●Senate panel seeks
expansion of local content act beyond oil, gas ●NGPTC attributes ₦15.81b
profit to transformation
The Federal Government’s
focus on modular refineries is to improve local capacity, create cost cutting
technologies and reduce capital flight.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
The
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, disclosed this at the
weekend during the convocation ceremony of the Petroleum Training Institute
(PTI), Effurun, Delta State.
Represented
by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Petroleum Resources, Dr. Folasade
Yemi-Esan, hesaid: “One of the major policy thrust of the present
administration is the development and engagement of local content. In this
regard, PTI’s close collaboration with the Nigerian Petroleum Development
Company, which has been mandated to construct a model modular refinery, using
local materials and technology, cannot be overemphasized.
“When
operational, this refinery would be used for experiential training and for
teaching purposes. By implication, the institute would once again be involved
in the local training and re-training of industry personnel thereby reducing
capital flight in conformity with the change mantra of this administration in
the area of employing cost-cutting measures in the conduct of government
business.”
The
minister lamented that the petroleum industry suffered massive setbacks
occasioned by the wanton destruction of oil facilities and installations.
Meanwhile, the newly created Senate Committee on Local Content said yesterday
that it would soon amend the Nigerian Local Content Act 2010 to make its
applicability broader than the present focus on the oil and gas sector in the
overall interest of Nigeria.
Chairman
of the Committee, Senator Solomon Adeola (APC, Lagos West), said “the expansion
of the scope of the Act as well as its effective implementation, in areas like
construction, manufacturing and other productive sectors increasingly dominated
by foreigners will not only create job opportunities for our teeming youths and
unemployed graduates but also spur the diversification of the economy.”
In
another development, a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC), Nigerian Gas Processing and Transportation Company Limited
(NGPTC), has declared a profit after tax of ₦15.81billion in 2016, saying ongoing
transformation in the sector is yielding positive results.
Though
the profit was due to the write-back of deferred tax of ₦8.05 billion in 2015,
Chief Operating Officer of NNPC’s Gas and Power Autonomous Business Unit and
Chairman of NGPTC, Saidu Mohammed, at the 22nd Annual General Meeting at the
NNPC Towers in Abuja said continued support of host communities aided the
group’s achievement.
Mohammed stated that the profit before tax for the year ended 31st December, 2016 was ₦24.4 billion as against ₦20.9 billion in 2015. This represents an increment of 16.8%, while the profit after tax reduced from ₦22.6 billion in 2015 to ₦15.81 billion in 2016.According to him, earnings per share reduced from ₦4,510 in 2015 to ₦3,163 for 2016.
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