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AUGUST 18, 2014
AGIP, GE frustrating local content, gas supply T
BY OMOH GABRIEL
HERE are indications that many international oil companies operating in Nigeria are frustrating government efforts at achieving local content in the oil and gas industry. Manipulations and flagrant disregard of laid-down rules have become the hallmark of their operations across the country. Agip Oil Company and General Electric have been particularly fingered for their attempts to disregard directives from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, in the award of contracts for the maintenance of OBOB/Kwale/ Ebocha gas plants. Going by various correspondence between Agip, GE, NAPIMS and Arco, the Board of NNPC awarded a five-year contract (2006 -2011) to Nuovo Pignone (now GE) together with Arco Petrochemical Engineering Company Plc, a wholly-owned Nigerian company as the local Technical Partner, for the maintenance of the OBOB/Kwale/Ebocha gas plants. The Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC) allegedly changed the contract terms and awarded the same contract to GE. Arco which was used as a local technical partner was reduced from being a partner to a subcontractor. This, it was gathered, was the beginning of a long chain of improprieties by GE and NAOC against local firms in a bid to frustrate the local content law. According to documents sighted by Financial Vanguard, within one year of the commencement of the contract, the Niger-Delta crisis erupted and GE expatriate staff had to be evacuated from OBOB/ Kwale/Ebocha. Arco’s engineers and technicians
zIOCs run riot, disregard rules zAn oil & gas installation
took up the challenge and successfully maintained the plants for six months before the crises abated and GE staff eventually returned to site. In gratitude to Arco for managing the plants in its absence, GE poached 19 of Arco’s engineers and technicians, reduced the scope of Arco’s jobs and introduced third-party firms to undertake part of Arco’s scope of work in the contract with the sole
aim of making it difficult for Nigeria to realise its local content dream as far as Agip and GE are concerned. But GE in response to Vanguard’s inquiry through a third party TPT said: “What do you mean by Arco staff? We are not poaching anybody. We believe that there are qualified and experienced Nigerians from Continues on page 18
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