Dr Maikanti Baru, the Group Managing Director of the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), on Sunday pledged to support
any legislative process to end Gas flaring.
Baru made the pledge in Abuja in a statement by Mr Ndu
Ughamadu, Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division NNPC.
The Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) had said that it
put in place measures and facilities to curb gas flaring preparatory to the
2020 flare deadline.
Baru, while making this submission during a one-day public
hearing on Gas Flaring Prohibition Bill 2017, at the National Assembly
expressed NNPC’s strong support for the legislation to reduce gas flaring.
Represented by the Managing Director of the Nigerian
Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), Mr Yusuf Matashi, Baru said the
Corporation considered the legislation from the financial benefits it promises
to capture rather than seeing it from the point of view of penalty.
“NNPC supports the legislative intervention to prohibit gas
flaring in line with global best practices, considering its negative impacts on
the environment and the communities where the gas is flared.
“NPDC, the Exploration and Production arm of the
Corporation, is going ahead to see that the monetization of flared gas is
realized despite the challenges of the past,” Baru said.
He said that NPDC was the highest gas supplier to Nigerian
domestic market and was therefore committed to the reduction and elimination of
gas flaring to generate more revenue for the country.
Earlier, Senate President Bukola Saraki, who was represented
by the Deputy Majority Leader, Sen. Bala Nallah, while declaring open the
public hearing said the issue of gas flaring was a national embarrassment.
He added that the 8th Senate was committed to enacting a
legislation that would end gas flaring in the country.
“Gas flaring is as old as crude oil exploration in the country.
“We are, therefore, committed to this legislation which
seeks to put an end to gas flaring which has deprived the nation of huge
revenue, impacted the lives of oil producing areas negatively and depleted the
ozone layers,” Saraki said.
On his part, the Senate Committee Chairman on Gas, Senator
Albert Bassey, stated that the Gas Flaring Prohibition Bill 2017 served as a
legislative panacea to end gas flaring in the country.
He said the public hearing was to collate views of relevant
stakeholders that would enrich the bill and find a lasting solution to the
challenge of gas flaring in line with the Paris Agreement on clean environment
and World Bank 2030 flare out deadline.
NAN reports that on May 28, the Senate began legislative
processes aimed at prohibiting gas flaring and imposing stiffer penalties on
defaulting oil and gas firms, as proposed by the Gas Flaring (Prohibition and
Punishment) Bill 2017.
The bill is intended to address the inadequacies and
shortcomings of the Associated Gas Re-Injection Act of 1979, provide stiffer
penalties in line with current economic realities, and ensure the achievement of the National
Flares-out Target of January 1, 2030.
The bill, which recently passed through second reading, also
makes it mandatory for operators to submit gas utilisation plan within 90 days
of the commencement of the Act for effective monitoring.
The sponsor of the bill, Sen. Bassey Akpan, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Gas,
speaking on the bill, said that gas flaring remains one of the most dangerous
environmental and energy waste practices in the oil industry.
He added that the continuous practice has disastrous
consequences on human and environmental health and causes loss of revenue by
depriving the government of tax and trade opportunities.
Bassey also the
stated that the emphasis on creation of infrastructure for gas
utilisation should be a condition for grant of licenses, as being done in
countries like the United States.
“The Bill also makes specific provisions for the
installation of requisite gas flare meters equipped with facilities that enable
real time, online data retrieval for independent reporting and monitoring by
the industry regulator,” he said.
“The current gas flare penalty of N10 per 1,000scf is too
low, and not in line with current economic realities and encourages continuous
gas flaring by operators with its attendant negative effect on our environment
instead of encouraging investment in infrastructure by the operators to make
gas available for our domestic use,” he said.
(Source: NAN)
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