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		<title>Gas Industrialisation to Generate 60 Million Jobs in Nigeria</title>
		<link>https://nationalambassadorngr.com/gas-industrialisation-to-generate-60-million-jobs-in-nigeria/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=gas-industrialisation-to-generate-60-million-jobs-in-nigeria</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Mon, 13 May 2019 04:42:06 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Business]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Accountability and Responsible Leadership]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[African Initiative for Transparency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[AfriTAL]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Agip]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>A new gas-based Industrialisation (GBI) policy of the federal government is set to generate massive job employment, according to experts. At least 60 million jobs&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://nationalambassadorngr.com/gas-industrialisation-to-generate-60-million-jobs-in-nigeria/">Gas Industrialisation to Generate 60 Million Jobs in Nigeria</a> first appeared on <a href="https://nationalambassadorngr.com">National Ambassador News</a>.</p>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A new gas-based Industrialisation (GBI) policy of the federal government is set to generate massive job employment, according to experts.<br />
At least 60 million jobs are targeted to come through its implementation, according to a study by experts in the<br />
industry.<br />
Mr. Louis Brown Ogbeifun of the African Initiative for<br />
Transparency, Accountability and Responsible<br />
Leadership, AfriTAL, while commenting on the initiative,<br />
drew the attention of National Ambassador to a current study<br />
by the Facility for Oil Sector Transparency and Reform<br />
(FOSTER) on Co-location framework as a strategy for<br />
gas-based Industrialisation (GBI) implementation that is<br />
capable of creating 60 million jobs in the next 10 years in<br />
Nigeria.<br />
FOSTER is an international organisation that works in<br />
partnership with national decision makers to diagnose<br />
policy problems, develop public policy, support its<br />
implementation, and evaluate its impact and by bringing<br />
together national and international expertise, it helps<br />
governments in these countries to implement impactful<br />
public policy that will bring about lasting, positive<br />
change.<br />
National Ambassador gathered, that the co-location concept<br />
is a practice which promotes optimisation through one or<br />
more plants sharing mature pre-existing infrastructure,<br />
rather than building their own infrastructure, or waiting for<br />
a third party to do so.<br />
Ogbeifun explained that since this is a new concept to the<br />
oil and gas space, it is crucial for the country to<br />
understand the concept of colocation strategy for the<br />
implementation of gas-based industrialisation projects in<br />
Nigeria.<br />
He said the buy-in into the initiative by government had<br />
become imperative as the nation today requires a radical<br />
change that would transform the oil and gas industry into<br />
a world-class energy sector.<br />
Advocacy campaigns, he observed, have in part led to<br />
many attempts aimed at reviewing Nigeria’s oil and gas<br />
laws that would attract investors, allow the sector to run<br />
unencumbered and improve its bankability.<br />
He recalled that 19 years after the Petroleum Industry Bill,<br />
which started its journey as the Oil And Gas<br />
Implementation Committee (OGIC) in April 2000, it is yet<br />
to be passed into law.<br />
“In June and July 2017, the Federal Executive Council<br />
approved the National Gas Policy and the National<br />
Petroleum Policy (NPP) respectively. Laudable as these<br />
were, they are yet to be progressed to the realm of law.<br />
“In 2018, the National Assembly also passed the PIGB<br />
into law. Unfortunately, the Bill is yet to be signed into<br />
law.<br />
In addition, the fiscal, Host Community and the<br />
Administrative Bills are still within the confines of the<br />
National Assembly. As this administration winds down,<br />
there is nothing in the horizon to show that these bills<br />
shall see the light of day.”<br />
Ogbeifun stated that in spite of the reputation of Nigeria as<br />
the second largest producer of liquefied petroleum gas,<br />
LPG, in Africa, progressing her per capita usage of LPG<br />
has been stalled by failures traceable to systemic<br />
corruption, lack of political will to review and implement<br />
policies, rent-seeking, entrenching the culture of<br />
promoting conflict entrepreneurs, which leads to non-<br />
bankability of oil and gas investments and projects, and<br />
painful abandonment of projects, neglectful under-<br />
development of the market and the oil producing<br />
environments.<br />
Nigeria, he said, is a blessed nation with abundant and<br />
enormous gas resources that is capable of generating<br />
massive employment that would ease the pressure of<br />
unemployment on our teeming youths, but sadly the<br />
country has not fully harnessed the opportunities<br />
presented by the value chain of all the products available<br />
within the oil and gas streams.<br />
”Though the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) has<br />
done well in its quest to earn scarce foreign exchange for<br />
Nigeria and launch the country into the international<br />
markets, it has been unable to satisfy Nigeria’s domestic<br />
demand. For instance, Nigerian LPG production was<br />
estimated at 2 million metric tonnes per annum (MTPA) in<br />
2016, but her annual per capita consumption of 2.3kg<br />
remains lower than the West African regional average of<br />
3.5kg and the Sub-Saharan African average of 2.5kg.<br />
“Paradoxically, Nigeria is presently exporting her crude<br />
and importing finished products for use in Nigeria. Over<br />
90 per cent of her domestically produced Liquefied<br />
Petroleum Gas is exported and, in return, we massively<br />
import LPG for local consumption.”<br />
Speaking further, he added that just like the petroleum<br />
subsidy regimes became a big profitable venture for rent<br />
seeking and highly connected Nigerians, the LPG<br />
business is also encumbered by avoidable bureaucratic<br />
distortions. He listed other pitfalls to include under-<br />
utilisation of the LPG; lack of effective planning for the<br />
use of the LPG; lack of political will and effective strategy<br />
to formulate and implement a reversal of the current<br />
export-driven LPG strategy to one of increased domestic<br />
utilisation; corrupt practices; a defective LPG penetration<br />
strategy; lack of enabling infrastructure; lack of effective<br />
regulatory mechanisms; the persistence of giving priority<br />
to Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) over gas as a value-<br />
based energy product and lack of critical and mature<br />
midstream infrastructure needed to achieve near-term<br />
gas-based implementation strategy in Nigeria.<br />
He said that given the gap, or near absence of critical and<br />
mature midstream infrastructures, among others, to<br />
support gas-based industrialization (GBI) project in<br />
Nigeria, in trying to address some of the gaps identified<br />
above, FOSTER, conducted two studies and recommended<br />
co-location as an infrastructural optimisation strategy<br />
that could be explored.<br />
He lauded the strategy as being capable of encouraging<br />
and promoting increased GBI investments by the private<br />
sector; creating a vibrant value chain, providing<br />
employment, substantially increasing governments<br />
revenue and having the potential to reduce host-<br />
community conflict in the Niger Delta.<br />
“If the country must effectively implement the principles of<br />
co-location, the press has to play a major role in the<br />
dissemination of the advantages and workability to the<br />
populace. They can only play this critical role if they fully<br />
understand the concept and how it could help Nigeria<br />
achieve her optimum in gas-based implementation. This<br />
therefore, is one of the reasons you have been invited for<br />
the training and dialogue.<br />
“On the flip side is the worrisome phenomenon of<br />
contestations, dysfunctions, skirmishes, stalling or total<br />
abandonment of developmental projects intended for the<br />
Niger Delta, which hitherto was ascribed to agitations for<br />
resource control, injustices perpetrated by authorities,<br />
unemployment and environmental degradation,” he said.<br />
Also, speaking on the initiative,<br />
Solomon Adeleye, a gas expert, said Nigeria needs to<br />
create 60 million jobs in the next 10 years when the<br />
unemployment figure is expected to hit 60 million people.<br />
According to him, GBI will enable Nigeria maintain a<br />
minimum three per cent GDP growth.<br />
“Nigeria has the 9th largest gas reserves in the world, with proven gas reserves of 188 trillion cubic feet (tcf).</p>
<p>Little effort has been made in the exploration of non-associated gas historically.</p>
<p>Natural gas exploration was mainly undertaken by the oil majors (Shell, Chevron, Agip,Texaco, Mobil, Elf, Ashland, and Pan Ocean) with Shell taking the lead”, he added.<br />
Corroborating their positions, Charles Majomi, another gas expert, remarked that co-location promotes the sharing of infrastructural facilities and services.<br />
He cited the example of Warri refinery’s existing properties which include landed property, jetty facilities infrastructure, services and 125MW of electrical power plants.<br />
Others are water treatment plants, two nitrogen plants,compressed air systems and wastewater treatment<br />
plants.<br />
“Opportunities abounds in the strategy. Government should sensitise the custodians of the existing hydrocarbon complexes, create a platform to explore the<br />
co-location strategy and formalise engagement and alignment with interested stakeholders”, he said.<br />
The proposed Co-location Roadmap, according to him,will include, but not limited to, identifying a potential<br />
location for sharing of infrastructural facilities and services; liaising and officially communicating with the<br />
management of the potential location; establishing the current status of each infrastructure and service and<br />
completing preliminary investigation to include detailed audit and status of existing facilities, utilities and services to be shared.</p><p>The post <a href="https://nationalambassadorngr.com/gas-industrialisation-to-generate-60-million-jobs-in-nigeria/">Gas Industrialisation to Generate 60 Million Jobs in Nigeria</a> first appeared on <a href="https://nationalambassadorngr.com">National Ambassador News</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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