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Nigeria, E’Guinea Plan Joint Logistics Base to Lower Operational Costs in Oil Industry
Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja
The federal government and the Republic of Equatorial Guinea have opened discussions on the establishment of a joint logistics base, deployment of indigenous capacities across countries, and lowering the costs of major oil and gas operations.
A statement from the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) said the move was part of discussions held when the Minister of Planning and Economic Diversification of Equatorial Guinea, Mr. Gabriel Mbega Obiang Lima led a delegation to engage the Executive Secretary, NCDMB, Simbi Wabote in Abuja.
Also on the minister’s entourage were the Ambassador of Equatorial Guinea to Nigeria, Mr. Francisco Edu Ngua Mangue; First Secretary of the Embassy, Mr. Josue Nsue Mbasogo and Personal Assistant to the Minister of Planning and Economic Diversification, Mr. Akim Lima.
Conversations at the meeting, it said, centred around inviting reputable Nigerian oil and gas service companies to establish their operational bases at Equatorial Guinea, where the companies would use the country’s ports to launch their activities in neighbouring countries such as Gabon, Cameroon, and Angola.
NCDMB noted that the minister promised to send a formal request on the partnership to the board, adding that the support of government institutions would be needed before such business opportunities could be explored successfully.
It explained that the visiting minister complained about the exorbitant cost of key oil and gas operations in the Gulf of Guinea.
“He further suggested that operators in Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea could lower their costs significantly by collaborating in the scheduling of their respective work programmes such as mobilisation and demobilisation of drilling rigs and other assets.
“He hinted that the proposed business relationship and pooling of demand profiles were necessary to attract key investments. This is because big companies like General Electric would only invest in a jurisdiction if they were assured of markets from neighbouring countries,” NCDMB statement said.
On the clamour by western nations for energy transition and plans to progressively displace fossil fuels with renewable energy solutions, the minister and the executive secretary re-echoed their positions that fossil fuels would remain the world’s dominant energy source for several decades.
Both countries also agreed that Nigeria and Equatorial Guinea would not hurriedly abandon their natural resources to embrace renewable energy where they lack competitive advantage.
Rather both nations, the statement said, would continue to exploit their oil and gas resources to the fullest and use the proceeds to develop their national economies, including renewable opportunities.
In his comments, Wabote noted that both nations have collaborated closely in the energy sector in recent years and that representatives of the nation had participated in several Nigerian oil and gas conferences as well as visited some oil and gas facilities.
He confirmed that the board and the Nigerian oil and gas service companies were keen to participate in the proposed collaboration.
According to him, such arrangements were identified in the Nigerian Content 10-Year Strategic Roadmap under the pillar of sectorial and regional market linkages, he said.
The executive secretary further explained that Nigerian service companies had developed surplus capacities in several key areas, hence it was imperative to explore opportunities across the Gulf of Guinea, where their expertise and collaboration with players from those nations are needed.
“The NCDMB will galvanise Nigerian service producers under the Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN) and make sure they come with us to your conference, and we will synergise.
“There is no need going to US or Singapore. We can work out areas where we can partner. It might be in the marine sector, logistics base. There are huge opportunities,” Wabote stressed.