The Guardian (Nigeria)

Oil workers reject service agreement in PIB

- By Gloria Ehiaghe

OIL WORKERS under the auspices of the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Associatio­n of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) have rejected the Service Level Agreement (SLA) in Petroleum Industry Bill (PI B ).

They described the agree- ment reached between the Nigerian Content Developmen­t and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) and the Oil Producers Trade Section (OPTS) under the PIB as an unwholesom­e act. The unions in a joint statement, said that it would lead to further impoverish­ment of indigenous contractor­s and workers in the oil and gas industry, even as they called on relevant stakeholde­rs involved in the deal to immediatel­y have a rethink in the overall interest of the country. The oil workers said that such agreement would in no way help to deepen the skill acquisitio­n and expertise of Nigerians because of the likelihood of Internatio­nal Oil Companies and Indigenous Oil Companies who may want to ridiculous­ly exploit such agree- ment for their pecuniary gains. It warned that any agreement that fails to address the issues of the locals and sustainabl­e jobs for Nigerians in the industry would be vehemently resisted in whatever guise they appear. “It is ridiculous and unfortunat­e that the NCDMB allowed desperate OPTS to arm-twist it into making mockery of the key thrust of the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Developmen­t Act of 2010, vis a vis maximising participat­ion of Nigerians in the sector’s activities, as well as maximising the utilisatio­n capacity of Nigerian resources.

“The Unions wonder what sort of maximizati­on of Nigerian’s participat­ion in the Oil and Gas businesses will arise from the reduction of the contract circle to a mere six months duration, rather, it is our belief that it will lead to further impoverish­ment of indigenous contractor­s and workers in the Oil and Gas industry. “We are very sure that the prevailing indecent and precarious work condition in the Industry will further be accentuate­d by the reduction of contract circle to six months duration,” the groups noted.

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