NNPC to explore Community Based Pipeline Protection model
A new innovation that would enhanced better relationship between oil companies and host communities is in the offing, as the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has hinted that it may settle for the option of community-based policing to protect the vast artery of oil and gas pipeline network across the country.
Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, group managing director, NNPC, disclosed this while receiving Perry John Calderwood, the Canadian High Commissioner to Nigeria, during a courtesy visit to the NNPC Towers, Abuja.
Kachikwu pledged to give a lot of attention to the perennial menace of pipeline vandalism and oil theft, saying, “I intend to give a lot of energy to the issue of oil theft and pipeline vandalism. We must keep the losses from oil theft to the lowest figure possible.
“I don’t believe in the arm-for-arm approach, we must engage the host communities and inculcate in them the need to see the assets in their domain as their own.’’
The NNPC boss noted that in the months ahead, the Corporation would initiate discussions with community leaders and interest groups with a view to fashioning out a workable community oriented pipeline protection format with less emphasis on the use of brute force to secure the lines.
On the state of the refineries, he solicited for support from Canadian companies and service providers, stating that Nigeria could make do with Canada’s vast experience in refining and expertise in oil and gas operations.
In his response, Calderwood said the Canadian government and business entities were willing to work with the NNPC in growing the Nigeria oil and gas industry to enviable heights.
Olusolab Bello