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Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas Company Limited (NLNG), a joint
venture between the government and foreign oil majors, has generated some US$85
billion dollars from exports since its inception 15 years ago, the company
announced late Friday.
"For us, it has been
a success story. Between 1999 when we came on stream and now, we have realized
some US$85 billion from exports of liquefied natural gas to buyers in Europe,
America and Asia," chief executive Babs Omotowa told reporters in Lagos.
He said the company,
which was set up to harness Nigeria's vast natural gas resources and produce
liquefied natural gas for export, has also paid billions of dollars to the
state in tax.
"Just a few days
ago, we paid US$1.6 billion dollars to the government as tax and this will go a
long way to assist the new government in solving some of its problems," he
said.
AFP report continues:
The new administration of
President Mohammadu Buhari, who became the first Nigerian to oust a sitting
president in democratic elections in March, is facing a severe economic crunch.
About 20 of the country's
36 states are unable to pay workers salaries.
Omotowa said the company
had paid 30 billion dollars in dividends to its shareholders over the years,
including the government, which owns a 49-per-cent stake through the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).
NLNG's other shareholders
are Anglo-Dutch oil major Shell, which owns 25.6 percent, Total LNG Nigeria, a
subsidiary of French oil giant Total which owns 15 percent, and Italy's Eni,
which has 10.4 percent.
Omotowa said plans were
afoot to expand the NLNG plant in Finima on Bonny island, in the oil and
gas-rich southern Rivers state, by 2017.
"With six trains
(production units) currently operational, plans for building Train 7 that will
lift the total production capacity to 30 million metric tons per annum of LNG
are currently progressing," he said.
He said Train 7 would
cost an estimated US$12 billion, create 18,000 construction jobs and bring in
an additional US$3 billion in exports when operational.
Nigeria currently exports
22 million metric tons of LNG, making it the world's fourth largest LNG
exporter.
Liquefied natural gas,
which is created by cooling natural gas and transforming into liquid for
transport on tankers, represents around nine percent of global gas demand.
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