HeadlineFG Lacks Resources To Stop Vandalism, Oil Theft - NEC Committee

FG Lacks Resources To Stop Vandalism, Oil Theft – NEC Committee

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SAN FRANCISCO, May 20, (THEWILL) – National Economic Council, NEC, through its ad hoc Committee on Crude Oil Theft Prevention and Control, has observed that the federal government does not have adequate operational vessels to patrol and secure the network of pipelines in the Niger Delta region.

The committee, which was set up sometime in 2013, told the council that it consulted widely with relevant stakeholders including the Armed Forces Joint Task Force, JTF, oil companies, oil producing states, and the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps, NSCDC, among others, to come up with its findings.

Addressing newsmen at the end of the 67th meeting of NEC which held on Thursday at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, the Deputy Governor of Bayelsa State, Admiral John Jonah Atuama (rtd) said the committee also discovered that massive unemployment among youths in the Niger Delta has contributed greatly to the rising incidence of oil theft and vandalism of oil company facilities in the region.

Atuama, who pointed out that the scarcity of petroleum products in the Niger Delta area was equally responsible for the recurrence of illegal bunkering, said the committee recommended that appropriate technology must be procured and deployed for surveillance of the oil and gas facilities.

The deputy Governor disclosed that the committee also recommended that combat vehicles/boats be procured and deployed in difficult terrains to drastically reduce incidents of oil theft and illegal bunkering, adding that this would ensure full benefits of uninterrupted supply of oil and gas to the terminals and for domestic use.

Among others, the committee recommended that the federal government should set up special courts for the speedy prosecution of illegal oil bunkerers and oil theft suspects, and the engagement of traditional rulers to sensitise their communities on the criminal and environmental dangers of oil theft.

To address the problems in the oil sector on a long-term basis, NEC further agreed that there should be an increase in the refining capacity of the domestic refineries through the co-location of smaller cost-efficient refineries within the timeframe of 12 to 24 months.

Noting that it was also agreed that focus should be on restoring upstream production by positively engaging host communities to bring the current militancy to an end, Atuama revealed that council also agreed that attention should be focused on improving government funding in the upstream sector where funding had been less than 30 per cent and that government should be relieved of monthly cash-call funding and create a sustainable self-funding arrangement.

The NEC further agreed that government should continue to engage the general public and all stakeholders by providing relevant information and education.

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