…as stakeholders ask for technical details for Kolman River and Bornu Basin Discoveries.
The Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, Mele Kyari, says Nigeria’s oil production has reached 1.7mbpd as of Saturday.
The NNPCL boss who stated that the production is coming from 1.28 million barrels per day a few months ago, did not state whether the growth in production includes condensate.
However, some stakeholders are asking for the technical presentation regarding Kolman River and Bornu Basin (the Nigerian sector of the Chad Basin,) discoveries to be presented for discussions by experts across the globe. They want NNPCL to emulate Namibia which was a frontier region before it made major discovery. By July this year, the Namibia discovery will be the major focus of an international conference being organized by the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG), Africa Region..The association is one of the world’s largest professional geological societies with about 17,000 members across 129 countries. The technical details of that discovery will be presented to the world.
However, the situation is not the same with the Kolman River and Bornu Basin discoveries.
The NNPCL helmsman keeps telling Nigerians that the Kolman River field is a one billion barrels field
OPEC in February cut Nigeria’s production level to 1.5 mi; million barrels per day because of her inability to meet the 1.7 production target set for her
This is as the NNPCL boss hinted that the country that critical gas infrastructure projects are ongoing to ensure the transport of 8 billion stock of gas daily through an extensive pipeline network within the next four years.
Kyari spoke during a stakeholders engagement between the Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists and the NNPCL held in Lagos on Saturday.
According to Kyari, the nation’s crude oil production keeps dropping due to oil theft and vandalism.
The NNPCL boss emphasised the need to fight insecurity in the oil and gas sector to increase production.
“How do you increase oil production? Remove the security challenge we have in our onshore assets. As we all know, the security challenge is real. It is not just about theft, it is about the availability of the infrastructure to deliver the volume to the market.
“No one is going to put money into oil production when he knows the production will not get to the market. Within the last two years, we removed over 5,800 illegal connections from our pipelines. We took down over 600 illegal refineries – cooking pots or whatever they were. You simply cannot get people to put money until you solve that problem,” he stated.
Due to pipeline vandalism, Kyari said everyone resorted to barging, with some spending $21 to transport a barrel of oil to the terminals.
He argued that barging and the trucking of petroleum products did not happen in the 1990s.
“Barging is not normal. Barging is not economical, even trucking. In 1991, we didn’t think of barging, even to put oil on the trucks. But that’s what we are doing today,” he stated.
However, Kyari disclosed, “The good news is, there is substantial work that is being done by the government and I’m not going to speak about it. But I know that this will come to pass. It’s already subsiding. We are already seeing the results.
“As of today’s data, we’re inching to 1.7mbpd. We won’t celebrate this. On 17th of April 2020, our production, without doing anything, without drilling new wells, shot to 2.2mbpd. The difference was COVID-19. The thieves, the vandals, everybody went to sleep.
“We should be able to take control of this infrastructure. We are doing many things. I am very sure things are changing and that is why we are seeing the new value that is coming on the table. Production will improve”.
Kyari noted that the AKK pipeline is a key element in the discussion about developing the infrastructure needed to ensure gas supply.
He emphasised that the only remaining task to connect the east and the west is a 2.7 km river crossing.
This, he assured, would be completed by the end of May or June, enabling the flow of gas from the east to the west.
Speaking, the President of NAPE, Abiodun Ogunjobi, said for efficient gas production and utilisation, the upgrade of existing gas infrastructure, as well as the addition of new ones, is important.
Also, the Chairman of NAPE’s Board of Trustees, George Osahon, stressed the significance of the NNPCL as the propagator of oil and gas exploration in Nigeria.
Osahon urged Kyari for industry support in areas such as the availability of technical training and data for research purposes.
Similarly, the immediate Past BOT Chairman, Chief Chamberlain Oyibo, stated that as the nation’s reserve and production are declining, there is a need for implementation of good policies and incentives for improvement.
He added that industry stakeholders should not shy away from producing.
The PUNCH reported earlier that there seemed to be hope in the offing for Nigeria as its dwindling daily oil production turned the corner in April, rising marginally from 1.23 million barrels per day in March to 1.28mbpd, according to the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.
OPEC, in its Monthly Oil Market Report for May, said Nigeria’s oil production added 50,000 barrels daily in the last month after it fell in recent times during the month before.
The nation’s crude production fell from 1.32 million barrels per day in February to 1.23 million barrels per day in March
Kyari’s comment that the production had inched close to N1.7mbpd may be a plus for the nation’s economy.