NNPC Becomes Profitable by End of 2016

Thu, Jun 23, 2016
By publisher
3 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Business Briefs

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THE Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, is targeting to increase its income and profitability before the end of 2016. Ibe Kachikwu, minister of state for petroleum, said the corporation has reduced the average monthly loss from N40 billion to N3 billion as a result of its corporate restructuring in the first quarter of the year.

During his visit to the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, NCDMB, in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, the minister admitted that the entire spectrum of Nigeria’s petroleum industry required strategic intervention. Kachikwu, however, harped on the need to see the challenges as opportunities to transform the sub-sectors into income earners for the country.

“Anywhere you look, you see that the oil and gas sector is populated by a need. We have to translate those needs to economic models that are beneficial to the citizenry. The drop in oil price should motivate us into going into parallel income streams.”

He also unveiled plans to carry out infrastructural re-graphing of Nigeria’s petroleum sector, adding that plans were afoot to review Nigeria’s aging pipelines, depots and gas infrastructure and begin the process of replacing them. Speaking on the issue of gas flaring, the minister stated that the new thinking was to move away from a penalty-based gas regulation, which had largely failed over the years to a zero tolerance gas flaring regulation with year 2020 as the new target deadline.

The minister restated that the federal government saves N1.4 trillion from the recent adjustment of the price of petrol, adding that this huge fund would have been expended on subsidy claims yearly. He explained that the deregulation policy has also re-awakened the downstream sector and would help the nation become a net exporter of petroleum products in a few years.

“We now have a lot of people who are interested in investing in our refineries and building more refineries and we will remain committed to the goal which is to reduce importation of petroleum products by 60 percent by the end of 2018 and become a net exporter of petroleum products by 2019.”

Kachikwu described the NCDMB as a critical agency in the petroleum industry and expressed delight that the Board had the right personnel to deliver on its mandate. He recalled the agency’s lofty achievements in the last six years of existence, noting that every Nigerian appreciated the good work that it has achieved.

The minister pledged to provide the right support and encouragement for the Board to deliver on its targets. With the fall in crude oil prices and reduced investment in the sector, he charged the NCDMB to re-strategise and transit from its role of just propagating local content and local participation to one of finding commonality with industry stakeholders to encourage investment.

The new focus of the board, he said, “affects how quickly you process things, it affects the rigidity of some of the terms you ask for as people enter into transactions and the need for increased collaborative relationships.” The minister, who is also the group managing director of Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, expressed happiness that achievements were being recorded by staff of the corporation who had previously given up hope in the system.

He lauded the contributions of various trade unions in the oil and gas industry to the successful introduction of the deregulation policy, stressing that “the success of the policy was only possible because of the unity that was provided by PENGASSAN, NUPENG, NARTO and every active participant in the oil sector. My role was to be the professor, explaining why we had to do it,” he added.

—  Jun 23, 2016 @ 17:35 GMT

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