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PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday - Politics (2) - Nairaland

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Kaduna Inland Dry Port To Be Commissioned By President Buhari On Thursday / Strike Call-off: Ngige, Ibe Kachikwu Sign Agreements With Pengassan(photos) / NNPC Scandal: PENGASSAN, NUPENG Pledge Support for Baru (Photos) (2) (3) (4)

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Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Nobody: 9:50pm On Jul 06, 2016
Na wa o. These people make una still pity Nigerians na. The suffering in the land is just too much to bear and una wan add una own join! Make una cucuma kill us abeg cry cry cry


Today I visited more than 8 Atm and stand for line wey long pass fuel queue before I fit withdraw money, my own money for that matter o! I go soon stop to dey deposit money for bank I swear. It has gotten to a point where banks now program their atm to be paying only their own. God! Which kind life be this for Nigeria! Na Wetin we really do!

2 Likes

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by phelps007: 9:52pm On Jul 06, 2016
lordhugo:
Stop holding the Nigerian state to ransome for selfish interests

Don't mind the idiots.

They keep going on useless strikes, making life even harder for Nigerians.

1 Like

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Ovialekhe(f): 9:53pm On Jul 06, 2016
Even if I want to fill my fuel tank,I don't av the money sef.Dis Sallah get as e be oo.Nobody bring food for me unlike previous years.CHANGE has affected Sallah too.

5 Likes

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Nobody: 9:53pm On Jul 06, 2016
This is crazy...nothing seems to be working in this country. i fear for d future
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by kaptinphilz(m): 9:54pm On Jul 06, 2016
Naigerians have endured a lot not to be moved anymore by your threats
APC kwontinu your deceit... We are WATCHING!
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by dallyemmy: 9:57pm On Jul 06, 2016
Avengers members of Pengassan
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by passionate88: 9:59pm On Jul 06, 2016
The dullard is just an idiot. He is so damn insensitive to the common man's plight, let me read the comments to see what the zombies are saying.

4 Likes

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Cordis92(f): 10:02pm On Jul 06, 2016
Slowly but surely, Nigerians are getting to a point where they will say enough is enough. We are the people to make the change not the government. Till we stop deceiving ourselves, and stand up for the truth that the change will occur. The politicians cannot deceive us forever and can't give us the desired change because they are all corrupt, none of them should be exonerated.

2 Likes

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Nobody: 10:04pm On Jul 06, 2016
blueto:


http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/07/going-total-shut-tomorrow-pengassan-threatens/
Can't you wait till after the holidays? Una non dey taya self
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Cordis92(f): 10:05pm On Jul 06, 2016
Slowly but surely, Nigerians are getting to a point where they will say enough is enough. We are the people to make the change not the government. Till we stop deceiving ourselves, and stand up for the truth, then the change will occur. The politicians cannot deceive us forever and can't give us the desired change because they are all corrupt, none of them should be exonerated.

Despite the challenges we are facing, I still love my country.

God bless Nigeria.

3 Likes

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Boring: 10:10pm On Jul 06, 2016
who dey stop dem b4..yimu pple undecided undecided
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Kemzone2003: 10:10pm On Jul 06, 2016
Bluffly:

What sensitivity are you talking about?. They are pengashits. Can't they list the issues for the Nigerians to see? Just selfish interests. Why using Nigerians as pawns. Nonsense.


Pengasson is going on strike due to $7bn Unpaid JV Cash Calls by previous govt over 10years owed by Jonathan & Yaradua Administration.

DETAILS BELOW

Nigeria’s crude oil production from the Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) with the international oil companies (IOCs) is known to have grown by over 700 per cent in the last 10 years due to federal government’s non-involvement in funding PSCs. In contrast, the country has lost over 50 per cent of crude oil production from the joint venture (JV) operations during the same period as a result of government’s inability to provide its JV cash calls, which has accumulated to $7 billion. Ejiofor Alike writes that the Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, should pursue vigorously his proposed funding models to liquidate this outstanding obligation

Shortly after assumption of office as the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, had unveiled plans to explore alternative funding models to pay the outstanding arrears of NNPC’s obligations to the joint venture companies with the international oil companies (IOCs), which currently stand at about $7 billion.

Before entrenched interests mounted spirited opposition against his reform at the NNPC, Kachikwu’s target was to pay all the arrears, which was then around $6 billion, by the end of December 2015.

As at that time, the reform was already yielding dividends with the corporation already saving $150 million monthly from the cancellation of certain contracts, while he focused on transparency for the NNPC to get back its credibility.

In the joint venture between the NNPC and the IOCs, each of the partners contribute funding, otherwise called Cash Call, according to their equity holdings in the joint venture company and also lifts crude oil in that proportion.

Under current JV arrangements between the NNPC and the IOCs, the NNPC contributes about 55 per cent of the funding requirement, while the foreign firms provide the remaining 45 per cent.

But the federal government, through the NNPC has over the last 10 years demonstrated lack of financial capacity to fund the JV projects between the NNPC and the IOCs.

In contrast, production from projects under the PSC arrangement, which are solely funded by the IOCs, has risen by about 700 per cent over the same period.

In fact, Nigeria’s crude oil exports are sustained today by huge production from prolific deep offshore fields such as Shell’s Bonga, ExxonMobil’s Erha, Total’s Akpo and Usan; and Chevron’s Agbami, which are all under PSCs.

The IOCs, on the other hand, are selling their stakes in JVs to local entities due partly to government’s inability to provide its own funding to boost investments in JVs.

So, a major challenge of the joint venture system is the inability of the NNPC to meet its cash-call obligations.

This development led to the establishment of a new fiscal regime – PSC, modelled after Indonesia’s Production Sharing Agreement.

Under a PSC, the NNPC does not contribute any fund as the PSC contractor (IOC) provides 100 per cent of the risk capital, as well as technical and manpower requirements.

However, the contractor recoups the investment outlay when it starts the export of crude oil.

But the grave danger in the Nigerian PSC is that the IOC is not refunded the exploration cost if oil is not found in a commercial quantity.

Following the National Assembly’s failure to allocate enough money as cash calls for the NNPC in the country’s budget over the years, the arrears of JV cash calls have accumulated to about $7 billion.

“If you ask for $4 billion; they (National Assembly) will give you $1.5 billion,” Kachikwu had told THISDAY.

For the first time in a very long time, Kachikwu had on assumption of office, introduced a raft of measures to open up the oil and gas sector and enthrone a regime of transparency, due process and accountability in an industry that was run in an opaque and secret nature.

Due to inadequate funding of the JVs by the NNPC, crude oil production by the NNPC JV with Shell, Chevron, Total and ExxonMobil has dropped by 50 per cent in the last 10 years.

According to statistics obtained by THISDAY, the country should have been producing between 500,000 barrels per day and 1 million bpd more than it is producing today if the government had been providing adequate funding.

Kachikwu’s new funding models

Kachikwu achieved a major feat for the JV when he secured$1.2 billion multi-year drilling financing package for 36 offshore/onshore oil wells under the NNPC/Chevron Nigeria Limited Joint Venture as one of the funding models he proposed.

With the restoration of the confidence of local and foreign investors in the sector, a landmark achievement was recorded when the $1.2 billion multi-year drilling financing package was secured in 2015.

The funding package, which is being financed by a consortium of Nigerian and international lenders, is an integral part of the Accelerated Upstream Financing Programme initiated by Kachikwu to address the perennial challenge experienced by the federal government in providing its counter-part funding of JV upstream activities.

A breakdown of the NNPC/ Chevron JV deal, which was executed at a signing-ceremony in London, showed that the $1.2 billion is to be channelled into the development of 23 onshore and 13 offshore wells on Oil Mining Leases (OMLs) 49, 90 and 95 in two stages over 2015- 2018.

Stage one, comprising 19 wells is projected to deliver 21, 000 barrels of crude oil and condensate per day alongside 120 million standard cubic feet of gas per day, mmscf/d, over 2015 and 2016.

Stage two, comprising 17 wells is projected to yield 20, 000 barrels of crude oil and condensate per day alongside gas production of seven mmscf/d of gas between 2016 and 2018.

It is envisaged that both stages of the project would generate $2 billion to $5 billion of incremental revenue to the Federation Account.

Beyond the contribution to the national treasury, the projected peak incremental gas production of 127 million standard cubic feet per day (mmscf/d), which is the electricity equivalent of 400 megawatts, would help boost the Federal Government’s domestic gas aspirations with expectant positive effect on power supply.

Kachikwu had described the new alternative funding arrangement as the new contractual model in upstream financing which would serve as a template for future initiative to supplement the federal government’s joint venture Cash Call commitment.

While commending the NNPC/ Chevron Joint Finance Team and the consortium of local and international lenders led by Standard Chartered Bank and UBA, the minister had noted that NNPC would not relent in the renewed effort to restore probity and transparency to the process of generation, collection and remittance of crude oil proceeds.

He encouraged the other IOCs to come up with funding models that would be favourable to the joint venture partners.

Exploring Funding Options

The minister has consistently restated that rather than waiting for the federal government’s budgetary allocations, there are viable alternative funding options for the JV projects if the government and the IOCs could sit on a negotiating table.

As the then Executive Vice Chairman and General Counsel of ExxonMobil (Africa), Kachikwu had prepared the legal framework for the successful raising of about $15 billion in recent years by the joint venture between the NNPC and Mobil Producing Nigeria (MPN).

As the Minister of State for Petroleum, he should therefore be allowed by entrenched political interests to implement his vision for alternative funding options such as External Financing (EF); and Alternative Funding (AF) or Modify Carry Agreement (MCA).

Having been given a free hand by President Muhammadu Buhari to implement the Change Agenda in the oil and gas industry, he should not be distracted in implementing the administration’s dreams. As a global business run in line with global best practices, Nigeria’s oil and gas business should not be mixed with local politics.

“I am grateful to be working with the President, who has done everything that you would expect in terms of giving you the latitude to bring the issues on the table; discuss with him; and reach decisions that will be fruitful to this industry.

So, if you see the speed with which we are moving, it is because he has given me the free hand and is willing to work with me to sanitise the company. The President is very emotional about the poor people,” Kachikwu had explained.

External financing will relieve the federal government of its obligations to the JVs.

In external financing, commercial banks provide funding for approved JV work programmes at cost-effective and market-driven borrowing rates.

External financing is structured in a way that the lenders have no recourse to the JV assets, as the loan is secured from forward sale of incremental volumes.

Under Alternative Funding or Modified Carry Arrangement, the IOC funds the NNPC share of the approved JV work programme.

The IOC receives agreed after-tax Internal Rate of Return (IRR), while the loan is repaid via tax relief and crude oil liftings.

As pointed out earlier, the joint venture between the NNPC and Mobil Producing Nigeria had successfully raised $15 billion through these alternative funding options in recent years.

Shell has also raised billions of dollars under Modified Carry Arrangement to fund NNPC’s share of JV work programmes.

The federal government should therefore provide all the enablers for the IOCs to use alternative funding options to finance NNPC cash calls, so as to solve the problem of the inability of the corporation to fund the JV, which has constrained Nigeria’s overall oil production growth.

Alternative funding has provided viable options for funding JV projects, especially during this period of plummeting crude oil price.
http://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2016/06/19/kachikwus-funding-options-for-7bn-unpaid-jv-cash-calls/

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by rumaabk(m): 10:13pm On Jul 06, 2016
Nonsense if they like let them go on strike forever we used to it greedy people.
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by bakila: 10:16pm On Jul 06, 2016
Cordis92:
Slowly but surely, Nigerians are getting to a point where they will say enough is enough. We are the people to make the change not the government. Till we stop deceiving ourselves, and stand up for the truth that the change will occur. The politicians cannot deceive us forever and can't give us the desired change because they are all corrupt, none of them should be exonerated.
.
So how do you suggest the Government tackle PANGASSEN. Yield to their demands or ignore them.
With the Avangers setting off bombs on oil facilities is strike action appropriate to address the oil industry.
..... Or the issue is just about changing the government.
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Nobody: 10:17pm On Jul 06, 2016
Bluffly:


What sensitivity are you talking about?. They are pengashits. Can't they list the issues for the Nigerians to see? Just selfish interests. Why using Nigerians as pawns. Nonsense.

Guy it is obvious a member of ur family must be eating from that aspect of national cake and spreading it to ur family. I see nothing wrong in his post. Why u dey drink Booska for him mata sef...

4 Likes

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by senbonzakurakageyoshi(m): 10:18pm On Jul 06, 2016
You can now see that the problems of Nigeria is not solely our successive governments alone but our fellow Nigerians. Was it not a short while ago that fuel marketers were holding the entire country to ransom in the guise of unpaid subsidy deficits? So they were paid off and the subsidy was removed and we all thought "finally, fuel scarcity can be laid to rest". Next thing they showed up again, lamenting that it was impossible for them to access forex for importing refined petroleum products due to government's monetary policy. Okay, government finally changed its monetary policy and floated the naira, to make forex more accessible and the skeptical ones amongst us asked; "can we now rest?". Now these ones at PENGASSAN are threatening to strike owing to government's alleged "insensitivity to issues in the oil and gas industry", issues they haven't outlined for us to peruse and assess the veracity of their claims. What do these people want the government and people of Nigeria to do, keel over and die? I just don't understand anymore!

9 Likes 3 Shares

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Vcsaint: 10:23pm On Jul 06, 2016
Tommorrow Chaii
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Compliant(m): 10:26pm On Jul 06, 2016
blueto:


Seriously, enough of the insensitivity of this govt. A change of this APC govt will be congenial and well appreciated.

We can't continue to maintain phlegmatic duffers as govt by not misusing the opportunity we have in 2019.

WHAT HAS APC GOT TO DO WITH THIS OR THEY DID NOT GO ON STRIKE WHEN PDP WAS THERE?

YOU ARE SICK FOR SURE

LET THEM GO ON STRIKE FROM NOW TILL END OF THE YEAR SELF WE CARE LESS AFTER ALL WE HAVE SEEN WORSE

NO BE WHO GET MONEY DEY BUY FUEL?

MAY GOD PUNISH THEM IF THEY EVENTUALLY CALL OFF THE STRIKE

UNION OF CRIMINALS

2 Likes

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by TheGoodJoe(m): 10:26pm On Jul 06, 2016
Kemzone2003:


Pengasson is going on strike due to $7bn Unpaid JV Cash Calls by previous govt over 10years owed by Jonathan & Yaradua Administration.

DETAILS BELOW

Nigeria’s crude oil production from the Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) with the international oil companies (IOCs) is known to have grown by over 700 per cent in the last 10 years due to federal government’s non-involvement in funding PSCs. In contrast, the country has lost over 50 per cent of crude oil production from the joint venture (JV) operations during the same period as a result of government’s inability to provide its JV cash calls, which has accumulated to $7 billion. Ejiofor Alike writes that the Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, should pursue vigorously his proposed funding models to liquidate this outstanding obligation

Shortly after assumption of office as the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, had unveiled plans to explore alternative funding models to pay the outstanding arrears of NNPC’s obligations to the joint venture companies with the international oil companies (IOCs), which currently stand at about $7 billion.

Before entrenched interests mounted spirited opposition against his reform at the NNPC, Kachikwu’s target was to pay all the arrears, which was then around $6 billion, by the end of December 2015.

As at that time, the reform was already yielding dividends with the corporation already saving $150 million monthly from the cancellation of certain contracts, while he focused on transparency for the NNPC to get back its credibility.

In the joint venture between the NNPC and the IOCs, each of the partners contribute funding, otherwise called Cash Call, according to their equity holdings in the joint venture company and also lifts crude oil in that proportion.

Under current JV arrangements between the NNPC and the IOCs, the NNPC contributes about 55 per cent of the funding requirement, while the foreign firms provide the remaining 45 per cent.

But the federal government, through the NNPC has over the last 10 years demonstrated lack of financial capacity to fund the JV projects between the NNPC and the IOCs.

In contrast, production from projects under the PSC arrangement, which are solely funded by the IOCs, has risen by about 700 per cent over the same period.

In fact, Nigeria’s crude oil exports are sustained today by huge production from prolific deep offshore fields such as Shell’s Bonga, ExxonMobil’s Erha, Total’s Akpo and Usan; and Chevron’s Agbami, which are all under PSCs.

The IOCs, on the other hand, are selling their stakes in JVs to local entities due partly to government’s inability to provide its own funding to boost investments in JVs.

So, a major challenge of the joint venture system is the inability of the NNPC to meet its cash-call obligations.

This development led to the establishment of a new fiscal regime – PSC, modelled after Indonesia’s Production Sharing Agreement.

Under a PSC, the NNPC does not contribute any fund as the PSC contractor (IOC) provides 100 per cent of the risk capital, as well as technical and manpower requirements.

However, the contractor recoups the investment outlay when it starts the export of crude oil.

But the grave danger in the Nigerian PSC is that the IOC is not refunded the exploration cost if oil is not found in a commercial quantity.

Following the National Assembly’s failure to allocate enough money as cash calls for the NNPC in the country’s budget over the years, the arrears of JV cash calls have accumulated to about $7 billion.

“If you ask for $4 billion; they (National Assembly) will give you $1.5 billion,” Kachikwu had told THISDAY.

For the first time in a very long time, Kachikwu had on assumption of office, introduced a raft of measures to open up the oil and gas sector and enthrone a regime of transparency, due process and accountability in an industry that was run in an opaque and secret nature.

Due to inadequate funding of the JVs by the NNPC, crude oil production by the NNPC JV with Shell, Chevron, Total and ExxonMobil has dropped by 50 per cent in the last 10 years.

According to statistics obtained by THISDAY, the country should have been producing between 500,000 barrels per day and 1 million bpd more than it is producing today if the government had been providing adequate funding.

Kachikwu’s new funding models

Kachikwu achieved a major feat for the JV when he secured$1.2 billion multi-year drilling financing package for 36 offshore/onshore oil wells under the NNPC/Chevron Nigeria Limited Joint Venture as one of the funding models he proposed.

With the restoration of the confidence of local and foreign investors in the sector, a landmark achievement was recorded when the $1.2 billion multi-year drilling financing package was secured in 2015.

The funding package, which is being financed by a consortium of Nigerian and international lenders, is an integral part of the Accelerated Upstream Financing Programme initiated by Kachikwu to address the perennial challenge experienced by the federal government in providing its counter-part funding of JV upstream activities.

A breakdown of the NNPC/ Chevron JV deal, which was executed at a signing-ceremony in London, showed that the $1.2 billion is to be channelled into the development of 23 onshore and 13 offshore wells on Oil Mining Leases (OMLs) 49, 90 and 95 in two stages over 2015- 2018.

Stage one, comprising 19 wells is projected to deliver 21, 000 barrels of crude oil and condensate per day alongside 120 million standard cubic feet of gas per day, mmscf/d, over 2015 and 2016.

Stage two, comprising 17 wells is projected to yield 20, 000 barrels of crude oil and condensate per day alongside gas production of seven mmscf/d of gas between 2016 and 2018.

It is envisaged that both stages of the project would generate $2 billion to $5 billion of incremental revenue to the Federation Account.

Beyond the contribution to the national treasury, the projected peak incremental gas production of 127 million standard cubic feet per day (mmscf/d), which is the electricity equivalent of 400 megawatts, would help boost the Federal Government’s domestic gas aspirations with expectant positive effect on power supply.

Kachikwu had described the new alternative funding arrangement as the new contractual model in upstream financing which would serve as a template for future initiative to supplement the federal government’s joint venture Cash Call commitment.

While commending the NNPC/ Chevron Joint Finance Team and the consortium of local and international lenders led by Standard Chartered Bank and UBA, the minister had noted that NNPC would not relent in the renewed effort to restore probity and transparency to the process of generation, collection and remittance of crude oil proceeds.

He encouraged the other IOCs to come up with funding models that would be favourable to the joint venture partners.

Exploring Funding Options

The minister has consistently restated that rather than waiting for the federal government’s budgetary allocations, there are viable alternative funding options for the JV projects if the government and the IOCs could sit on a negotiating table.

As the then Executive Vice Chairman and General Counsel of ExxonMobil (Africa), Kachikwu had prepared the legal framework for the successful raising of about $15 billion in recent years by the joint venture between the NNPC and Mobil Producing Nigeria (MPN).

As the Minister of State for Petroleum, he should therefore be allowed by entrenched political interests to implement his vision for alternative funding options such as External Financing (EF); and Alternative Funding (AF) or Modify Carry Agreement (MCA).

Having been given a free hand by President Muhammadu Buhari to implement the Change Agenda in the oil and gas industry, he should not be distracted in implementing the administration’s dreams. As a global business run in line with global best practices, Nigeria’s oil and gas business should not be mixed with local politics.

“I am grateful to be working with the President, who has done everything that you would expect in terms of giving you the latitude to bring the issues on the table; discuss with him; and reach decisions that will be fruitful to this industry.

So, if you see the speed with which we are moving, it is because he has given me the free hand and is willing to work with me to sanitise the company. The President is very emotional about the poor people,” Kachikwu had explained.

External financing will relieve the federal government of its obligations to the JVs.

In external financing, commercial banks provide funding for approved JV work programmes at cost-effective and market-driven borrowing rates.

External financing is structured in a way that the lenders have no recourse to the JV assets, as the loan is secured from forward sale of incremental volumes.

Under Alternative Funding or Modified Carry Arrangement, the IOC funds the NNPC share of the approved JV work programme.

The IOC receives agreed after-tax Internal Rate of Return (IRR), while the loan is repaid via tax relief and crude oil liftings.

As pointed out earlier, the joint venture between the NNPC and Mobil Producing Nigeria had successfully raised $15 billion through these alternative funding options in recent years.

Shell has also raised billions of dollars under Modified Carry Arrangement to fund NNPC’s share of JV work programmes.

The federal government should therefore provide all the enablers for the IOCs to use alternative funding options to finance NNPC cash calls, so as to solve the problem of the inability of the corporation to fund the JV, which has constrained Nigeria’s overall oil production growth.

Alternative funding has provided viable options for funding JV projects, especially during this period of plummeting crude oil price.
http://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2016/06/19/kachikwus-funding-options-for-7bn-unpaid-jv-cash-calls/

Nice post.

From your post, the Government is not insensitive but the greedy people just want President Buhari to wave a magic wand to solve the problem overnight.

This strike looks like a case of pure Sabotage and the Federal Government should look within the Oil and gas workers for members of the NDA. The Oil and Gas needs probing to dismantle some of the Corrupt people sabotaging the country.

1 Like

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by freeze001(f): 10:29pm On Jul 06, 2016
senbonzakurakageyoshi:
You can now see that the problems of Nigeria is not solely our successive governments alone but our fellow Nigerians. Was it not a short while ago that fuel marketers were holding the entire country to ransom in the guise of unpaid subsidy deficits? So they were paid off and the subsidy was removed and we all thought "finally, fuel scarcity can be laid to rest". Next thing they showed up again, lamenting that it was impossible for them to access forex for importing refined petroleum products due to government's monetary policy. Okay, government finally changed its monetary policy and floated the naira, to make forex more accessible and the skeptical ones amongst us asked; "can we now rest?". Now these ones at PENGASSAN are threatening to strike owing to government's alleged "insensitivity to issues in the oil and gas industry", issues they haven't outlined for us to peruse and assess the veracity of their claims. What do these people want the government and people of Nigeria to do, keel over and die? I just don't understand anymore!

Apparently these are the issues...

Kemzone2003:

Pengasson is going on strike due to $7bn Unpaid JV Cash Calls by previous govt over 10years owed by Jonathan & Yaradua Administration.

DETAILS BELOW

Nigeria’s crude oil production from the Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) with the international oil companies (IOCs) is known to have grown by over 700 per cent in the last 10 years due to federal government’s non-involvement in funding PSCs. In contrast, the country has lost over 50 per cent of crude oil production from the joint venture (JV) operations during the same period as a result of government’s inability to provide its JV cash calls, which has accumulated to $7 billion. Ejiofor Alike writes that the Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, should pursue vigorously his proposed funding models to liquidate this outstanding obligation

Shortly after assumption of office as the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, had unveiled plans to explore alternative funding models to pay the outstanding arrears of NNPC’s obligations to the joint venture companies with the international oil companies (IOCs), which currently stand at about $7 billion.

Before entrenched interests mounted spirited opposition against his reform at the NNPC, Kachikwu’s target was to pay all the arrears, which was then around $6 billion, by the end of December 2015.

As at that time, the reform was already yielding dividends with the corporation already saving $150 million monthly from the cancellation of certain contracts, while he focused on transparency for the NNPC to get back its credibility.

In the joint venture between the NNPC and the IOCs, each of the partners contribute funding, otherwise called Cash Call, according to their equity holdings in the joint venture company and also lifts crude oil in that proportion.

Under current JV arrangements between the NNPC and the IOCs, the NNPC contributes about 55 per cent of the funding requirement, while the foreign firms provide the remaining 45 per cent.

But the federal government, through the NNPC has over the last 10 years demonstrated lack of financial capacity to fund the JV projects between the NNPC and the IOCs.

In contrast, production from projects under the PSC arrangement, which are solely funded by the IOCs, has risen by about 700 per cent over the same period.

In fact, Nigeria’s crude oil exports are sustained today by huge production from prolific deep offshore fields such as Shell’s Bonga, ExxonMobil’s Erha, Total’s Akpo and Usan; and Chevron’s Agbami, which are all under PSCs.

The IOCs, on the other hand, are selling their stakes in JVs to local entities due partly to government’s inability to provide its own funding to boost investments in JVs.

So, a major challenge of the joint venture system is the inability of the NNPC to meet its cash-call obligations.

This development led to the establishment of a new fiscal regime – PSC, modelled after Indonesia’s Production Sharing Agreement.

Under a PSC, the NNPC does not contribute any fund as the PSC contractor (IOC) provides 100 per cent of the risk capital, as well as technical and manpower requirements.

However, the contractor recoups the investment outlay when it starts the export of crude oil.

But the grave danger in the Nigerian PSC is that the IOC is not refunded the exploration cost if oil is not found in a commercial quantity.

Following the National Assembly’s failure to allocate enough money as cash calls for the NNPC in the country’s budget over the years, the arrears of JV cash calls have accumulated to about $7 billion.

“If you ask for $4 billion; they (National Assembly) will give you $1.5 billion,” Kachikwu had told THISDAY.

For the first time in a very long time, Kachikwu had on assumption of office, introduced a raft of measures to open up the oil and gas sector and enthrone a regime of transparency, due process and accountability in an industry that was run in an opaque and secret nature.

Due to inadequate funding of the JVs by the NNPC, crude oil production by the NNPC JV with Shell, Chevron, Total and ExxonMobil has dropped by 50 per cent in the last 10 years.

According to statistics obtained by THISDAY, the country should have been producing between 500,000 barrels per day and 1 million bpd more than it is producing today if the government had been providing adequate funding.

Kachikwu’s new funding models

Kachikwu achieved a major feat for the JV when he secured$1.2 billion multi-year drilling financing package for 36 offshore/onshore oil wells under the NNPC/Chevron Nigeria Limited Joint Venture as one of the funding models he proposed.

With the restoration of the confidence of local and foreign investors in the sector, a landmark achievement was recorded when the $1.2 billion multi-year drilling financing package was secured in 2015.

The funding package, which is being financed by a consortium of Nigerian and international lenders, is an integral part of the Accelerated Upstream Financing Programme initiated by Kachikwu to address the perennial challenge experienced by the federal government in providing its counter-part funding of JV upstream activities.

A breakdown of the NNPC/ Chevron JV deal, which was executed at a signing-ceremony in London, showed that the $1.2 billion is to be channelled into the development of 23 onshore and 13 offshore wells on Oil Mining Leases (OMLs) 49, 90 and 95 in two stages over 2015- 2018.

Stage one, comprising 19 wells is projected to deliver 21, 000 barrels of crude oil and condensate per day alongside 120 million standard cubic feet of gas per day, mmscf/d, over 2015 and 2016.

Stage two, comprising 17 wells is projected to yield 20, 000 barrels of crude oil and condensate per day alongside gas production of seven mmscf/d of gas between 2016 and 2018.

It is envisaged that both stages of the project would generate $2 billion to $5 billion of incremental revenue to the Federation Account.

Beyond the contribution to the national treasury, the projected peak incremental gas production of 127 million standard cubic feet per day (mmscf/d), which is the electricity equivalent of 400 megawatts, would help boost the Federal Government’s domestic gas aspirations with expectant positive effect on power supply.

Kachikwu had described the new alternative funding arrangement as the new contractual model in upstream financing which would serve as a template for future initiative to supplement the federal government’s joint venture Cash Call commitment.

While commending the NNPC/ Chevron Joint Finance Team and the consortium of local and international lenders led by Standard Chartered Bank and UBA, the minister had noted that NNPC would not relent in the renewed effort to restore probity and transparency to the process of generation, collection and remittance of crude oil proceeds.

He encouraged the other IOCs to come up with funding models that would be favourable to the joint venture partners.

Exploring Funding Options

The minister has consistently restated that rather than waiting for the federal government’s budgetary allocations, there are viable alternative funding options for the JV projects if the government and the IOCs could sit on a negotiating table.

As the then Executive Vice Chairman and General Counsel of ExxonMobil (Africa), Kachikwu had prepared the legal framework for the successful raising of about $15 billion in recent years by the joint venture between the NNPC and Mobil Producing Nigeria (MPN).

As the Minister of State for Petroleum, he should therefore be allowed by entrenched political interests to implement his vision for alternative funding options such as External Financing (EF); and Alternative Funding (AF) or Modify Carry Agreement (MCA).

Having been given a free hand by President Muhammadu Buhari to implement the Change Agenda in the oil and gas industry, he should not be distracted in implementing the administration’s dreams. As a global business run in line with global best practices, Nigeria’s oil and gas business should not be mixed with local politics.

“I am grateful to be working with the President, who has done everything that you would expect in terms of giving you the latitude to bring the issues on the table; discuss with him; and reach decisions that will be fruitful to this industry.

So, if you see the speed with which we are moving, it is because he has given me the free hand and is willing to work with me to sanitise the company. The President is very emotional about the poor people,” Kachikwu had explained.

External financing will relieve the federal government of its obligations to the JVs.

In external financing, commercial banks provide funding for approved JV work programmes at cost-effective and market-driven borrowing rates.

External financing is structured in a way that the lenders have no recourse to the JV assets, as the loan is secured from forward sale of incremental volumes.

Under Alternative Funding or Modified Carry Arrangement, the IOC funds the NNPC share of the approved JV work programme.

The IOC receives agreed after-tax Internal Rate of Return (IRR), while the loan is repaid via tax relief and crude oil liftings.

As pointed out earlier, the joint venture between the NNPC and Mobil Producing Nigeria had successfully raised $15 billion through these alternative funding options in recent years.

Shell has also raised billions of dollars under Modified Carry Arrangement to fund NNPC’s share of JV work programmes.

The federal government should therefore provide all the enablers for the IOCs to use alternative funding options to finance NNPC cash calls, so as to solve the problem of the inability of the corporation to fund the JV, which has constrained Nigeria’s overall oil production growth.

Alternative funding has provided viable options for funding JV projects, especially during this period of plummeting crude oil price.

http://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2016/06/19/kachikwus-funding-options-for-7bn-unpaid-jv-cash-calls/
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by TheGoodJoe(m): 10:29pm On Jul 06, 2016
The minister has consistently restated that rather than waiting for the federal government’s budgetary allocations, there are viable alternative funding options for the JV projects if the government and the IOCs could sit on a negotiating table.

1 Like

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Remii(m): 10:37pm On Jul 06, 2016
Bluffly:


What sensitivity are you talking about?. They are pengashits. Can't they list the issues for the Nigerians to see? Just selfish interests. Why using Nigerians as pawns. Nonsense.
govt has been owing IOC's cash call due to them in JV. Company are shutting down operations with massive jobs losses daily and many more threatened
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Kazrem(m): 10:40pm On Jul 06, 2016
Make den let me reach house tomorrow.
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Remii(m): 10:40pm On Jul 06, 2016
TheGoodJoe:
The minister has consistently restated that rather than waiting for the federal government’s budgetary allocations, there are viable alternative funding options for the JV projects if the government and the IOCs could sit on a negotiating table.
the govt calls alternative funding and PSC frauds too, argue every cost, lol. Na govt that didn't pay when oil was $120/bbl go pay when oil is now <$50/bbl?
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by brojoshua: 10:44pm On Jul 06, 2016
It is only God that shuts down and no one opens and when He opens no one shuts down. So unions go and sit down. And they are part of Nigeria's problems.
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by Nobody: 10:51pm On Jul 06, 2016
Na wetin be dia needs gan??
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by AODT(m): 10:54pm On Jul 06, 2016
After the strike what next. As if whatever they are striking for has or will benefit the country. Na today??
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by yeni2015(m): 10:57pm On Jul 06, 2016
This should be a group of educated engineers and I expect them to consult with the Government and iron out issues not shouting strike strike every time

1 Like

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by ummeey: 11:00pm On Jul 06, 2016
Maybe even my relationship will shut down tomorrow, cos it runs on fuel.
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by iswallker(m): 11:19pm On Jul 06, 2016
blueto:


Seriously, enough of the insensitivity of this govt. A change of this APC govt will be congenial and well appreciated.

We can't continue to maintain phlegmatic duffers as govt by not misusing the opportunity we have in 2019.

Wailing wailer..at least you know you have to bear with us till 2019... grin

1 Like

Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by gbeseun(m): 11:23pm On Jul 06, 2016
just because free subsidy money stopped and gradually we are seeing the reality, they want to start agitation.OK,so was penganssan sleeping some years ago when everyone is buying cars for their gf just because they relied on subsidy funds.owk I can now understand.kontinue
Re: PENGASSAN Going On Strike On Thursday by engrjacuzzi: 11:44pm On Jul 06, 2016
with the level of persistent strikes from pengassan, NLC and other related activities that tend to cripple our economy, I'm sure FG will find it hard to pay workers' salaries putting more pressure on the masses. PMB has failed us

2 Likes

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