Alison-Madueke in a Surprise Visit to Lagos Filling Stations, Accuses Marketers of Causing Scarcity

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 Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke


•  IOC/NNPC in battle of wits over projects
Determined to have a first hand understanding of the cause of the prolonged fuel scarcity across the country, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, paid a surprise visit to several filling stations in Lagos Sunday and concluded that the marketers were behind the scarcity of the product.
Speaking during the inspection of some filling stations in Lagos State, the minister said the country had enough PMS to meet the domestic demand.
“We have enough fuel to wet the country, but the challenge we are having is that, after loading, some truck drivers will not supply the lifted products at the designated filling stations. Having gone round the state (Lagos), it is not just the filling stations at Ikoyi that appeared to be wet with product, but other extreme locations like Ajah and other parts in Surulere,” she said.
This came on a day that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the International Oil Companies (IOCs) are engaged in rounds of accusation and counter accusation over the commencement of new projects by the IOCs.
Speaking on the scarcity of petrol, Alison-Madueke said there were many factors militating against efficient delivery of the products to the end users.

“We learnt that some of the marketers instructed their drivers to change the number plates of their trucks to make it difficult for tracking. Does it mean those markets they are diverting the product to are more lucrative than intended market? I have directed the heads of the agencies, Departemnt of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Pipeline Product Marketing Company (PPMC) and Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA), to get back to me today and give me a clear picture and timeline in terms of numbers of trucks coming in to Lagos, the volumes and where they are getting to in terms of the market,” she said.
“If we can establish there is (diversion of products), I want to know when and how this is being done. They need to supply me how these trucks are being tracked because diversion is not easy to do. They will be sanctioned and I am ready to publish names of anybody that may be involved,” she added.
The minister however assured Nigerians that there were enough products in strategic reserves that would last for over two weeks if importation of fuel were to be suspended.
The private marketers had blamed the scarcity on the delay of their fourth quarter 2014 import allocation by the PPPRA.
Meanwhile, the NNPC and some of the IOCs seem headed for a collision over the alleged failure of the NNPC Board to sit for the past 15 months to approve new oil and gas projects, coupled with the long contracting cycle of projects, 
This impending clash between the two bodies, it was learnt, had prompted some of the major IOCs to place embargo on new employment as they insisted that no jobs would be created without new projects coming on stream.
Some of the projects that have suffered undue delay due to budget issues include Bonga South West, Bonga North (Aparo) and Bonga North West, initiated by Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company (SNEPCo), under a Production Sharing Contract (PSC) arrangement with the NNPC.
Other projects include Eni’s Zabazaba and Etan Fields, under the company’s Agbara and Abo projects; Chevron’s 100,000 barrels per day Nsiko deepwater project; and Exxonmobil’s Bosi and Uge projects.  
Officials of some IOCs said that there were other new projects that successfully passed through the National Petroleum Investment and Management Services (NAPIMS), an investment arm of the NNPC, but had not been approved by the NNPC board.
THISDAY gathered that the frosty relationship between the NNPC and the IOCs over new projects had deteriorated to the extent that a top official of the corporation last week walked out on the deputy managing director of one of the major IOCs, who led a team of officials of his company to the NNPC to discuss the IOC’s budget from his office over disagreement on budget.
But the NNPC officials, who spoke to THISDAY on condition of anonymity, defended his action, saying the affected deputy managing director and his team presented a budget that was more expensive than the price of crude oil.
“They presented a budget based on $118 per barrel, when the price of crude oil is between $105 and $110 at the international market. How can the cost of producing crude oil be higher than the price of oil at the international market and you expect me to discuss with them. I did not have any issue to discuss with them,” he said.
However, some officials of the IOCs also said that all the new projects they initiated had been put on hold because the NNPC board that ought to approve the projects had not sat since January 2013.
“The NNPC board has not sat for the past 15 months to approve new projects. So, all contracts have been put on hold. We have plans; we have aspirations, but if you have a roadmap and there is a stumbling block, what can you do? Nobody can bring money now and it is killing investments. Initially, they blamed the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) but nobody is talking about PIB these days, yet they cannot approve new projects,” said an official of one of the IOCs.
 Oil Producers’ Trade Section (OPTS) of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industries (LCCI), which comprises all the IOCs and the Nigerian independent producers, had sent representation to the highest levels of government on the precarious situation but no positive response was received.
“OPTS has gone to the highest level of government but the government seems not to be listening. There is embargo on employment because if you cannot invest, you cannot employ people. If the projects we have are allowed to go on, it will boost our daily production and create employment opportunities. All new projects go through NAPIMS but once they get to the NNPC for board approval, they get stalled,” he said.
But a member of the NNPC board and Group Executive Director (GED) in charge of Exploration and Production (E &P), Mr. Abiye Membere,said over the weekend that the board had approved enough projects for the IOCs.
“NNPC has never complained over the board meeting of the IOCs. But if they are complaining about the NNPC board, all I can say is that we cannot keep on approving projects, when they have not done anything on the ones we have approved. The EGTL (Escravos Gas-To-Liquid) project has been on for 10 years and they want us to approve new ones. We cannot keep on approving. We have approved the ones that can keep them going,” he said.
On the claim made by some IOCs that they had placed embargo on employment because there were no new projects, Membere said: “You don’t employ people because you have new projects; you employ people because some people are retiring and you want to replace the aging workforce.”
NNPC’s Group General Manager (GGM) in charge of NAPIMS, Mr. Fidel Pepple, said that the “IOCs always have excuse for everything.”
According to him, “Budget has not been passed. So, how can they start new projects? Has the bidding process been concluded? Even when you ask them to issue commercial invitation to tender, they will not do it until two years after the conclusion of the technical tender and they will turn around to blame the NNPC for the delay.”
Spokesman of the NNPC, Dr. Omar Farouk Ibrahim, however,said that it was not true that the NNPC board had not met for 15 months.
“Whoever told you that the board never sat last year except in January did not tell you the truth,” he said.

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