Business
PETAN Charts Path For Local Content
To leverage on the Nigerian Content Act for economic value
addition, Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN) has suggested
three perspectives from which the Local content should be looked at.
PETAN’s Chairman, Engr Emeka Ene while giving a keynote
address at the third Port Harcourt Oil and Gas Conference in Port Harcourt
Rivers State, last week said the local content can only be beneficial when seen
in terms of economic value addition, technical know how and cluster economic
development.
Engr Ene argued that the economic footprints from producing
so much energy were not there because we do not see the oil and gas industry
from the point of view of economic value addition adding that when we start
seeing it in that light all the industrial activities that took place in the extraction of oil and gas
would be carried out in Nigeria.
“There should be an economic footprints that are there that
translate the commodity oil into productive efforts.
No country has ever developed just living on selling
commodities alone. We must add value and local content gives a framework for
converting from oil and gas activities” he stressed on the technical know how,
he said the local content Act had provided a framework.
as it encourage
services to be developed within the area where oil and gas activities take
place.
He however pointed out that there was a gap in the technical
knowhow and its importance cannot be underestimated.
Explaining that the local content Act enables one to
appreciate the value chain involved in producing a barrel of oil, he said when
he sees a barrel of oil, he sees the multiplier effects.
He explained further that the total value of gas Nigeria
sells to United States is close to $11 billions dollar a year but the
multiplier effect of that gas on the US economy is worth $250 billion on seeing
it from the cluster economic development perspective, The CEO of Oil Data, an
independent energy service company also said if for instance gas is extracted
here in Nigeria, it could be converted into the components of gas which would
turn gainfully employ thousands of Nigerians.
“To give you a perspective, in Africa the consumer profile
of Nigeria is only second to South Africa in terms of the building power. Potentially,
if we add value to our economy, we are actually going to be magnet of foreign
direct investment.
In other words, money
goes to the direction of energy. If we are producing so much energy, we should
be attracting a lot of investment.
And the reason we are not attracting investment is because
we have not created a framework which is value adding within our economy for
the investment to come,” he said.
Vivian- Peace Nwinaenee