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Subsidy removal: Top oil companies demand full deregulation

It’s all about price

Some top oil and gas companies in Nigeria have called for full deregulation of the downstream sector of the oil and gas industry.

Indigenous oil companies, particularly those operating in the African energy space, made this known in Abuja at the sixth edition of the Nigeria International Energy Summit (NIES 2023).

They spoke at a session, tagged: “Africa at Heart of the Global Energy Mix: What’s Ahead in Nigeria,” which dwelt on a sustainable system for downstream, midstream and upstream and a roadmap for the incoming administration.

Speaking, Chief Executive Officer, Ardova PLC., Olumide Adeosun, decried the fact that deregulation, the most fundamental aspect of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA 2021), has not been implemented.

Adeosun, also the Chairman, Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN), frowned at the way full deregulation was being suspended in Nigeria.

“And specifically, it is around the creation of a free market where prices are determined by the forces of supply rather than by law.

“We also represent a professional association of major oil marketers association of Nigeria. So we have done a lot of the work but the challenges we face are very well documented.

“Deregulation must happen in full and it must happen immediately. We can no longer have a situation where there is a single supplier. As we are deregulating, we must make sure we have excellence execution.

He appealed that deregulation must be done in a transparent and sustainable manner while the public and relevant stakeholders are included.

Deregulation must happen in full and it must happen immediately. We can no longer have a situation where there is a single supplier.

He further explained that deregulation, when implemented, would reduce oil smuggling, increase investments to the downstream and redefine cash durability.

Speaking on, “Building Energy for Tomorrow”, Chairman, Petroleum Contractors Trade Session (PCTS LCCI), Tayo Akinwunmi, tasked the government on deploying technology to improve storage systems to ensure affordability and sustainability.

The Executive Director, Deepwater, Exxonmobil Nigeria, Oladotun Isiaka, who also called for deregulation, expressed dissatisfaction over significant misalignment and overlapping roles in view of PIA implementation between agencies in the sector.

This, he said, gave room for gaps and lapses and equally made opportunities less attractive.

Chairman, Shell Companies in Nigeria, Osagie Okunbor, however, tasked the incoming administration to fix the insecurity challenges in the industry.

“The new administration should not come in to delay the PIA, rather they should find a will power and focus on making it work effectively,” Okunbor advised. (NAN)

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