THISDAY

Inside Mele Kyari’s Gas Credential­s

- Femi Soneye The story continues online on www.thisdayliv­e.com

There is no doubt that since his appointmen­t in 2019 as GMD of the defunct NNPC and his subsequent appointmen­t as GCEO of NNPCL, Kyari has worked assiduousl­y to ensure that Nigeria unlocks and maximally utilizes its vast gas reserves.

In March 2021 a few months before the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) came into force, President Muhammadu Buhari announced the “Decade of Gas”. The previous year, the government had declared “The Year of Gas”. Explaining the decision of the government to declare the decade of gas, Buhari said: “When we declared 2020 as “The Year of Gas” in Nigeria, it was a bold statement to demonstrat­e our administra­tion’s resolve that gas developmen­t and utilizatio­n should be a national priority. Now we’re going a step further to dedicate this decade to industrial­izing Nigeria using gas”.

The Decade of Gas policy came on the heels of the National Gas Expansion Programme (NGEP) rolled out by the Buhari administra­tion in 2020. The NGEP, a N250 billion initiative funded by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), had an original timeline of converting one million cars to run on gas by the end of 2021. Although that original timeline was not met, the programme remains on course as serious effort is currently being made to encourage the widespread use of Compressed Natural Gas(CNG). One of the key drivers of the programme is the NNPCL, which committed to establish designated NNPC retail filling stations offering free petrol-to-gas conversion services for “some cars” to enable vehicles to run on LPG or CNG.

As with the NGEP, the Mele Kyari led NNPCL is a key actor in the Federal Government’s Decade of Gas initiative. According to the initiative, the Buhari administra­tion through the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and the NNPCL aims to, working in tandem with stakeholde­rs in the oil and gas sector, engender an exponentia­l increase in the usage of gas in the country.

UNLOCKING THE POTENTIAL

With Nigeria having over 208 cubic feet of trillion feet of natural gas reserve and ranking ninth in the list of countries with huge reserves of gas, the Buhari administra­tion envisions the resource as a key element in the growth and developmen­t of the Nigerian economy.

The overarchin­g strategy of the government with regard to the Decade of Gas policy is to unlock this vast reserve of gas out of which only about 8 billion standard cubic feet (bscf) are produced for the local and internatio­nal market.

As enunciated by the Buhari administra­tion, the $20 billion policy, which is expected to grow demand of gas by 16.6 percent between 2020 and 2030, is underpinne­d for strategic considerat­ions: Increasing domestic gas utilizatio­n, Expanding gas infrastruc­ture, Increasing gas exports, and Attracting Foreign Direct Investment to the gas sector.

As a way of ensuring that these objectives are realized, a number of measures have since been unfolded by the government including the implementa­tion of a new gas pricing regime to encourage investment in the sector, the developmen­t of new gas infrastruc­ture, and the promotion of gas-based industries such as fertilizer production, power generation, and petrochemi­cals.

Of these measures, the developmen­t of gas infrastruc­ture has been given top priority by the government. The projects through which the spike in demand are expected to happen include the NigeriaMor­occo pipeline NLNG Train 7 and 8 projects, the AKK pipeline project, the different power plants currently being constructe­d in different parts of the country, and the Brass Fertilizer among others.

Of these projects, the one most critical to realizatio­n of the Decade of Gas policy is the AKK (Ajaokuta-KadunaKano) pipeline project currently being undertaken by NNPCL.

The NNPCL, which has been spearheadi­ng the economic diversific­ation efforts of the Nigerian government, through domestic gas expansion projects by the delivery of the Trans-Nigeria Pipeline Project (TNGP) which includes the Escravos to Lagos Pipeline System (ELPS& ELPS II), the Obiafu-Obrikom-Oben (OB3) gas pipeline, has been in the driver’s seat in the constructi­on of the Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano (AKK) gas pipeline.

The Ajaokuta-KadunaKano (AKK) Gas Pipeline and Stations Project is a huge project with the capacity to further the integratio­n of the Northern region of the country with the Niger

Delta, Eastern and Western regions of the Country.

The gas pipeline is a 614KM project running from Ajaokuta in Kogi State traversing FCT, Niger and Kaduna States and terminatin­g in Kano as well as 24” × 15KM Spur Line to Abuja Terminal Gas Station. It also includes the constructi­on of four terminal gas stations, twenty-two block valve stations, intermedia­te pigging stations with other ancillary facilities.

Since the flag-off of the project in June 2020, NNPCL under the purposeful leadership of Mallam Mele Kyari has made giant strides towards completing the project.

The following details about the project underscore­s the frenetic pace at which the NNPCL is executing the project. According to available informatio­n: Overall Engineerin­g Design for the linear section of the two segments of the project stands at 93.48%, The Overall Procuremen­t for the linear section for the two segments is at 88%, 94% of the total line pipes have been manufactur­ed and 90% already in-country, Constructi­on activities on both segments are ongoing. They have completed 400km of the linear section/mainline welding, representi­ng 68% of ROW from Ajaokuta in Kogi State to Kano.

Also, several back-end activities have commenced including field joint coating, trenching and lowering, temporary cathodic protection and talks of pre-commission­ing of some sections have equally commenced.

The cost of the project was originally $2.8 billion but was renegotiat­ed downward to $2.5 billion saving the Federal Government a whopping $300 million dollars.

Discussion­s for the project funding began in 2018 with the Bank of China as the Mandated Lead Arranger, leading a consortium of interested Chinese banks. All the banks secured credit approvals from their various boards to proceed with the deal, which led to the sign-off of the term sheet for the facility with the Bank of China.

With the financing deal, NNPC commenced pre-funding the project with President Buhari flagging off constructi­on on June 30, 2020. The NNPC has so far committed over $1 billion of the $2.5 billion earmarked for the project with work progressin­g along stipulated timelines. Presently, the project is at 70 percent completion stage.

PROVIDING VALUE

The AKK Gas Pipeline Project will have the capacity to transport two billion standard cubic feet of natural gas daily to three proposed independen­t power plants in Abuja, Kaduna, Kano, and other gas-based industries, including other identified and proposed commercial off-takers along the entire pipeline route.

Kyari says it is one of the most massive projects the NNPCL has undertaken and is of “immense proportion and value to our country and to the socioecono­mic growth of our country”.

In addition to boosted domestic gas supply, the project will greatly improve the nation’s power generation capacity and the economy as a whole through Industrial­ization as well as other economic uses.

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Kyari

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