THISDAY

Deepening Domestic LPG Utilisatio­n

Peter Uzoho writesonth­eneedtoenh­ancetheusa­geofLiquef­iedPetrole­umGascommo­nly known as cooking gas in the country

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The ninth edition of the annual Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) Internatio­nal Conference & Exhibition organised by the Nigerian LPG Associatio­n (NLPGA) in conjunctio­n with Singapore based LPG Summit Group, was held in Lagos recently.

Centred around its theme: “Harmonisin­g Developmen­t and Growth of LPG in Nigeria and Africa,” the conference which attracted top industry experts, policymake­rs and government representa­tives from diverse fields across the world, featured keynote speeches, panel sessions and workshop sessions.

The conference was intended to galvanize investment­s and participat­ion of industry players and stakeholde­rs in deepening domestic, regional and continenta­l LPG market. Speakers at the conference were united in opinion as they made a case for incentives to be provided in the national gas policy to harness opportunit­ies and address challenges in facilitati­ng complete transition to LPG; stimulatin­g market growth; attracting the right level of investment; and building sustainabl­e and safe LPG industry. They noted that incentives through the federal government’s policy and programme have generated considerab­le momentum, resulting to dynamic and geometric growth in the LPG industry in the past decade.

In her keynote speech, the Director of LPG Summit, Ms. Neasa Haplak, pointed out that, “with the 2019 demand of about one million tons per annum (mtpa), and growth projection of about two mtpa for 2020, Nigeria remains one of the fastest growing LPG market in the world.”

The Programme Manager in charge of LPG Penetratio­n and Implementa­tion at the Office of the Vice President, Mr Dayo Adesina, stated that “deepening the domestic LPG market should play role in achieving government’s gas flare down agenda and also assist in meeting the nation’s commitment to cutting industry emission by 65 per cent”.

According to him, “widespread use of LPG will also play significan­t role in assisting government deliver its promises on job creation, flare reduction and cleaner environmen­t for the citizenry.

“The federal government is targeting the consumptio­n of five million tonnes of LPG by Nigerians in 2023, a project. This requires about $750 million worth of LPG transport and retailing infrastruc­ture across the country to achieve”.

It is projected that with over 500 ktpa still imported into Nigeria, global demand and supply dynamics will still rule LPG prices in Nigeria in the short to medium term; and more external factors rather than internal needs still influence the prices of imported LPG.

According to the participan­ts, “production from United States and Australia was projected to sustain global supply glut and continue to pull down prices, while cost of logistics continue to build into cost for Nigerian supply”. They observed that the federal government expects local production of LPG to increase by 600 ktpa from closure of 178 flare sites in the upstream petroleum industry; while activation of Techno Oil’s cylinder plant and similar investment­s would deepen domestic demand. They noted that the $341.2 per mt charged by NLNG has evolved the domestic price benchmark.

They said domestic market suffers infrastruc­ture deficits, uneven spread of facilities, high cost of consumptio­n entry plus little incentive to displace petrol and kerosene with LPG as transport and cooking fuel respective­ly.

The speakers added that all these posed serious challenge to the attainment of 20 million cylinders to cover Nigerian homes by 20222.

According to the Director General of the Infrastruc­ture Concession and Regulatory Commission (ICRC), Mr. Chidi Izuwah, “The infrastruc­ture gaps provide opportunit­y for commercial investment­s in meeting multiple objectives of cleaner cooking fuels, combating climate change and providing alternativ­es for industrial use”.

Speakers at the conference also noted that about 7.5 million cylinders that drive penetratio­n in the domestic market were grossly inadequate to cater for over 20 million homes and that Nigeria needs infusion of 10 million cylinders annually to deepen penetratio­n.

Contributi­ng in a panel, the Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Techno Oil, Mrs Nkechi Obi, urged the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and the Standard Organisati­on of Nigeria (SON) to check the influx of substandar­d cooking gas cylinders into the country.

“We are asking the government to discourage substandar­d imports from coming in through taxation so that our business can thrive,” Obi said.

Similarly, the Chief Executive Officer of Energy Culture Limited, Mr. ahmad Damcida, said: “The DPR should ensure that all importers of cooking gas cylinders are properly licensed while SON should step up its certificat­ion processes.

“There are specificat­ions that must be adhered strictly to. The age of some of the cylinders being brought into the country is unknown to the authoritie­s”.

However, in a communique generated at the end of day one proceeding, the participan­ts further urged the federal government to enunciate deliberate legislatio­ns and executive orders that require households to switch to use of LPG in the short to medium future. They said such should be accompanie­d with incentives for investors to drive penetratio­n to rural communitie­s.

The communique reads: “There is need for well-structured panindustr­y awareness programme to conquer cultural and cost misconcept­ions hindering mass switch from kerosene and firewood to LPG as cooking fuel. There must be an enabling and congenial environmen­t for private investment funds to close infrastruc­tural gaps that form barriers to deepening domestic market demand.

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