Nigeria targets $5billion investments from commercialising gas flares
Nigeria is targeting investments of about $5billion which could potentially add $1billion to the country’s GDP from commercialising gas flares in 89 locations around the country through the Nigerian Gas Flare Commercialization Programme (NGFCP), an initiative of the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources.
The NGFCP seeks to attract investments and develop a transparent market mechanism through a competitive procurement process for allocating gas flares, under clear and transparent criteria, to competent third party investors using proven technologies in commercial application globally.
“Under the NGFCP, the Federal Government shall exercise its ownership rights of all gas flared in Nigeria. Paragraph 35(b)(i) of the 1st Schedule to the Petroleum Act CAP P10, LFN 2004 provides that the Minister of Petroleum may, in the public interest, impose terms and conditions applying to any natural gas discovered, including the right of the FGN to take any associated gas that would have been flared either free of cost at the flare or at an agreed cost,” says Justice Derefaka Program Manager NGFCP, at a conference in Lagos.
As a result of this, the Federal Government will, under the NGFCP, grant licences to third parties (i.e. licensees) to access and collect such gas on behalf of the government from the flare points of oil producing companies. They would necessary permits and approvals, and also enter into a series of agreements with the government and the Flare Gas Producer. These include the Gas Supply Agreement and the Milestone Development Agreement between the offtaker and the government, the Connection Agreement and Deliver-or-Pay Agreement between the offtaker and the Flare Gas Producer.
The licensees will then be required to use necessary technology to set up the facilities for the delivery and collection of gas at the flare points. Under the NGFCP, all identified gas flare points are part of the programme and compliance with the programme will be a licence condition for the award and renewal of all Oil Mining Leases and Marginal Fields.
Nigeria currently flares 700 MMscf/d of gas at 178 flare sites which is equivalent of the total volume of gas used in power production. This results in 20 million tons of CO2 emissions per year. In 2016, Nigeria lost $800 million to gas flaring, annually, for many years, the country losses close to $1.15 billion.
“This has to be stopped. 50 top flare locations will be commercialized to reduce 80% of our gas flare,” says Derefaka.
The NGFCP value proposition is that assuming around 65% of the flared gas volume meets a minimum monetisation investment threshold, it could lead to overall investment of $3-5billion.
At an average project size of $40m, the NGFCP could trigger 89 projects. Over a 2 year period, the NGFCP could generate approximately 26,000 direct jobs, with an average labour force of 300 per project and approximately 300,000 direct and indirect jobs.
“Once operational, projects launched under the NGFCP, would reduce Nigeria’s emssions by 13 million tons of CO2 per year and can become an important source of gas for power,” Derefaka said.
To give legal teeth to this programme, A Flare Gas (Prevention of Waste and Pollution) Regulations, 2018 is being finalised and will be issued by the Ministry of Petroleum Resources. The regulations is made persuant to relevant sections of the Petroleum Act and Associated Gas Re-Injection Act.
Key provisions in the new regulation is mandatory reporting and access to gas flare data, increased flaring fines, new flaring standards, metering requirements, reporting obligations which include monthly gas flare logs and annual reporting and issuance of a certificate for any gas flaring at all.
Some participants at conference said this was not the first programme to end gas flaring and lack of political will continues to dog the proposition.
“Government policies are a major hurdle to the realities on the ground. The policy is not aligned with all the good intentions and what private sector businesses plan to do in terms of gas flare outs,” said Inemo Samiama Project Manager, Eco Delta Power.