THISDAY

Frontier Oil Seeks Better Deals for Indigenous Gas Companies

- Ejiofor Alike

The Chief Executive Officer of Frontier Oil Limited, Mr. Dada Thomas has called on the federal government to negotiate with the indigenous gas companies on ways of boosting gas production if the country must meet its power and other gas related needs.

In his presentati­on at a special session of the recent annual conference of the National Associatio­n of Energy Correspond­ents (NAEC) 2015 with the theme: “Tackling gas supply challenges to arrest power crisis,” Thomas hinted that some 182 trillion cubic feet of gas is in Nigeria waiting to be developed.

“What is lacking and urgently required are the political will, enabling policy, commercial and regulatory framework to unleash the true potential of gas to the benefit of all Nigerians,” he added. He said the future for gas and gas-to-power in Nigeria was bright and called on the government to grant the kind of incentives it granted to the Internatio­nal Oil Companies (IOCs) in the past to the indigenous operators, who contribute over 53 per cent of local gas production in Nigeria. “I strongly believe that the federal government should incentiviz­e indigenous operators to undertake domestic gas projects which will help Nigeria meet its power and other gas related requiremen­ts. If the Government could give incentives to IOCs in the past then surely it is only fair and equitable that they also give similar incentives to the indigenous operators,” Thomas said

Thomas noted that the highly successful Bonny NLNG project by the Shell-led Joint Venture, the Chevron Escravos Gas to Liquids project and similar projects were all given incentives to ensure these projects came to fruition.

He also condemned the current gas prices in Nigeria describing it as lower than what is obtainable in markets around the world.

This, according to him, has made the gas business less attractive than the oil business for more than 40 years.

He said that the solution to this is “for the gas transactio­ns to be based on a willing-buyerwilli­ng-seller market-driven commercial platform in which the government is removed from regulating the commercial transactio­ns between interested parties.” He recalled that although the federal government increased baseline gas price to the power sector to a total of $3.3 per thousand standard cubic feet in 2014, the gas producers, transporte­rs and end users are yet to actualise the new pricing regime as the necessary modalities were not put in place for the implementa­tion of this price regime.

Thomas also hinted on the need for Nigeria to rapidly roll out a collaborat­ive gas distributi­on system between the private sector and the government, which would be led by the private sector, and based on an open access and economic tariff basis.

This, according to him, would enable gas producers tie-in into the nearest pipeline and reduce the security challenges facing gas distributi­on in the country.

“In spite of the fact that we currently lack adequate pipeline transporta­tion and distributi­on system, the disturbing thing is that the little we have has been subjected to attacks and sabotage over the last five years, a phenomenon that created the crisis this conference is trying to address,” Thomas added.

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