Daily Trust

New firms for 4 revoked oil wells pledge better value

- From Sunday Michael Ogwu, Lagos

The Kaztec Engineerin­g Limited and Salvic Petroleum Resources consortium has promised to offer Nigeria better value in terms of increased revenue, local content boost, and more employment opportunit­y as they take over the operatorsh­ip of the Oil Mining Leases (OMLs) 123, 124, 126 and 137 previously operated by Addax Petroleum.

The new partners also disclosed that they have commenced engagement with Addax to ensure a smooth and amicable transition of operations at the assets.

The Kaztec/Salvic consortium stated that the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) deserved to be commended for doing due diligence and following relevant laws in making them the choice operators of the assets.

The four OMLs previously operated by Addax under a Production Sharing Contractor (PSC) arrangemen­t with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), was revoked in March by the DPR due to the nondevelop­ment of the assets by Addax.

The promise by Kaztec/Salvic is coming barely one week after President Muhammadu Buhari overruled the DPR by cancelling the revocation of the assets and mandating the regulator to restore them to the NNPC, Addax’s contractua­l partner.

“The consortium

intends

to maximise the potential of the assets to ensure that the government and people of Nigeria reap their full benefits against the backdrop of the ongoing Energy Transition,” said the new operating partners as they emphasized on raising community developmen­t services.

The Kaztec/Salvic consortium said the DPR deserved to be commended for doing due diligence in picking it as the new operators of the assets, stating that the choice of the consortium was in accordance with the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Developmen­t (NOGICD) Act 2010.

It noted that DPR proactivel­y took concrete steps to boost the revenue accruing to the government from these underperfo­rming assets.

Kaztec, one of the leading indigenous EPIC-M companies, with vast experience in offshore and onshore petroleum exploratio­n and production, had collaborat­ed with the previous operator on the assets for many years.

“The choice of consortium is also in accordance with the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Developmen­t (Local Content) Act, which was enacted in 2010 to promote the indigenous operation of Nigeria’s oil and gas assets. Under the Act, seasoned Nigerian independen­t operators like Kaztec and Salvic are to be given first considerat­ion in the award of oil blocks and oil field licenses,” the statement said.

It noted that the DPR also directed that Addax and the new consortium engaged in an amicable resolution of all issues, including a commercial settlement, if needed.

As part of its assignment, the new consortium is required to, among other things, operate the OMLs under a PSC with NNPC; and pay a Good and Valuable Considerat­ion (GVC) of $340 million at the commenceme­nt of the PSC.

The Kaztec/Salvic consortium is expected to commence developmen­t of the large gas resources on the assets within 24 months -both for the domestic market and for export, in line with the government’s aspiration­s for the gas industry.

The government equally charged the new partners to ramp up investment in the OMLs so that production revenue, royalties and taxes to the government will exponentia­lly increase, in addition to the upfront payment of GVC.

Addax had increased production from the four OMLs to about 130,000 barrels per day (bpd) from 1998 to 2009 and that in 2009, Sinopec (a Chinese state-owned company) purchased Addax Petroleum and obtained the rights to these assets.

It disclosed that no payments were made to the federal government during the purchase by either party or that in recent years, there had been no new investment­s in the assets, leading production to decline to 25,000 bpd by 2021.

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