
The Group
Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Mr.
Mikanti Baru, has promised that gas flaring will end in Nigeria in a year or two.
Baru, who said this
while speaking at the 50th Offshore Technology Conference (OTC) in Houston also
said the country has already reduced flared gas from 25% to 10%; scaling the
state from the second to the seventh highest gas emitting country in the globe.
He said the corporation had adopted a
multi-pronged approach to bringing down the volume of gas flared by oil
companies.
According
to him, the first step taken by the Corporation was to ensure no new fields
were developed without a Field Development Plan, in order to prevent flaring
from future projects.
Baru
added that in conjunction with the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the
corporation has formulated a series of policies such as the Flare Gas
(Prevention of Waste and Pollution) Regulations 2018 and adjustments to the gas
flare penalty through its Gas Flare Commercialization Program.
“These
have significantly reduced gas flared to current levels of about 800mmscfd and
in the next 1-2 years we would have completely ensured zero routine flares from
all the gas producers,” Baru noted.
He
said the corporation’s flare programme has been followed up with an aggressive
gas infrastructure programme: “Today, we have completed and commissioned almost
600km of new gas pipelines thereby connecting all existing power plants to
permanent gas supply pipelines. We are also currently completing the.
construction of the strategic 127km Obiafu-Obrikom-Oben gas pipeline –“OB 3”
connecting the Eastern supply to the Western demand centres,” he added.
According
to Baru, the Nigerian gas market is the most vibrant in Africa and is
positioned for investments of up to $25 billion in ten years.
“Nigeria
offers unique opportunities for investment in exploration, refining, storage,
transportation, power, distribution and marketing of petroleum products,” Baru
observed.
For
the gas market to meet the GMD’s expectation, the country will need to resolve
the pricing challenge faced by indigenous players; with specific reference to
gas to power stakeholders.
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