Govt loses
N1.29b daily to unproductive oil wells
The nation’s
plan to earn additional $14.100 billion (N4.314 trillion) from 300 million
barrels of crude oil is uncertain as licensed marginal fields are unable to
engage in
meaningful exploration and production activities 13 years after.
The country
targets daily earnings of $4.23 million (N1.29 billion) from an average of
90,000 barrels of oil per day. Experts say that 18 of the marginal fields with
an average capacity of 5,000 bpd each could produce 90,000 bpd of crude oil.
This leakage
is a major loss to the economy as the revenue would have been used to plug
budget deficits and provide infrastructure that would boost national
development.
Data from
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) indicate that the Federal
Government has 200 fields classified as marginal by operators due to
low-ranking in investment portfolio and/or remoteness to existing facilities.
According to
the NNPC, of the 200 fields, 24 granted licences by the Department of Petroleum
Resources (DPR) have an estimated reserve of about 300 million barrels of
crude. Of the 30 marginal fields awarded by the government since 2004, only 12
are active. It was learnt that18 of these licences have been classified as
non-producing and require the farmees to relinquish the assets (having had the
opportunity of a licence renewal after the initial five years duration
expired).
The marginal
fields awarded cumulatively produce around 2.6 per cent of daily oil production
and 2.5 per cent of the estimated 4,000 MMscf gas productions in the country,
due largely to the inability of indigenous firms to fully monetise the assets.
The producing
wells, according to the latest statistics from the DPR, are Egbaoma Oil Mining
Licence (OML) 38 belonging to Platform Petroleum; Ebendo OML 56 belonging to
Energia Limited; OML 56 Omusati, Pillar Oil Limited; OML 56 Ebok, Oriental
Energy; OML 54 Ogbelle, Niger Delta Petroleum Limited; and OML 56 Umusadege,
Midwestern Oil and Gas.
Others are
OML 90 Ajapa, Brittania-U Nigeria Limited; OML 16 Ibigwe, Walter Smith
Petroleum Oil Limited; OML 13 Uquo, Frontier Oil Limited; Universal Energy and
Network Exploration and Production.
DPR listed
some of the non-producing marginal fields to include Oil Mining Licences (OML)
54, Omerelu oil field operated by Niger Delta Petroleum Limited; Otakikpo OML
11, Green Energy International; Ubima OML 17, All Grace Energy; Okwok OML 67,
Oriental Energy; Amoji OML 56, Chorus Energy; Ekeh OML 88, Mavido Exploration
and Production; and Oriri OML 88, Goland Petroleum.
Others are
Ke OML 54, Del Sigma Limited; Dawes Island OML 54, Eurafric Energy; Ogedeh OML
90, Bicta Energy System; Akepo OML 90, Sogenal Limited; Ororo OML 95, Guarantee
Petroleum; and Asaramatoru OML 11, Prime Energy Limited.
The
discovery of one of the non-producing fields, Okwok, was made by a joint
venture between NNPC and Mobil Producing Nigeria, a subsidiary of ExxonMobil.
According to
the latest estimates, Okwok contains more than 70 million barrels of
recoverable oil reserves. The stock tank oil initially in place (STOIIP) is
estimated to be 225 million barrels of oil.
Akepo Field
(OML 90’s) total proven reserves are estimated at 81 million barrels. The
probable reserves are estimated at 410 million barrels and possible reserves at
1.243 billion barrels.
Asaramatoru
marginal field is an onshore field in Rivers State with Shell/NNPC and JV
partners as leaseholder. The field is estimated to contain a recoverable
reserve of 28 mbbl of oil and 2.7 bscf of associated gas. Stubb Creek field is
estimated to contain 20 mmbbl oil and 450 bscf of gas (proven and probable
reserves). Ekeh oil field owned by Movido Exploration and Production has a
reserve base of 25 million barrels and is yet to take off.
Also,
Otakikpo marginal oil field operated by Green Energy International has an
estimated 56.75 million barrels of oil (mmbbl), with an additional 70 billion
cubic feet (bcf) of gas reserves.
Ogedeh Field
(OML 90) is an oil and gas field located in the shallow water offshore Niger
Delta. It is fully covered by 3D seismic, and the technical analysis indicates
that the Ogedeh licence area holds hydrocarbon prospective resources likely to
be in the range of 10 to 25 million barrels of oil, with gas reserves in the
order of 25 BCF.
On the issue
of idle marginal field, President of Nigeria Association of Petroleum
Explorationists (NAPE), Abiodun Adesanya, said that International Oil Companies
(IOCs) made these discoveries. “Later they did not meet the threshold of their
corporate size and therefore they keep them idle. But that might change
somebody else’s life and so opportunity should be given to such a person,” he
said.
According to
Adesanya, some of the fields are idle because the funding is not in place to
develop them, especially the government’s part of the funding. “Even though
government has come up with a plan to let each project go out to the capital
market to raise funds for itself, it is a good idea, but you have a backlog
from the higher valued ones until you trickle down,” he said.
Also,
Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Energia Limited, Felix
Valentine Amieyeofori, said that there was the need to structure a marginal
field company to look like an exploration and production company.
“There are
lots of co-ventures and partnership issues. There are technology and experience
gaps, and rather than use local or foreign experts, some of the marginal
fields’ operators still resort to the use of the trial and error method of
restructuring.”
On the issue
of finance, Amieyeofori, noted: “Some of us who have been in production, we are
trying to tell them the different models of financing. It does not have to be
the banks.
“There are
service companies that are ready to finance marginal field companies and then
get paid on production. There are people that are off takers who can give money
to develop these fields and there is a guarantee to lift up the crude.”
The Chairman
of Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria, Bank Anthony Okoroafor, stated
that Nigeria’s target of increasing our crude oil reserves to 40 billion
barrels and production to four million barrels per day could only be achieved
when we invest in explorations and developments. “New blocks should be given
out for people to explore. We should conduct blocks and marginal bid rounds so
people will explore and share with government; incentivise people to come and
explore new areas; new bid rounds under laws that are friendly to investors,”
he added.
Meanwhile,
the NNPC has said it saves about $3billion annually from the reduction of crude
oil operation costs since 2015.
The
corporation also drove the cost of crude oil production down from $78 dollars
per barrel as at August 2015 to $23 per barrel representing 70.5% reduction.
The Group
General Manager of National Petroleum Investment Management Services (NAPIMS),
a unit of NNPC, Dafe Sejebor, disclosed this during the inauguration of the
anti-corruption committee of the unit.
Sejebor said
NAPIMS arrived at the figure after looking at the difference between the $78
and $23 which represents the old and new costs of production in relation to the
present daily average production in the country.
“If you
knock down your cost of production from $78 per barrel to $23, take the
difference and multiply by the average daily production, you will discover that
we are saving a minimum of $3billion in the upstream for both Production
Sharing Contracts (PSCs) and Joint Ventures (JVs),” he said.
The GGM
disclosed that the target was to bring the cost of production to between $17
and $19 for onshore and offshore production.
He commended
the Federal Government for its support to the NNPC management in tackling the
challenges in the petroleum industry, especially the cash call exit agreement
signed in 2016 and the reduction of contracting circle from three years to six
months.

0 Comments