November 24, 2024

The Group Chief Executive Officer, the CEO, of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company, NNPC, Limited, Melee Kyari, on Tuesday, said some illegal petroleum products pipelines were connected to Churches and Mosques.

He also said that the shutting down of pipelines in the country was deliberate.

The CEO also said that the reason for shutting down the refineries includes the challenge of not operating as a business, thereby making them incur losses.

Speaking when he was featured at the ministerial briefing organized by the Presidential Communications Team at the State House, Kyari said that
the authorities of the NNPC borrowed one billion US dollars from the AFREXIM Bank to put in place the refineries.

Read Also: Pipeline surveillance: Militants threaten FG, Sylva, NNPC over Tompolo, others’ contracts

He added that the management of the company was confident that it was restoring the company to about 90 percent efficiency.

He further noted that the repayment of the borrowed money was tied to the productivity of the refineries, boasting that NNPC would deliver on the rehabilitation exercise.

He also assured us that there would not be any importation of petroleum products by the middle of next year.

While lamenting the level of losses on the nation’s pipelines, he said that the nefarious business of pipeline vandals cuts across different regions and religious organizations where the pipelines pass through.

According to Kyari, some of the pipelines are illegally connected around Churches and Mosques.

The CEO said that the NNPC management is building the National Reserve Company.

Maintaining that the issue of crude oil theft is real and happening, he said the company was not helpless as its efforts were paying off.

He said that 295 illegal connections were discovered in one line, in less than 200 meters, and that the company with the help of the security agencies and the directive of the Chief of Defence Staff, they were able to intervene.

He said so far, 30 Speed Boats, 179 Wooden Boats, and 37 trucks have been impounded, but that the authorities have taken the decision not to arrest any longer but to burn such confiscated products.

Besides, he said, 122 persons comprising highly placed individuals have been arrested between April and August and that some of them have been handed over to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.

He said 739 ovens for the illegal crude oil theft have been discovered and some destroyed, 344 reservoirs created and 355 cooking pots also discovered, stressing that the level of the illegal business was enormous.

“It simply means the destruction of the environment. We have lost revenue,” he declared.

On the alleged contract to the former Niger Delta agitator, Government Ekpemupolo also known as Tompolo, the NNPC CEO said that the contract was not awarded to Tompolo as a person, but a company he has an interest in.

He explained that it was not the first time that individuals within the Niger Delta region were awarded a contract for pipeline surveillance, noting that the contract was in the interest of the people.

He said he believed that the Federal Government has taken the right decision to hire private contractors to man its oil pipeline network nationwide.

Kyari argued that although the security agencies are doing their part, end-to-end pipeline surveillance would require the involvement of private entities and community stakeholders.

He said: “We need private contractors to man the right of way to these pipelines.

“So we put up a framework for contractors to come and bid and they were selected through a tender process. And we believe we made the right decision.”

According to earlier reports, one of those selected is a former Nigerian militant commander of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, Government Ekpemupolo, predominantly referred to as Tompolo.

Fielding further questions on the contract, Kyari explained that although the Federal Government is not dealing directly with the former creek warlord, it has signed a contract with a company in which Tompolo has interests.

“We have taken the right decision,” he said.

(Vanguard News)

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