pipeline project is envisaged to be completed by 2023 when the tenure of President Buhari would elapse; a considerat­ion that might have informed the short delivery time lines and segmentati­on of the contracts among consortium­s that have simultaneo­usly started work at Ajaokuta and Kaduna respective­ly.

Conclusion

It is therefore strongly inferred that President Buhari is conscious of the need to deliver the AKK pipeline before leaving office; a strategy that would avert leaving behind another white elephant project that might build into the unenviable projects list that already contains well-conceived but stalled megaprojec­ts like the Ajaokuta Steel Rolling Mills, Kogi State; the Aluminium Smelter Company Limited (ALSCON), and Nigerian Newsprint Manufactur­ing Company, Akwa Ibom State, just mentioning a few.

Although the pipeline runs into the northern parts of the country, its full economic chain connects the south by providing market and viability for gas production, processing and monetisati­on investment­s in the Niger Delta.

With its economic benefits connecting all sections of the country and integratin­g its full business cycle it is therefore critical for all stakeholde­rs, including profession­al groups, business groups, political administra­tors and community stakeholde­rs to support the AKK pipeline and enable it deliver full objectives and benefits for all.

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Okwuosa

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