THISDAY

‘Petralon 54 Engaged Barge FP Amangwu to Barge Legally-Produced Crude Oil’

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Petralon 54 Limited has said tha it engaged Barge FP Amangwu to barge legally produced and government authorised crude oil from its operated Dawes Island Marginal Field to the Ajapa FSO, operated by Britannia-U Nigeria Limited, which is the offtake terminal.

“We have followed with keen interest reports of the exchange between our erstwhile vendor, First Priority Resources Internatio­nal Limited (First Priority) the operators of Barge FP Amangwu and security operatives (men of Operation Delta Safe and Tantita Security Services), and wish to highlight some facts of our transactio­n with the vendor in question.

“Not being sea going, the Barge was berthed at NPA Jetty, Warri pending offtake of the crude oil onboard by a sea going vessel,”the companysai­d in a statement.

Upon completion of the contract on March 28, 2023, it disclosed that, all the tanks of the Barge FP Amangwu, were fully evacuated with all crude conveyed pumped out, except the cumulative residual volume of ca. 100 barrels at the bottom of the tanks that pumps could not pick up.

This fact, it stressed, can be attested to by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), the relevant oil and gas operations regulator that supervised and signed-off on the evacuation operation and ensured the Barge was emptied.

In the statement issued yesterday to clarify misconcept­ion surroundin­g this issue, the firm said, the Barge was released by Petralon 54 Limited to its owners-First Priority- on March 30, 2023 at the NPA Jetty in Warri, Delta State, which signaled the end of the contract between Petralon 54 Limited and First Priority, the operators of Barge FP Amangwu.

The Barge, it added was subsequent­ly moved to Ejovi Jetty, located in Warri, Delta State, by its owners on April 17, 2023.

According to the statement, “Early in May 2023, the owners of the Barge, who by contract were to clean the tanks of their vessel post activity reached out to Petralon 54 Limited, claiming that at the point of their cleaning the barge, they discovered that crude was left on board the Barge and requesting that Petralon 54 Limited should evacuate same. We responded to this claim advising that it was incorrect because we had evacuated our crude completely from the Barge.

“Owing to the magnitude of the claim, we immediatel­y followed up on our response by sending a representa­tive to verify the claim. Consequent­ly, samples of the fluid in the barge tanks were taken and tested at an NMDPRA-certified laboratory. The results confirmed that what the owners of the Barge - FP Amangwu, considered as crude, was actually oily wastewater, a combinatio­n of the residual amount of the cumulative crude dead volume of ca. 100 barrels which the staff of the barge owners had now accumulate­d into two tanks as they cleaned out the other tanks, and the sea water the staff of the owners of the Barge said they pumped into the various Barge tanks in washing the Barge and had also accumulate­d into these same two tanks.”

It said: “First Priority thereafter wrote to us, still requesting that we undertake the cleaning of the Barge ourselves on the basis of the fact that Warri was outside their jurisdicti­on, and that they had no experience in cleaning. Taking over tank cleaning was contractua­lly impossible for Petralon 54 Limited to do as the cleaning was contracted to First Priority, and is outside our remit, we however reached out to the NMDPRA on behalf of First Priority, for the recommenda­tion of a certified waste management company. Guided by NMDPRA, two NMDPRA responded certified waste management companies were identified, of which Diamond Energytech Limited was considered more responsive and was subsequent­ly engaged to undertake the cleaning operation.

“The scope of engagement of the waste disposal company (Diamond Energytech Limited) was tank cleaning, evacuation and transporta­tion of oily water, treatment, and disposal of oily water from the Barge. The operation would be overseen by First Priority alone as the cleaning transactio­n was directly between they and Diamond Energytech.

“From this point, we stopped interfacin­g with both First Priority and Diamond Energytech as the contract with First Priority had terminated, and the cleaning transactio­n was between both parties alone (First Priority and Diamond Energytech).”

Expressing its concern, the management of Petralon 54 Limited noted that, since the news of incidents detailed above broke, none of the government security agencies involved in the exchange with these vendors (First Priority and Diamond Energytech Limited) has reached out to the firm for any informatio­n, clarificat­ion, or corroborat­ion, adding that, “We read in the news that during the course of transporta­tion, the disposal agent’s vacuum truck was intercepte­d by men of the Operation Delta Safe and the private security firm, Tantita Security Services.

“We also read on the news that a section of the waste treatment facility belonging to Mawe Services Limited was set ablaze by the security forces, in addition to the burning of the FP Amangwu Barge. Both actions were taken within a day of the reported arrest of the truck. It was also reported that the driver of the disposal agent’s vacuum truck and his mate on board were arrested and taken into custody, where they are currently being held at 3 Battalion Nigerian Army Barracks, Effurun.

On the basis of the foregoing facts, the management of the coy urged security operatives and relevant authoritie­s to properly investigat­e the issue while all parties in the issue, including the Nigerian security forces and Tantita Security Services, relevant regulatory authoritie­s, among others.

“Beyond the fact that Petralon 54 Limited conducts its business legitimate­ly at all times in addition to being a socially responsibl­e organisati­on with commitment to fair business practices, it is our hope that government will look into the operations of surveillan­ce operatives on our waterways and cause them to become more accountabl­e.

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