Sunday, May 19, 2024
Home Blog Page 150

Facing the future with Veracity: Data Key to Unlocking Value for Maritime

0

DNV GL is at the vanguard of digital developments in maritime and, with Veracity, the group has built a unique platform for users to share, access and utilize data – realizing its potential and enabling a smarter, greener and safer future for all of shipping’s stakeholders. Here Magnus Lande, Veracity Head of APAC and Commercial Director, assesses the industry’s past, present and impending course down the path of digitalization. 

DNV GL will be showcasing Veracity, alongside its other innovative services, at Nor-Shipping 2021, Your Arena for Ocean Solutions. The Oslo-headquartered, global group is a key partner of Nor-Shipping, seeing the event week as an important platform to connect with the industry, share knowledge and collaborate with partners worldwide. 

What is the digital maturity of the maritime industry?

It varies. Some companies have come far in their digital transformation, while others are just about to start. In general, the maritime industry started its digital journey relatively late. The upside is that there are now proven processes and technology available, allowing companies to fast-track progress and derive value from becoming more data driven almost from day one.

Another great benefit for maritime is the sheer scale of data being produced every day. Modern vessels have thousands of sensors onboard. In addition to being used for direct system control, these data can now be harvested and used all the way up to board level, helping to inform and guide strategic direction and decisions.

 So, there is no lack of industry data, but there is a lack of data utility beyond its original intended use. This can mostly be blamed on a combination of a lack of systems and standards for accessing and utilizing the data for added value, allied to an immaturity with regards to how data should be used. In addition, it is worth mentioning that as data utilization grows data quality will emerge as a key pain point. This should be approached in the same way as the quality management of physical assets. If not, it will risk undermining trust in data and the uptake of digital.

 What is your advice to a company wanting to make better use of its data?

To come to a position where you can realize the optimal value of your data, you need to start with the basics. I recommend setting a goal for where you want to be in five years’ time, in terms of using data for business improvement, and then create a strategy roadmap accordingly.

 When you know where you want to go, you can start with the first project. Make a limited data inventory and start cleaning, standardizing and making the data fit for purpose for this project – but with your long-term ambition in mind for how to scale to all data and all use-cases. This is a process that DNV GL, Veracity and our eco-system of partners can help with, allowing customers to effectively navigate day-to-day, augmenting their industry domain know-how along the way, and preparing for longer-term change.

 Also, it is of utmost importance to understand “better use of data” as the combination of digital technology with internal capabilities to create business value from the data. Managing this will be a major C-level challenge for businesses over the next five years or so.

Finally, , I think it could help many to get going by taking the “edge” off digitalization by viewing it as a traditional improvement project meant to give immediate effect, as well as something that will, in time, lead to business transformation. In practical terms it simply means that if your first project doesn’t contribute to your desired medium and longer-term position, then you better find another project.

 When should companies build their own solutions and when should they reach out to you?

Well, if they are just performing one project and are not planning on any real integration it may be enough to tailor their own digital technology internally. However, for companies that are serious about becoming data driven, and want to be ready for the unforeseen technology requirements of tomorrow, it’s best to consult someone building flexible and open data platform technology. For most shipping companies there should not be an ambition to grow their IT department, but to grow and maximize the business value they create. As previously mentioned, the biggest barrier is really going to be how to manage and derive business value from digital. As such, I’d suggest most small and medium sized enterprises should concentrate energies on that task.

 With an established platform like Veracity, the focus is to provide everything “as a service” with a subscription model – like Netflix for example. This provides flexibility and transparency in relation to the costs of digital, and we believe this fits the volatility and often low margin business we live in.

 On Veracity we have more than 30 validated providers that offer data, enabling services and value-added services, and we are constantly growing the network with new offerings based on customer needs. We also have more than 18,000 companies and 200,000 users across these companies, in total consuming more than 1,600,000 subscriptions. As such it is highly likely that you will find your business partners and stakeholders already digitally validated and interlinked within our platform. With these standardized data, connections, digital identities and APIs we make it easy for companies to collaborate, innovate and re-use them for multiple purposes.

What do you predict to be the major future digital trends in maritime?

Digital trends will form as a result of business requirements in the industry. For example, we can see that the increased requirements for environmental performance and reporting is pushing for data standardization, secure access and consent control of data, and the possibility to re-use data for different needs. Companies must now not only ensure proper collection and access to data, but also ensure its trustworthiness before providing secure access to it to legislative bodies, banks and others. This gives rise to the need for industry-wide data standards and secure interoperable platforms where “certified” data can be transacted and re-used securely by several parties. Questions relating to legal aspects of property and user rights will also need to be answered, as data will be used more frequently and in different forms and maturity by multiple stakeholders.

In addition, the remote management and control of vessels will be important themes. This will add real value from the outset and is an important step towards autonomy. We also expect to see more digital twins appearing from yards, makers and service providers. These have the potential to be refined, combined and re-used for purposes other than their initial intent, such as the ongoing optimization of operations. 

Efficiency goals and cost savings are naturally also key drivers for becoming more data driven, as they offer the ability to achieve a competitive edge in the market. At DNV GL we work with some of the digital pioneers in the industry and have seen that, once they embark on the journey, they quickly find new opportunities to explore through the iterative process of transformation yielding new building blocks, patterns and ideas at every turn. In the years to come I think digital maturity in the industry will grow considerably because nobody can afford to be left behind. Even those inclined to lag will at least be pushed by compliance and “ticket to trade” requirements. Also, the technology is now so mature that it is possible for most to get started and get value with positive ROI “tomorrow”. 

How is DNV GL and Veracity responding to these trends?

DNV GL has put digitalization at the heart of its strategy, with exciting work progressing in all business areas. We were pioneers when it comes to remote surveys and this became an important service as COVID-19 locked down large parts of the world this year. Automated MRV/DCS planning and reporting are other services to mention. These are immediate responses to the need for stricter environmental reporting by IMO and the EU – and ensure correct and efficient reporting for users.

In Veracity we are constantly looking at how we can improve our service offerings to the market. This year, we are launching several new products that will make it even easier for our customers to make use of the data that is available. One example is the Veracity Asset Connect – an asset centric hub and portal for managing the “truths” about your vessels, where you can plug in (and out) data, KPIs, notifications and services from different providers as your digital journey matures (like you sign on and off to B2C services like Netflix, as your preferences evolve). Veracity Deep Search is another product which helps you search text and data across large archives and documents, drawings and P&IDs. In addition, we have just launched Veracity Connected – a native mobile app that will give our customers the Veracity experience on their phones, from both a data capture and “making decisions on the move” perspective. 

Nor-Shipping 2021 takes place at the 22,500 sq. m Norges Varemesse exhibition space in Lillestrøm and at a variety of venues across nearby Oslo from 1-4 June 2021. The event week will use its exhibition and activity programme to focus on the theme of #ACTION, showcasing who is doing what, and how, to unlock real value and achieve tangible industry success. A host of networking, knowledge sharing and social events are now being lined up for participants, ensuring that there’s something for everyone in Nor-Shipping’s diverse audience group (in 2019 participants were welcomed from over 85 countries, with exhibitors representing 47 different nationalities). Stay tuned for further developments!

Optimarin Successfully Completes IMO G8, USCG Test programme

0

Ballast water treatment (BWT) specialist Optimarin has successfully completed testing of its market proven Optimarin Ballast System (OBS) in accordance with the revised IMO G8 guidelines, while also upgrading its existing US Coast Guard (USCG) approval certificates to ensure compliance for zero to two hours holding time.

In a demonstration of OBS’ unique robustness and flexibility, the tests were conducted with two different filters simultaneously to provide peace of mind for all operational parameters.

Optimarin is a pioneer in the BWT niche. The first company to install a commercial maritime system, in 2000, the Stavanger-headquartered team was also the first to achieve full USCG approval and the first to offer a full five-year parts and servicing guarantee on fleet agreements.

The latest move cements its position as an early mover, completing testing ahead of IMO’s G8 October deadline to ensure customers meet the most stringent regulatory requirements.

“We have built a reputation as a true specialist, with reliable, easy to install and operate technology that also has the highest specifications with regard to quality and compliance,” states CEO Leiv Kallestad.

“We understand our customers’ needs and are committed to providing them with technology that, in short, makes their life a little simpler – allowing them to focus on core operations safe in the knowledge they have a BWT system, and support, they can rely on.

“This emphasizes that drive. In a shifting regulatory landscape we wanted to send out a clear message that we are ahead of the curve, satisfying all requirements so owners and operators have a global ‘ticket to trade’, and one less thing to worry about.

Optimarin is a long-term partner for its customers. So, we see it as vital that we safeguard their operations as much in the future as we do today.”

 Stringent Standards

The testing procedures were conducted at the NIVA test facility in Norway from September 2019 to the end of June 2020, with DNV GL operating as the designated Independent Laboratory.

In total, 36 tests were run for three salinity conditions (fresh, brackish and marine water), with zero interruption or mechanical issues recorded. DNV GL is now undertaking final evaluation and documentation of the tests ahead of full regulatory application and completion. 

In other news, Optimarin notes that the COVID-19 pandemic failed to have significant impact on the organisation, with several new fleets agreements signed and “business as usual” for its delivery and service functions.

Positive progress

“It’s obviously been a time of disruption, for the industry and society as a whole, but we’re very satisfied with how the organisation has responded,” Kallestad concludes. “We’d like to thank our dedicated staff, a superb supply chain and all our partners and customers for their hard work and support.

The pandemic doesn’t affect the industry’s need to comply with regulations and safeguard the environment. So, it’s gratifying to see the business continue to make such positive headway in 2020.”

Optimarin has now sold around 1000 of its UV-based systems, with more than 650 installed and operational, of which approximately 40% are retrofits. 

Customers include names such as Royal Caribbean International, Fednav, GulfMark, Hapag Lloyd, Matson Navigation, McDermott, the Danish Navy, MOL, Seatruck, and Technip, amongst others.

OBS has certification from a comprehensive range of classification organizations, including ABS, BV, DNV-GL, LR, CCS & MLIT Japan.

Algeria On The Move Out Of Oil-Reliance

0

The Algerian President, Abdelmadjid Tebboune on Tuesday reiterated his government’s determination to move the country’s economy from oil-reliance to being a diversified economy.

Tebboune in a meeting with the prime minister as well as energy, finance, mines, agriculture and trade ministers, discussed his intention to embark on a new “economic and social revival plan”, a statement from the presidency said.

Tennpime who was elected in December, has repeatedly vowed to reform the oil-dependent economy by developing the non-energy sector and seeking new funding sources.

This has become imperative for many oil-dependent economies especially as they grapple with the impact of the Coronavirus pandemic. The drop in oil and gas earnings during the coronavirus pandemic forced the government to cut public spending and delay planned investment projects in sectors including energy.

 “Building a new real economy requires launching initiatives and liberating them from bureaucracy and reviewing existing legal texts,” the statement quoted Tebboune as saying at the meeting.

“No distinction must be made between the public and private sectors in creating wealth and jobs,” he added. The new plan will keep unchanged the country’s subsidy policy. The government subsidizes almost everything from basic foodstuffs to housing, medicine and fuel.

“This plan must preserve the social nature of the state and protect the purchasing power of citizens, especially the fragile class,” Tebboune said.

The authorities will unveil more details of the plan after final government approval in the coming days before being submitted to businessmen for debate, the statement said.

The plan is coming amid preparations for a referendum later this year on amendments to the constitution to boost freedoms and give parliament more powers as part of political reforms.

The move by the President Abdelmadjid Tebboune comes after over a year of mass protests demanding the withdrawal of the ruling elite and prosecution of people involved in corruption, forcing veteran president Abdelaziz Bouteflika to end his 20-year rule in April 2019.

Subsequently, the government banned the protests in mid-March to limit the spread of the novel coronavirus.

Peace Obi with Agency Report

Nigeria Well Data Now Available to Marginal Fields Round Bidders

0

Subsurface data providers Geoex and Bilview have made a portion of Nigeria’s national well data portfolio available at reproduction cost to pre-qualified bidders of the 2020 marginal fields bid round.

The core data pack includes more than 50 wells and will be available to successful applicants at reproduction costs only during the data prying stage of the bid round. In addition, further two packages will be on offer under interesting pricing conditions. These advanced sets will include infill wells and other complementary data in and around the marginal fields.

The well data portfolio is offered to the industry under an exclusive agreement with the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR). The bid round’s custom data pack will be composed of core wells located in the estimated marginal fields.

An Oil Review Africa report yesterday said that this set will be available to interested companies immediately, subject to signature of the licensing agreement and terms and conditions. Uplift fees will apply upon placing a bid.

Executive vice-president of Geoex Ltd, Jean-Philippe Rossi, , said, “Pre-qualified companies will be able to access the data without paying premiums associated with a regular data license, making them an excellent source for evaluation of these marginal fields. This is a one-time opportunity for the indigenous Nigerian companies, which Geoex and Bilview are offering in support of the ongoing bid round.”

He said his companies have carefully designed these well packages to offer a flexible price schedule to interested parties. “We are being mindful of the current industry situation and want to allow pre-qualified companies to use our data to their advantage,” Rossi said.

The national well data are available to the industry all year round via a dedicated www.geoinfoweb.com portal, where companies can browse, select and request data information. The full portfolio comprises high-quality workstation-ready well logs, correlative well information, and on-demand log suites for more than 7,000 wellbores. The web portal showcases the well repository since 2011.

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

Eni Reviews Long Term Price Forecasts

0
Eni Ranked Top by Corporate Human Rights Benchmark

       …Hopes to stick to its long-term climate strategy presented in February

Italian oil giant, Eni S.p.A, has taken a decision to cut its long-term price forecasts, in the conclusion that the raging Corona virus may last longer than assumed. Rivals Royal Dutch Shell Plc and BP Plc have also cut price forecasts as the lockdown-induced slump batters their businesses, forcing producers to reassess the value of their assets amid a shift to cleaner energy, a Bloomberg report said yesterday.

It said that Eni now sees benchmark Brent crude at $60 a barrel in 2023 real terms, down from a previous estimate of $70, the company said late Monday, warning of impairment charges.

 “Having considered the prospect of the pandemic having an enduring impact on the global economy and the energy scenario, Eni has revised its view of market fundamentals,” the Rome-based oil international said in a statement.

The noted that the spread of the Covid19 virus across the world this year grossly lowered oil demand, hitting oil majors’ earnings in the first quarter and threatening worse to come in the second. It also noted that despite a recent rebound in consumption in some of the worst-hit countries, resurgent waves of the virus show the recovery remains uncertain.

Lowering price forecasts “appears to be the flavor of the month,” Biraj Borkhataria, an analyst at RBC Europe, said in a note. At Eni, “we do not see its current dividend as compatible with its aggressive decarbonization strategy.”

The Bloomberg report recalled that last month, BP signaled it would make the biggest write down on the value of its business since the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster, as it cut estimates for oil and gas prices in the coming decades between 20% and 30%.
Two weeks later, Shell also said it had revised its mid- and long-term pricing outlook, and warned of a record writedown.

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

2020 Marginal Bid Round: Nigeria to Deepen Local Participation

0

            …600 Companies Jostle for 57 Oil Fields

…FG to Establish National Acreage Management Strategy

The Federal Government has indicated its interest to further deepen Nigerian Content in the nation’s oil and gas industry through the ongoing marginal fields bid round.

Speaking during the Nigeria Association of Petroleum Explorationists’ (NAPE) webinar series on Wednesday, titled “Nigeria Marginal Field Bid Round: Implications, Challenges and Opportunities”, the Director of Department of Petroleum Resources, Engr Sarki Auwalu said that the government’s principal objective for the 2020 marginal bid round is to deepen the participation of Nigerian businesses in the upstream segment of the nation’s oil and gas industry.

Speaking on some of the gains the country has recorded from its marginal fields programme, Auwalu noted that a number of achievements have been attained which he said includes reserve and production goals, impact on Nigerian Content, domestic energy security leading to increase in the domestic refining, energy production, among others.

He said, “We have achieved reserve and production goals, impact on Nigerian Content, Domestic Energy Security by increase in the domestic refining and energy production.

“We have also recorded some increase in the inflow for government because once activity is there, taxes and employment are there, the economy is doing well. The Corporate Social Responsibility and community engagement has really made a lot of difference in marginal fields programmes.”

The DPR boss hinted that the government’s objective for the ongoing marginal field programme was a win-win value proposition for government, Nigerians, indigenous and foreign investors.

“There are various objectives, but principally, indigenous participation is being promoted because when that happens, employment will be generated, production will increase, technical capacity will be built, oil and gas reserve will be increased, capital inflow will be encouraged and synergy and coming together will also be promoted.

“So, for this year, 2020, we want to deepen the participation of Nigeria businesses in the upstream sector of the Nigerian oil and gas industry. We want to create opportunity for technical and financial partnerships.

“The key principle objective is indigenous participation. We want to grow reserve and optimize potential for these assets and we want to create wealth and generate revenue for all interested stakeholders – the investors want to grow their wealth while government wants to guarantee.

“We want to attract credible investors with technical and financial capability because this has been demonstrated before, Auwalu said.

On the ongoing bid round, the DPR boss disclosed that over 600 companies have applied to be prequalified for the 57 marginal oil fields in the country.

“First I will say that we have really witnessed an increase in bidders after the extension of the deadline to June 21. There has been almost 30 percent increase in participation,” he said.

“If you are making a bid or auctioning any oil field, you need to get 10 people per field really going after the field. We have 57 fields and we have over 600 companies. So. we can say that we are celebrating success so far,” he added.

“After the extension, we are moving according to schedule and now we are in the phase where we do pre-qualification for the bidders to apply. Everything is going perfectly.”

Speaking further, the DPR boss disclosed that government is working on establishing National Acreage Management Strategy (NAMSTRA), a body he said would be responsible for putting in place strategies to determine the nation’s periodic bid rounds.

According to him, NAMSTRA has become necessary since the last bid round was about 17 years ago. He stated that with the nation’s available seven basins comprising the Benue (central), Sokoto (north-west border), Chad (north-east), Bida (central, along the Niger valley), Dahomey (South-West) and Anambra (South-East) Basins and the Niger Delta (South coastal) including the deep water, the establishment of NAMSTRA will help to predict when the next bid round will be after assessing the commercial viability of these basins. “NAMSTRA will also help to determine how prolific such basins will be in a bid round process” Auwalu said.

Peace Obi

Explosion at NPDC’s Benin River Valve Station Claims 7 Lives

0

An explosion has been reported at the Gbetiokun, OML 40, operated by the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), on behalf of the NPDC/Elcrest Joint Venture.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) on Tuesday stated that the fire incident occurred during the installation of a ladder on a platform (Benin River Valve Station) for access during discharging of Gbetiokun production.

The Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division of NNPC, Dr Kennie Obateru, said that the unfortunate incident caused 7 fatalities.

The bodies of casualties have been deposited in a morgue in Sapele, while families of the personnel involved are being contacted by their employers: Weld Affairs and Flow Impact, which are consultants to NPDC.

NNPC further stated that all personnel on board the platform had been fully accounted for.

The NNPC Group Managing Director, Mallam Mele Kyari, in the statement commiserated with the families of the bereaved, praying that God grants them the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss of their loved ones.

Peace Obi

African Chamber Launches Jobs Portal to Boost Local Content

0
‘UK’s Decision to Halt Funding for new O&G Projects, Ill-Founded, Counter-Productive’

African Energy Chamber and its partners have launches a new energy jobs portal that would ultimately boost local content.

The platform will also assist local and international companies in attracting local talent across 30 different skills set in the oil & gas, power and renewable energy sectors.

African Energy Chamber said the idea is to maximize the saving of local jobs and assist in the recovery of African energy markets after the COVID-19 crisis. The Chamber stated that it will be a free-of-access jobs portal for trained and qualified African workforce.

The collaborative platform is accessible at www.EnergyChamber.org/jobs and relays the latest jobs opportunities for Africans across the continent’s energy markets, the statement stated yesterday.

“The platform will assist local and international companies in attracting local talent across 30 different skills set in the oil & gas, power and renewable energy sectors. All energy companies operating in Africa are able to post their job offers for free, and these will be relayed on the platform and via the Chamber’s communications channels after approval by the Chamber’s admin and team,” the chamber said.

The jobs portal will be operated and maintained by the African Energy Chamber in order to avoid fraud and guarantee the credibility of the offers available.

“Local content has always been the number one priority of the African Energy Chamber when advocating for an energy industry that works for Africans and builds truly sustainable business models. With this new platform, we are getting rid of a lot of entry barriers set on the job market by expensive recruitment agencies.

“This initiative of the Chamber is non lucrative and we encourage all African and international companies to work with us on boosting local jobs creation to support the recovery of our industry and build true sustainability,” Nj Ayuk, Executive Chairman at the African Energy Chamber, stated.

He said the African Energy Chamber is encouraging all companies in search of African talent across the energy industry to submit their job offers directly online via the platform. Any related requests or queries can be addressed to [email protected].

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

Nigeria to Lose 70% Oil Revenue Earnings in 2020 – World Bank

0
Nigeria to Lose 70% Oil Revenue Earnings in 2020 – World Bank

World Bank believes that Nigeria will lose up to 70 per cent of its earnings from crude oil sales in 2020 following the impact and outcomes of the raging Covid-19 pandemic.

Twice in three months, the impact of the pandemic forced Nigeria to revise its benchmark on oil production and price, from 2.3mbd and $57/b to 1.9mbd and $28/b.

In a recent report titled: ‘Nigeria Development Update 2020,’ the Bank stated that prices of crude oil are expected to remain low, no thanks to persistent supply glut and equally shaky Nigerian trading partners.

“Oil prices are expected to stay below pre-pandemic levels in 2020–21 because of slowed economic activity and a persistent supply glut. After averaging $65 per barrel (bbl) in 2019, the baseline scenario for this report assumes that prices of Nigerian crude oil will average $30/bbl in 2020 and $40/bbl in 2021.

“Oil prices are projected to begin recovering gradually in second half of 2020, but accumulated inventories will continue to push prices down through 2021 even as global demand recovers, and the Covid-19 crisis subsides,” stated the Washington based global body.

It said that going forward, Nigeria needs resolute reforms targeting a sustained economic recovery. It noted that while Nigeria has managed the Covid-19 outbreak, and the authorities carried out a package of economic-relief policies in 2020, the country’s economy would still contract by at least three per cent.

“Government’s (Nigeria) oil revenue would be down by over 70 per cent, cutting total general government revenue to 5.35 of GDP for the year,” World Bank said.

It further stated that faced with large and widening fiscal deficits, mounting pressure on health spending, and less room to borrow, “Nigeria can be expected to cut capital spending, especially subnational, further diminishing its already low levels of investment and limiting service delivery at all levels.

“Falling domestic demand, which is sensitive to oil-dollar liquidity, will cause the non-oil economy to contract. With manufacturing and services hit hard by COVID-19 in April–May 2020,” it added.

According to the report, global economy will contract by at least 5.2%, affecting several Nigeria’s trading partners.

By April, Nigeria’s crude oil prices had fallen to $20 a barrel; down nearly 70 per cent in three months. “After this extraordinary oil-price shock, which led to a steep drop in oil production, oil revenues are expected to fall from 3.2 per cent of GDP in 2019 to about 1 per cent in 2020.

“Though oil production is expected to stabilise, it would not immediately contribute much to growth because investment in the sector is likely to remain subdued,” the Bank stated.

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

Fuel Scarcity Looms as IPMAN Protests Fuel Price Increase

0
IPMAN Directs Members to Sell Fuel at N162 Per Litre

   …Threatens to stop lifting petroleum products

Nigeria is heading for another fuel scarcity crises as the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) threaten to stop lifting petroleum products in all South West depots.

According to IPMAN, the recent petroleum products price increment by the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) is “unfavourable” to their members.

South West chairman of IPMAN, Dele Tajudeen, at a press conference last weekend, accuse the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency of not consulting with the stakeholders in the sector before embarking on the price increment.

While announcing last Wednesday of the increase of product prices for July, PPPRA said consumers of petrol in the country would pay a 16.4% increase in the price of petrol. The agency said the approved new retail price for petrol for the month will vary between N140.80 and N143.80 per litre price band.

The new price arrangement replaces the previous price band of N121.50 and N123.50 per litre announced by the agency for June 2020. The agency said the approved new retail price for petrol for the month will vary between N140.80 and N143.80 per litre price band. The new price arrangement replaces the previous price band of N121.50 and N123.50 per litre announced by the agency for June 2020.

The IPMAN chairman said the new price regime of N143.8kobo came as a surprise, noting that the government moved the depot price from N111.78 kobo to N133.72 kobo and pump price to N140.80 kobo without considering the marketers’ plights, a situation he described as “unfortunate.”

PPPRA however stated that the new prices came after a review of the prevailing market fundamentals in the month of June, and considering marketers’ realistic operating costs as well as practicable. Explaining further on their decision, PPPRA said the ex-depot price for collection includes the statutory charges of bridging fund, marine transportation average, National Transport Allowance (NTA) and administrative charge.

“All marketers are advised to operate within the indicative prices as advised by the PPPRA,” said the agency. The implication of the new prices is that all petroleum products marketing companies throughout the country are permitted to sell at any price with the approved price band of N140.80 (lower limit) and N143.80 (upper limit) during the month.

The lower limit represents the least retail price per litre a marketer can dispense fuel, while the upper limit is the ceiling retail price the marketer cannot exceed in dispensing the product. In line with the approved price modulation template, marketers can sell the product at any price within the band during the period.

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

Equity Market: Brent Crude passes $43/bbl Saudi Price Hike

0
Venezuela’s oil and gas sector sees worst crisis during 2020, says GlobalData - Orient Energy Review
Venezuela’s oil and gas sector sees worst crisis during 2020, says GlobalData - Orient Energy Review

Oil price has risen in London to above $43 per barrel just as Saudi Arabia hiked its official selling prices, and as the global equity markets climbed, World Oil News Agency reported yesterday in a global market report   

It learnt that Brent gained 1% to near the highest level since March. It is noted that, Saudi Aramco increased its crude prices to Asia in another sign of recovering demand, adding that Libya’s oil exports are expected to fall in July, as the chairman of its state company said any future recovery in output will take months. Global equity markets rose to the highest since early June, giving crude another boost.

The surge in Corona virus infection around the world, including in the United State of America, makes the recovery in the oil market fragile, the report said.

It recalled that the World Health Organization (WHO) reported the highest number of global virus infections in a single day over the weekend. For now, though, optimism over strong economic data, returning energy demand as countries ease lockdown measures, and OPEC and its allies’ bumper output cuts are driving crude higher, the World Oil news agency reported;

“Despite the rapid increase in new global cases of Covid-19, financial and commodities markets appear immune to the news,” the report quoted Eugen Weinberg, Head of commodities research at Commerzbank, “The good discipline with OPEC+ is lending support.”

Brent for September rose 44 cent to $43.24 a barrel as of 1:29 p.m. in London. The global benchmark is nearing a Fibonacci re-tracement at $43.87 as well as its upper Bollinger band, both levels it has retreated away from in recent weeks. Net bullish Brent positions climbed to a 17-week high. West Texas Intermediate for August edged 3 cents lower from Thursday’s close to $40.62. There was no settlement on Friday due to the Independence Day holiday in the U.S.

The report further stated that Saudi Arabia lifted pricing for all of its crudes to Asia by $1 a barrel. Though the increase was less than expected, it’s another sign that demand is continuing to firm in the world’s fastest growing markets.

However, in a warning sign for oil’s resurgence, the higher prices from OPEC’s largest producer come in the context of a refining industry that is struggling to turn a profit. A refiner using Saudi Arabia’s flagship Arab Light crude in Singapore would currently make a loss with the most basic processing, according to Oil Analytics data.

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

AfDB, W/Bank Support Solar Power Plants Light Up Bayelsa Communities

0

    …With technical support from W/Bank ($350m), AfDB ($200m)

Nigerian government, through its implementing agency, Rural Electrification Agency (REA), has commissioned two solar hybrid mini grids in the villages of Akipelai and Oloibiri in Bayelsa State.

The grids have a total capacity of 134.64kW for both communities under the Nigeria Electrification Project (NEP). 

The two systems include 134.64kW of solar PV, 180kWh of lithium battery storage and 2 units of 100kva diesel generator sets. The solar hybrid mini grids are expected to provide clean, safe and reliable electricity to hundreds of people and spur economic growth and development in Akipelai and Oloibiri respectively, a report said.

The NEP is a federal government programme that seeks to provide energy access to households and business enterprises in off-grid communities across Nigeria through renewable power sources. The solar hybrid plants have been commissioned under the performance-based grant (PBG) component of NEP.

Renewvia Energy Corporation, a recipient of the performance-based grants (PBG) from the REA through the World Bank funded NEP, successfully developed the two solar hybrid mini grids in Bayelsa state.

The 67.32kW solar hybrid mini grids in Akipelai and Oloibiri are estimated to connect 364 households.

These mini grids utilize lithium-ion battery storage to provide reliable power throughout non daylight hours and are designed to scale as individual household and communal power demand increases. 

“REA is committed to scaling up reliable and sustainable energy access to rural unserved and underserved communities through provision of grants to mini grid developers, which is the intent of the Nigerian government through the NEP”.

“After signing two performance-based grant agreements with Renewvia Energy, we are delighted to see the completion of these two projects and we look forward to commissioning more sustainable electrification solutions in our rural communities by grant beneficiaries” stated the MD/CEO, REA, Ahmad Salihijo Ahmad.

The World Bank Task Team Lead, Mr. Jon Exel stated, “The solar hybrid mini grids in Akipelai and Oloibiri will boost the local economy and improve the quality of life in both communities through electrification of homes, schools, and businesses. The project’s mini grid component, specifically, aims to develop solar hybrid mini grids to serve 300,000 households and 30,000 MSMEs with clean, safe, affordable and reliable electricity.

Together, the World Bank and the Federal Government of Nigeria are determined to transform the power sector with the goal of increasing electricity access for all Nigerians.

The Chief Executive Officer of Renewvia Energy, Mr. Trey Jarrard in his remark, informed that “Renewvia Energy is pleased to help fulfill the bold ambitions of the Nigeria electrification project. We are proud of Renewvia’s state-of-the-art micro grids, which have the ability to scale with the needs of each of these villages, and we look forward to expanding our work in Nigeria in the near future.”

And it is through the provision of grant funding, detailed market data and technical assistance, in collaboration with the World Bank ($350m) and African Development Bank ($200m). The NEP components are solar hybrid mini grids, solar home systems (SHS) and the Energizing Education Programme (EEP).

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

Gabon Records 5.3% Oil Production Increase in 2020 Q1

0
Gabon Plans a Slight Reduction of its Oil Production in 2021

Gabon’s Directorate General of Economy and Tax Policy (DGEPF) has stated that the country recorded a 5.3% increase in oil production during the first quarter 2020, compared to the same period in 2019. 

The directorate indicated in a report yesterday that oil production recorded an increased up from 2.64 million in 2019 to 2.78 million tons during the same period a year later.

“The work to improve yields in mature fields and the ramp-up of the Simba field explained the increase,” DGEPF published in the report.

The directorate operates under the country’s Ministry of Economy and Finance.

The report also points out that crude oil exports fell by over 20% to 2.35 million metric tons, due to weak demand, linked to the international production glut. The document detailed “the average crude prices were $50.26 per barrel for Brent and $49.16 per barrel for the basket of Gabonese crude, representing respective decreases of 20.5% and 21% compared to first quarter of 2019.

The report stressed however that the development in Gabon was occasioned by the Covid-19 pandemic, which it said accentuated the drop in demand for oil, and already already exacerbated by the price war between Russia and Saudi Arabia.

As a historic producer in Africa, with first oil produced in 1956, Gabon saw peak production in 1997, the directorate informed, adding that this year (2020) is marked as a decisive year in the country’s oil production history. It hinted that 12 exploration licenses have been signed during the country’s ongoing 12th licensing round

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

‘Poor Energy Capacity Costs Nigeria N10tln Annually’, Says World Bank

0
Trade Pact Could Boost Africa’s Income by $450 Billion, Study Finds

The World Bank has said that the unreliable power supply in Nigeria is been causing the country huge, annual economic losses, which it estimated at N10.1 trillion. 

In a new report, the World Bank said Nigeria’s attempt to transform its power to private sector led, which began in 2013, did not live up to expectations.

The report revealed that Nigerian power sector “is under severe stress,” it said, adding that the causes for the stress stared where stakeholders failed short of their expected contributions for achieving sector turnaround.

“This had led to a lack of trust between key stakeholders and among the general public with respect to power sector improvement.”

The report said the efforts to reduce the sizable public expenditures for tariff shortfalls would create critical fiscal space for the government to finance a pro-poor economic stimulus package to protect the poor and vulnerable from the crisis and to support the economy to recover.

World Bank stressed that a credible reform process would require an integrated approach of resolving regulatory and policy failures, and establishing a credible and fiscally sustainable financing plan by the Nigerian government to ensure full funding for tariff shortfalls, among other measures.

The global body made special notes of the distribution segment, describing it as “operationally inefficient with high losses,” stressing that power sector recovery is critical for the Federal Government of Nigeria’s response to the COVID-19 outbreak.

“The sector recovery efforts focused on ensuring regulatory and policy predictability providing incentives for efficiency in operations while enforcing payment discipline across the supply chain are critical for maintaining the ‘lights on’ through continued generation of electricity,”  World Bank said.

It said during the recovery period, improving power sector performance would be central to unlocking economic growth, particularly in the non-oil sectors of manufacturing and services. 

“The annual economic losses caused by Nigeria’s unreliable power supply have been estimated at N10.1 trillion or about two per cent of GDP” it said

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

Spanish Security Arrests 34 for Trafficking Electronic Waste To Nigeria, Others

0

Thirty-four people were reportedly arrested in Spain for attempting to fraudulently export 2,500 tonnes of electronic waste to eight African countries, including Nigeria. Afrik24 reported that Nigeria “has become customary with the import of approximately 16,900 tonnes of e-waste from Europe between 2015 and 2016.”

The Spanish Civil Guard announced the arrest of the 34 suspects on June 29, 2020, on the islands of Tenerife, Spain, off the west coast of Africa, on suspicion of illegally exporting 2,500 tons of e-waste to Nigeria and seven other African countries, the report said.

Majority of the suspects are of African origin, including a 62-year-old Italian woman who was responsible for transmitting the necessary documents to customs, falsifying certificates to make it appear that the devices were working perfectly.

The cargo consisted of used motor vehicles, spare parts, household items and electrical and electronic appliances, obtained from individuals or companies who disposed of them because they were obsolete or unusable. But once they arrive on the African continent, this waste “is often processed by children, who often handle the appliances with their bare hands without any protection and extract mainly aluminium and copper,” says the Spanish Civil Guard, which points out that this waste contains substances that are dangerous for the environment and harmful to human health if not processed properly.

The news agency said some European countries and the United States continue to export these hazardous wastes to Africa in violation of international treaties governing movements in this area. “In one year, 138 illegal shipments of hazardous waste were recorded between the Tenerife Islands and African countries,” the medium said.

The investigation conducted by the Civil Guard also established that between 2018 and 2019, 138 illegal shipments of hazardous waste were transferred from the Tenerife Islands to several African countries, including Senegal, Ghana, Gambia, Togo, Benin, Guinea-Conakry, Sierra Leone and, especially Nigeria, a country that has become customary due to this fact.

Quoting a study financed by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and published at the end of April 2018, which revealed that at least 16,900 tonnes of e-waste were sent to Nigeria in 2015 and 2016, the agency said some of the wastes were smuggled in second-hand cars.

Researchers estimate that 77% of the electronics shipped originated from EU ports. Of these, 20% came from Germany, 19.5% from the United Kingdom, 9.4% from Belgium and 8.2% from the Netherlands, said the report, pointing out that such exports are prohibited by the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and their Disposal.

This international treaty, which entered into force on May 5, 1992, cannot, however, be respected by countries that have not yet ratified it, such as the United States, Canada, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, Russia, India and Brazil, which are major producers of electronic waste.

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

Post COVID-19 Economic Rescue: Mining Gets N6bn of FG’s Proposed N2.3trln Injection

0

Nigeria has proposed to inject N2.3 trillion to boost the mining and other sectors of the economy in post COVID-19 rescue operations.  The Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Olamilekan Adegbite, who dropped the hint yesterday during an interactive session with journalists, pointed out that the ministry would get N6 billion from the total sum at the end of the day.

“This (N2.3 trillion) is what the government intends to inject into the economy to counter the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic,” he said, adding that the money had been allotted to different sectors of the economy, including the solid mineral sector.

“A large chunk of the money had been allotted to the sector to help counter the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic. We intend to spend this fund and some other funds that are available to us to improve artisanal mining in the country and deepen our explorative projects,” Mr Adegbite said.

He regretted that the COVID-19 ravaged the mining sector in Nigeria, of which a concerted effort is needed to salvage the sector. The minister said however that the development was not peculiar to the solid mineral sector as other sectors of the economy were equally affected by the pandemic.

“The pandemic for instance, has limited our ability to go forward on the Ajaokuta Steel project, we are four to five months behind schedule according to the government’s plans to resuscitate x before the pandemic,” he said.

He regretted that it was for COVID-19 that the Russia experts slated to come for the technical audit of the complex could not come due to flight restrictions according to him, the idea was for the experts to come into Nigeria and be hosted for 12 weeks within which they would conduct a comprehensive audit of the Ajaokuta Steel complex.

Adegbite promised that when the situation improves “and we think it is safe enough, these experts will come into the country and we will continue where we stopped,” he said, adding that although the Ajaokuta Project Presidential Implementation Team (APPIT) was still working, the audit was very necessary and important. “The technical audit report is necessary to enable the APPIT to know the cost implication,” the minister said.

According to him, an online audit of the Complex is ruled out as people had to be physically present. “Now, the government needs to come up with a response because the COVID-19 pandemic has adversely affected our sector, as a lot of miners could not go to work for obvious reasons. 

“The consequence of this is that the output is zero and a lot of miners had been impoverished, this, however, is not peculiar to the sector, because it goes all round. He further said that the ministry was determined to take its road shows round the world to attract foreign investors into the country post COVD-19,” the minister said.

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

Battle For Oil Market Share Grows As Consumption Slows

0
Low Demand Induces Weak Outlook for Oil and Gas Sector – FBN Analyst - Orient Energy Review
Low Demand Induces Weak Outlook for Oil and Gas Sector – FBN Analyst - Orient Energy Review

…Slower growth in demand will put pressure on prices, earnings, investment, over the next 2 decades.

Global consumption of petrol continues to slowdown over the decades and the situation will have profound implications for the business strategies of oil-producing companies and countries, Reuters posited in a special report yesterday.

“There is every reason to expect that slowdown to continue and intensify if there is a widespread displacement of petroleum by electric vehicles,” the agency said.

It said that slower growth will intensify intra-company competition for market share putting downward pressure on prices, revenues, investment and employment over the next two decades.

Consumption growth has been progressively slowing since the early 1970s and that underlying trend looks set to continue through the 2020s and 2030s, it said. Over the last five decades, the global economy has continued expanding but consumers have become efficient in their use of oil or substituted cheaper fuels such as natural gas.

Oil consumption has grown much more slowly than GDP and the relationship between the two has become increasingly weak. For the last 20 years, the oil market’s increasing maturity has been masked by China’s rapid industrialisation and by the disruption of a number of previously significant sources of production.

Venezuela, Iran, Nigeria and Libya, all once significant producers within the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), have seen their output slashed by sanctions, war, unrest and mismanagement.

Over the next two decades, however, it is not certain India or other emerging markets can replicate China’s enormous boost to consumption or that other major producers will be disrupted. Market maturity, coupled with the shale revolution after 2008, led to over-production and the market-share war fought between 2014 and 2016, which erupted again in 2020.

The next two decades are likely to see recurrent volume wars unless the major producers can agree on a way to share out a slow-growing or stagnant market, the report predicted, stressing that market maturity was also the principal reason major oil companies were forced to cut their long-term price assumptions recently.
Before the oil shocks of the 1970s, global petroleum consumption had been growing at average rates of around 8% per year. Growth at this rate was unsustainably fast and incompatible with the low oil prices prevailing in the 1950s and 1960s, directly creating the conditions for the oil embargoes and nationalisations of the 1970s.

Following the oil price shocks of 1973/74 and 1979/80, global consumption growth slowed to an average rate of less than 2%, Reuters said.  Since the global financial crisis in 2008/09, global consumption has slowed even further to well under 1.5% per year.

Progressively slower growth in consumption has been apparent through the ups and downs of the business and oil price cycles. The slowdown was evident in 2019, even before the coronavirus pandemic plunged the oil industry into the worst crisis in its history.

Since 1995, consumption in the advanced economies of the OECD has been flat; growth has come entirely from the fast-growing economies of the non-OECD, especially China.
China, as a large, fast-growing and increasingly prosperous economy, has accounted for around 40% of all the growth in oil consumption over the last quarter of a century, rising to 50% since 2007. China’s consumption has increased at an average annual rate of over 5% since 2007 compared with just 0.6% in the rest of the world.

China’s reintegration into the global economy since the 1980s, after two centuries of backwardness, is an exceptional economic development that may not be replicated in the next 25 years. India is probably the only single country large enough that it might replicate China’s extraordinary growth in oil consumption over the next quarter century.

Beyond that, the big consumption growth is most likely to come from groups of countries in South and Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America. But none are yet showing the extraordinary surge in oil consumption China has experienced since 1995.

Each of the three major shocks to the oil market (1973/74, 1979/80 and 2008/09) resulted in “scarring” – consumption never returned to its pre-shock trend. Some of the lost consumption proved permanent, the international news agency said.

Scarring has been especially significant in the advanced economies, with few or no signs in China and other fast-growing non-OECD economies, reinforcing the shift in consumption growth to emerging markets.

The coronavirus pandemic is also likely to result in permanent scarring with consumption throughout the 2020s remaining lower than it would have been in the absence of the pandemic, said the report. Even if oil consumption rebounds to its pre-pandemic level by 2022, as many analysts anticipate, it will still be lower in 2025 and 2030 than it would have been without coronavirus.

The industry is likely to remain cyclical, with alternating periods of boom and bust, but prices are likely to be lower on average over the cycle.

In a rapidly growing market, all major producers can boost their output simultaneously, but a slow growing market will be closer to a zero-sum game.

For major international oil companies, the focus will shift to delivering projects that break even at lower average prices to ensure they produce acceptable returns to shareholders, the agency forecasted. For OPEC countries, the focus will be adapting their government budgets to lower oil prices and export earnings, intensifying the pressure to diversify their economies and find alternative non-oil sources of income.

For U.S. shale producers, the focus will shift from rapid output expansion and the expectation of higher future prices towards profitable operation at more modest prices through the cycle. Petroleum is a depleting industry. Output naturally declines unless capital is invested to sustain output and replace produced reserves. Some estimates put the worldwide depletion rate at 6-9% or 6-9 million barrels per year.

So, even if consumption growth slows, and eventually peaks, hundreds of billions of dollars of capital will still need to be invested to sustain output levels and counter natural declines, likely for many decades.

Prices and profits will need to remain high enough to attract and retain sufficient capital within the industry to maintain production. But the industry appears to be shifting from expansion towards a more mature state, implying a set of very different business dynamics in the next 20 years compared with the last 20.

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja (With agency report)

Nigeria, Iraq, Kuwait Bow to OPEC Oil Production Cuts Order

0

Nigeria, Iraq, and Kuwait have been reported as having kept to their promises on Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) stipulated production cuts as they lowered their crude oil supply to the international market. There had been more limited cuts by Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Angola, according to Reuters yesterday. 

Before now, Nigeria and a number of countries, especially Iraq, continued to make headlines as countries lagging since May 2020 in the compliance with the general agreement for daily production cut that had been agreed upon by OPEC+.

In the statement issued by the Minister of State for Petroleum, Timipre Sylva, on behalf of the federal government, on Monday in Abuja, said: “Nigeria will adhere to the output cut in order to rebalance and stabilize the global oil market.”

The country joins OPEC+ to cut supply by up 10 million barrels per day between May and June 2020, eight million barrels per day between July and December 2020, and six million barrels per day from January 2021 to April 2022, respectively.

 Nigeria now produces about 1.412mbpd, 1.495mbpd, and 1.579mbpd respectively for the corresponding periods in the agreement; as against the 1.829mbpd of dry crude oil that was the reference production in October 2018.

This is in addition to condensate production of between 360-460 barrels per day of which are exempted from OPEC curtailment.

Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja

Nigeria: Oil Marketers Threaten Strike Over Petrol Price Increase

0
Nigeria: Oil Marketers Threaten Strike Over Petrol Price Increase - Orient Energy Review
Nigeria: Oil Marketers Threaten Strike Over Petrol Price Increase - Orient Energy Review

The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, South-West, has threatened to stop lifting of petroleum products over the hike in the petrol pump price.

The South-West Chairman of IPMAN, Alhaji Dele Tajudeen, described the hike in the pump price by the Federal Government as unfavourable and unfortunate.

Tajudeen spoke with journalists in Abeokuta on Sunday on the new petrol pump price which was announced by the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency last week.

The IPMAN Chairman said the new price regime of N143.8 came as a surprise.

He said that the government jerked up the depot price from N111.78 to N133.72k, and the pump price to N143.8 without considering marketers’ plights.

Tajudeen disclosed that the IPMAN executive committee in the zone had resolved to embark on strike if the government failed to look into the issue.

He added that the PPPRA was not consistent in dealing with the stakeholders, saying the government ought to have involved marketers and other parties before announcing any increment.

The IPMAN boss berated the PPPRA for announcing new price regime in the pump price of petroleum products without adequate consideration of the welfare of his members.

He said “It is very disheartening to hear that a new price regime is coming to effect without considering the plight of marketers who bought these products at an expensive price.

“We want to categorically state here that the last time when Federal Government put the price at N145, we still complained that it was inadequate but, now we can describe it as worse.

“In May this year, when the price was cut to N125, many of our members ran into debts as the landing cost and depot price were at a loss. To pay bank loan became a serious issue for us.”

The IPMAN South West Chairman said some of them obtained loans from banks with interest to run their businesses.

He said “We are still struggling with debts incurred before this increase with nothing to show for it, or how can somebody work with only N2 and yet we will pay workers, maintain the loans and also fulfill our obligations to the government.

“Our members had lost close to N100m as a result of unexpected reduction of pump price in recent times as many were having large volumes of petroleum products in their storage prior to such reductions.

Tajudeen lamented while IPMAN members were still grasping with huge loss, many of which were bank loans, the NNPC/ PPPRA again did further monthly reduction.

Orient Energy Review

US$50M Nigerian Content Research & Development Fund Receives Approval

0
US$50M Nigerian Content Research & Development Fund Approved - Orient Energy Review

The Governing Council of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) has approved the establishment of a US$50 million Nigerian Content Research & Development Fund (NCR&DF).

The NCR&DF is expected to boost Nigeria’s commitment to research and eradicate over-dependence on foreign technology for critical economic development activities, including oil and gas operations.

The Fund will be applied to four broad Intervention areas, namely-Research (basic and applied), establishment of Centers of Excellence in Academic and Research Institutes, Sponsorship of commercialization of Research and Sponsorship of endowment of professorial chair, the statement read in part.

The Board in a statement on Monday said deployment of the $50million Research Fund for sustainable funding of NCDMB’s mandate on Research & Development received the Governing Council’s approval at a recent meeting chaired by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva.

It stated that the NCR&D Fund is in support of Board’s mandate on Research & Development as enshrined in Sections 37 to 39 of the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development (NOGICD) Act 2010, which empowers NCDMB to superintend over R&D activities in the oil and gas industry.

According to the Board, the approval of the NCR&D Fund represents a major success pillar is closing systemic weakness of inadequate funding architecture for R&D activities in the Oil and Gas industry.

This is especially so as the Board is implementing the Research and Development Roadmap to institutionalize a robust R&D ecosystem that will lead to continuous development of technology, materials and process for industry application from indigenous research efforts.

It hinted that the Fund’s operating model has been designed to ensure transparent and well-focused application of the Fund, adding that it includes a Governance structure to leverage experienced researchers and industry experts in the decision-making process of selecting activities to be funded from the NCDMB R&D Fund.

Adding that “the Fund will be domiciled in a TSA Sub-Account in CBN.”

The Board said it would put in place an outcome focused performance metrics that will measure success in the application of the Fund and form part of the reporting template to the Governing Council on an ongoing basis

Following the Governing Council approval, the Nigerian Content Research and Development Council (NCRDC) held a meeting on June 25 and revalidated the identified focus areas for the utilization of the Fund.

The Fund would also be deployed in developing and implementing a Communication strategy for effective dissemination of NCDMB R&D interventions as part of stakeholder management process.

The NCRDC also approved the institution of a Performance management strategy to track progress and ensure application of the R&D fund in line with the key performance indicators (KPI) approved by the Governance Council.

It also approved the list for distribution of the smart gas leak and smoke detector alarm device for field trial. The product which was conceptualised by Amal Technologies is a research prototype sponsored by NCDMB

It stated that the scope of NCDMB’s R&D regulatory role includes development of capabilities for Research and Innovation in Nigeria including facilities, equipment, personnel and processes, review and approve R&D plans of operating companies, monitor implementation of R&D projects to ensure the execution of Nigerian content requirements of domiciliation within Nigerian R&D Centers.

Other roles include tying R&D spend to addressing industry technology, material, and process challenges and facilitating commercialization of research breakthroughs and Facilitating the deployment of successful products of research in industry Operations.

To achieve its R&D mandate, the Board developed the R&D framework anchored on seven (7) policy thrust, including focus on market driven research, establishment of world class Research and Development (R&D) Centers of Excellence, establishment of Research and Development Council and provision of sustainable funding to support Research and Development.

Other areas of focus include development of stakeholder collaboration matrix for Research and Development (R&D), provision of enablers for commercialization of research breakthrough and facilitation of acceptance and utilization of products of research by end users.

Peace Obi