The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)
on Tuesday disclosed reasons for its decision to cancel and re-award the
contract for security of 87-kilometre Trans Forcados Pipeline (TFP) to a new firm.
It added that so far in 2018, it had lost crude oil
worth $800 million from the TFP despite having a security contract on it.
In a statement signed by the corporation Group
General Manager of Public Affairs, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu, in Abuja, NNPC explained that
the decision to assign the TFP surveillance package to indigenous firm, Ocean
Marine Solutions, was reached after consideration of the huge losses on the
line.
NNPC said it appraised the new company’s record of
performance on the Bonny-Port Harcourt and Warri-Escravos crude oil evacuation
lines, and found it impressive, adding that its contract with it would entail
Ocean Marine paying for any damage to any inch of pipeline under its watch.
According to it, the new contract offered it and
its Joint Venture (JV) partners, host communities and the Nigerian government,
immeasurable benefits.
According to NNPC, faced with massive losses in
projected revenue, stakeholders in the TFP which reportedly account for daily
production throughput of over 250, 000 barrels of crude oil were unanimous in
the decision to seek better ways of ensuring reliability and availability of
the line, hence, the termination of its previous security deal.
Providing a context, NNPC said in the statement
that: “In 2018, we lost over 60 days of production due to incessant breaches on
the TFP despite having a security contract in place. In terms of production
numbers, this translates to over 11 million barrels of crude oil which on face
value equates to over $800 million in lost revenue to all the stakeholders in
the matrix which include NNPC, its Joint Venture partners and the Nigerian government.”
It noted that no responsible business entity or
government would allow such level of loss to go on without taking swift actions
to stop the losses.
Based on this, NNPC said Ocean Marine Solution was
assigned to handle the TFP under a proof of concept arrangement which it said
was yielding great results in the Bonny-Port Harcourt and Warri-Escravos crude oil
evacuation lines.
“Under this package, the surveillance company is
obligated to protect the lines and bear the cost of repairs if and when there
is any breach to the pipeline.
“This arrangement is totally different from the old
order where the contractor gets paid for surveillance duties and totally
exempted from repair cost or any form of responsibility in the event of any
line break or breach to the pipeline he is paid to watch,” the statement added.
It further explained that the cost of the new deal
was insignificant when compared on the basis of value-for-money with the old
arrangement.
According to NNPC, “In 2018, after we lost over 60
days of production under the old contract, the NNPC and its stakeholders spent
over $32 million on repairs, protection of the TFP and clean-up. This is a
verifiable fact which makes the new deal not only better but far more rewarding
to all stakeholders.”
It also dismissed insinuations that the new
contract would spell doom for youths of communities on the pipeline
right-of-way currently rendering sundry services to the old service provider,
arguing that the issue of TFP security was purely a matter of criminality which
the host communities along the pipeline corridor are totally against.
NNPC said long before now, it had evolved a host
community participation model which naturally incorporates youths within the
vicinity of its assets and areas of operations as veritable stakeholders and
participants in the running of such facility.
“We want to state for the umpteenth time that based
on our community engagement model for asset protection, OMS is obligated to
engage youths in the TFP right-of-way in executing its mandate therefore,
reports of imminent loss of jobs by host community youths are totally incorrect
and mischievous,” it explained.
On allegation that the new contract did not go through due
process as mandated by law, NNPC said the government-approved procurement
processes and procedures in the award of highly sensitive national security
contracts were followed to the letter.
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