Vulnerable pipelines: "Our target is to ensure zero militancy in the area" - Kachikwu |
Nigeria launched a US$10
billion infrastructure programme on Thursday in its restive Delta region as
part of a plan to end an insurgency that has hobbled oil production.
Reuters
report continues:
President
Muhammadu Buhari will meet representatives of militant groups and community
leaders from the Niger Delta in Abuja next week in a bid to end the attacks, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu said.
Speaking
to a forum in Abuja aimed at outlining strategy for the petroleum industry,
Kachikwu described bringing the insurgency to an end as the first goal of a
seven-point plan.
"Our
target is to ensure zero militancy in the area," he said. "This
planned meeting shows the level of interest the president has to ensure peace
in the area."
The
US$10 billion investment is "not necessarily" going to come from the
federal government, but rather from "oil companies, investors,
individuals", he said.
Militants
fighting for a greater share of the OPEC member's wealth complain of poverty
and a lack of development across the Niger Delta region, where most of
Nigeria's oil is pumped.
NATIONAL
IMPERATIVE
The
seven-part strategy also envisages passing a long-delayed Petroleum Industry
Bill by December. The bill, which covers everything from an overhaul of state
oil company NNPC to taxes on upstream projects, was delayed by violence in the
Delta, which at one point cut production to 30-year lows.
The
first part of the bill is already pending in the senate, and Kachikwu said the
second part, which deals with fiscal aspects of the petroleum industry, is
"almost completed" and will be presented to the oil industry in the
next week or two.
While
the government has emphasized diversifying the economy, Buhari said on Thursday
it would be impossible to move forward without the oil industry.
"Oil
and gas resources still remain the most immediate and practical keys out of our
present economic crisis," Buhari said, and the plan for the industry is
"a national imperative and a core thrust of our economic policy".
To
drum up financing and oil investments, Nigeria will hold a roadshow in the Gulf
in January and in the United States by mid-2017, Kachikwu told reporters.
One
area of investment would be in improving outdated refineries to stop costly
fuel imports, he said.
"We
are going to be licensing private refineries, to look at investing in private
refineries."
Kachikwu
said Nigeria's oil output stood at 1.8 million barrels a day, compared with the
1.9 million bpd the Petroleum Ministry announced earlier this week. Still, he
added that the government hoped to get back to 2.2 million bpd next year - the
level seen at the start of 2016.
"We have a capacity to
produce 3 million," he said.
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