From Uche Usim, Abuja
At least 35,000 jobs are to be created from the 10,000 tonnes/day methanol production plant by the Brass Fertiliser and Petrochemical Company Ltd (BFPCL). The project is being promoted by the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and DSV Engineering and committing equity investment of $670 million into it.
The Executive Secretary of NCDMB, Engr Simbi Kesiye Wabote, the Group Managing Director (GMD) of the NNPC, Malam Mele Kolo Kyari, and Executive Vice-Chairman of BFPCL, Mr Ben Okoye, signed the Final Investment Decision (FID) on behalf of their organisations in Abuja at the weekend.
Speaking at the event, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Mr Timipre Sylva, said that the project was part of the strategic efforts to maximise value and monetise the country’s vast gas endowments. He added that President Muhammed Buhari had in July 2020 ‘approved the development of the Brass Gas Company with the sole aim of aggregating and monetising all stranded gas in the Brass area, which amounts to over 10 trillion cubic feet of gas, into the processing facilities to be built in the hub.’
He expressed confidence that the project would have a significant economic and developmental impact on the country, including support for gas-based industries, revenue generation and import substitution for methanol needs of the nation that is currently 100 per cent imported.
Other economic benefits include foreign direct investment, economic diversification, acceleration of Nigeria’s march to zero gas flaring and community development through the company’s plan to offer one per cent equity to host communities.
In his remarks, the Executive Secretary of the NCDMB underscored the significance of two federal agencies – NCDMB and NNPC – catalysing investments in the country. He added that the project would place Nigeria in the world’s map as one of the top 10 producers of methanol.
He emphasised that local content can only grow sustainably when there are oil and gas projects, adding that a mega project of this size provides opportunities to utilise local capacities and capabilities built over the years.
He further explained that opportunities provided by the project in job creation, gas utilisation, local availability of methanol for primary and secondary users, formed part of the basis of the Board’s decision to partner with Brass Fertiliser and Petrochemicals Company Ltd to enhance the delivery of the project.
Wabote also commended Mr Sylva for recording huge achievements in the energy sector, at a time when most nations are unsure of decisions to make amid the COVID-19 pandemic. He listed some of the Minister’s accomplishments to include the signing of Train-7 FID, Gas Flares Commercialisation, Marginal Field bid rounds, Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), Refining Roadmap, and others.
In his remarks, the Group Managing Director of the NNPC, Mr Mele Kyari, described the BFPCL as the third most important project that had taken FID in the last five years. He stated that achieving FID for the project was proof of the Federal Government’s commitment to monetise the nation’s gas resources, notwithstanding the challenging investment environment. He pledged the commitment of NNPC to ensure the delivery of the methanol plant on schedule by 2025.
According to him, ‘the country is blessed with abundant gas resources, over 200 trillion standard cubic feet of gas (tscf) proven, with the potential of over 600 tscf. As energy transition processes go on, you must monetise these gases as quickly as possible. NNPC will continue to collaborate with all the strategic partners. We will ensure that feedstock is available for this project and subsequent projects that would happen in the Brass hub.’
The Executive Vice-Chairman of BFPCL, Mr Ben Okoye, said that jobs that would be created from the project would help to assuage the restiveness in the Niger Delta in addition to the development of a new oil and gas city in Brass Island.
The facility would be the largest methanol plant in Africa and the first in Nigeria and the construction phase is expected to create 30,000 direct and indirect jobs and additional 5000 permanent jobs during the operations phase.
According to the financing plan, the project is estimated to cost about US$3.5 billion and aside from the equity from NCDMB, NNPC and DSV, there is an impressive cast of lenders which includes a consortium of Chinese banks led by the China Exim Bank, African Development Bank (AfDB), international commercial banks, regional banks and African institutions and they would be expected to raise 70 per cent of the project cost.
Other agreements that have been firmed up include a Gas Supply Purchase Agreement (GSPA) with the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) led joint venture, offtake agreements and contracts for Engineering Procurement and Construction and technology providers.