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NCD: Sunmonu Challenges Local Contractors To Improve Capacity

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Managing Director of Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC), Mr Mutiu Sunmonu has challenged indigenous contractors in the Niger Delta to take advantage of the opportunities provided by the Nigerian Content Development Law and the various programmes initiated by the major oil and gas players to improve their capacity and consolidate on the gains already made in ensuring enhanced indigenous participation in the critical industry.

Sunmonu threw the challenge while declaring open the 2010 community content business clinic for small and medium scale entrepreneurs in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, last Friday.

Represented at the event by Shell’s Senior Procurement Manager, Onshore Projects, Arinze Oduah, the managing director said the business clinic was one of the strategies to partner with stakeholders to improve their businesses and contribute to the development of the region, adding that Shell believes local contractors and business owners would only participate in the oil and gas industry if they are given the necessary training and empowerment to enable them make a statement in the economic development of the country.

Sunmonu, who is also the country chair of Shell Companies in Nigeria (SCiN), said the Nigerian Content Development Law has provided a window of opportunity for indigenous business players to compete more advantageously by making their impact felt in the highly technical and capital-intensive areas of the oil and gas industry.   

He noted that in the last couple of years, Shell has initiated various programmes to build the capacity and capability of indigenous contractors and other local community stakeholders, including women and youths, to enable them play a leading role in the broadening of the economic space in the Niger Delta, and tasked small and medium scale business operators in the area to take advantage of the programmes to partner the company as a veritable means of participating actively in the development of the nation.

Also speaking, Shell’s Manager, Community Content, Amah Ikuru, explained that the development initiative was aimed at delivering sustainable growth in the Niger Delta through communities’ ability to supply services and materials to the oil and gas industry, while at the same time assisting the growth of existing contractors in the region.

Amah said Shell was doing everything possible to develop new indigenous contractors and a pipeline of opportunities for them, just at it ensures that the contractors can participate in these opportunities through training and capacity building.

He noted that to bring this vision about, the company has trained some 4,000 local contractors in skills relevant to the oil and gas sector, adding that the business clinic was designed to lift small and medium scale business owners in different fields from their present level to a point where they have all the capacities and capabilities needed to bridge the socio-economic gap in the region.

The Shell manager stressed that the business clinic provides successful Niger Delta role models to motivate excellence community contractors, through a forum for the cross fertilisation of business ideas, saying that this was one way Shell could support the capacity development of Niger Delta businessmen and women.     

In his presentation as role model of the business clinic, Chairman, Stambic IBTC Bank Plc, Atedo Peterside, took the over 100 participating business owners from Rivers State, round a set of seven critical issues necessary to manage a successful business concern based on the two pillars of brilliant business idea and model.

Peterside tasked the business owners that to succeed depends on how they first plan to engage the market, make money, sell their products, and answer the question of whether they should provide services or manufacture products as a means of fitting into the business environment, adding that they have to organised and fashion out a new way of doing business that should be attractive and innovative.

The successful banker told the participants that would get support from stakeholders if they plan their businesses and execute their goals with creative ideas that brings cutting edge innovations into the business, and challenged them to overcome the problems of poor managerial skills and projects funding by exploring the various opportunities provided by both government, Central Bank of Nigeria, other financial institutions, and corporate bodies such as Shell to excel in their businesses.

In his remarks, Managing Director, Wider Perspectives Limited, Kalada Apiafi, said a recent MSE Sector Study had shown that over 80 per cent of MSEs in the Niger Delta lack the managerial capacity to grow their businesses, adding that this has contributed greatly to inhibiting the growth of that sector in the region.

Apiafi noted the recent Central Bank of Nigeria’s N500billion SME fund to stimulate participation in the economy, but stressed that beyond availability of and access to funds, the most critical weapon for success were business and financial education through capacity building.

He said the business clinic was one strategy to build the business and financial capacities of indigenous business owners to take their rightful place in the economic development process of the region, and urged the participants to take full advantage of the opportunities offered by the clinic to broaden their business networks and financial resources for the benefit of the industry and region.     

 

Nelson Chukwudi

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Oil & Energy

TotalEnergies, Conoil Sign Deal To Boost Oil Production

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TotalEnergies has signed agreements with Conoil Producing Limited under which to acquire from Conoil a 50 per cent interest in Oil Processing Licence (OPL) 257, a deep-water offshore oil block in Nigeria.
The deal entails Conoil also acquiring a 40 per cent participating interest held by TotalEnergies in Oil Minining Lease (OML) 136, both located offshore Nigeria.
Upon completion of this transaction, TotalEnergies’ interest in OPL257 would be increased from 40 per cent to 90 per cent, while Conoil will retain a 10% interest in this block.
Covering an area of around 370 square kilometres, OPL 257 is located 150 kilometers offshore from the coast of Nigeria. “This block is adjacent to PPL 261, where TotalEnergies (24%) and its partners discovered in 2005 the Egina South field, which extends into OPL257.
Senior Vice-President Africa, Exploration & Production at TotalEnergies, Mike Sangster, said “An appraisal well of Egina South is planned to be drilled in 2026 on OPL257 side, and the field is expected to be developed as a tie-back to the Egina FPSO, located approximately 30 km away.
“This transaction, built on our longstanding partnership with Conoil, will enable TotalEnergies to proceed with the appraisal of the Egina South discovery, an attractive tie-back opportunity for Egina FPSO.
“This fits perfectly with our strategy to leverage existing production facilities to profitably develop additional resources and to focus on our operated gas and offshore oil assets in Nigeria”.
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“COP30: FG, Brazil Partner On Carbon Emissions Reduction

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The Federal Government and Brazil have deepened collaboration on climate action, focusing on sustainable agriculture, renewable energy, and the reduction of black carbon emissions.
The partnership is anchored in South-South cooperation through the Brazil-Nigeria Strategic Dialogue Mechanism, which facilitates the exchange of ideas, technology, and policy alignment within the global climate framework, particularly the Paris Agreement.
The Executive Secretary, Amazon Interstates Consortium, Marcello Brito, made the disclosure during an interview with newsmen, in Abuja, on the sidelines of the 2025 COP30 United Nations Climate Change Conference, held in Belem, Brazil.
Brito emphasized that both nations are committed to global efforts aimed at curbing black carbon emissions, a critical component of climate mitigation strategies.
“Nigeria and Brazil are collaborating on climate change remedies primarily through the Green Imperative Project (GIP) for sustainable agriculture, and by working together on renewable energy transition and climate finance mobilisation,” Brito said.
“These efforts are part of a broader strategic partnership aimed at fostering sustainable development and inclusive growth between the two Global South nations,” Brito added.
TheTide gathered that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu announced an ambitious plan to mobilize up to $3 billion annually in climate finance, through its National Carbon Market Framework and Climate Change Fund, positioning itself as a leader in nature-positive investment across the Global South.
Represented by the Vice President, Senator Kashim Shettima, Tinubu made the announcement during a high-level thematic session of the conference titled ‘Climate and Nature: Forests and Oceans’
Tinubu stressed that Nigeria’s climate strategy is rooted in restoring balance between nature, development, and economic resilience.
Hosted in the heart of the Amazon, on November 10—21, the 30th COP30 conference brought together the international community to discuss key climate issues, focusing on implementing the Paris Agreement, reviewing nationally determined contributions (NDCs), and advancing goals for energy transition, climate finance, forest conservation, and adaptation.
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DisCo Debts, Major Barrier To New Grid Projects In Nigeria ……. Stakeholders 

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Energy industry leaders and lenders have raised concerns that the high-risk legacy debts of Distribution Companies (DisCos) and unclear regulatory frameworks are significant barriers to the financing and development of new grid-connected power projects in Nigeria.
The consensus among financiers and power sector executives is that addressing legacy DisCo debt, improving contractual transparency, and streamlining regulatory frameworks are critical to unlocking private investment in Nigeria’s power infrastructure.
Speaking in the context of new grid-connected power plants, during panel sessions at the just concluded Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) Power Conference, Senior Vice President at Stanbic IBTC Infrastructure Fund, Jumoke Ayo-Famisa, explained the cautious approach lenders take when evaluating embedded or grid-scale power projects.
Ayo-Famisa who emphasized the critical importance of clarity around off-takers and contract structures said “If someone approaches us today with an embedded power project, the first question is always: Who is the off-taker? Who are you signing the contract with?” . “In Lagos State, for example, there is Eko Electricity and Excel Distribution Company Limited. Knowing this is important,” she said.
She highlighted the nuances in contract types, whether the developer is responsible just for generation or for the full chain, including distribution and collection.
“Collection is very important because you would be wondering, ‘is the cash going to be commingled with whatever is happening at the major DISCO level, is it ring-fenced, what is the cash flow waterfall,” she stated.
Ayo-Famisa pointed out that the major stumbling block remains the “high leverage in the books of the legacy DisCos.” Incoming project financiers want to be confident that their cash flows won’t be exposed to the financial risks of these indebted entities. This makes clarity on contractual relationships and cash flow mechanisms a top priority.
Noting that tariff clarity also remains a challenge, Ayo-Famisa said “Some states have come out to clearly say that there is no subsidy; some are saying they are exploring solutions for the lower income segments. So, the clarity would be on who is responsible for the tariff, is this sponsored?, Can they change tariffs?, In terms of if their cost rises, they can pass it on, or they have to wait for the regulator.
“Unlike, what you find in the willing seller-willing buyer, where they negotiate and agree on their prices. Now they are going into grid, there is Band A, Band B, if my power goes into, say, Ikeja Electric, or I have a contract with them, “am I commingled with whatever is happening across their multiple bands?”
Also speaking, Group Managing Director and CEO of West Power & Gas Limited, Wola Joseph Condotti, stressed the dual-edged nature of decentralization in the power sector.
“Of course, decentralization brings us closer to the people as the jurisdiction is now clear. You also know that your tariff would be reflective of the type of people living in that environment. You cannot take the Lagos tariff to Zamfara, and this is what has been happening before now in the power sector. So, decentralization brings about a more customized solution to issues you find on the ground.
“Some of the issues I see are those that bother on capacity. It was a centrally run system that had 11 DISCOs. Of the 11 DISCOs, I think there are 3 or 4 of us today that are surviving or alive, if I may put it that way. If you go to electricity generation companies, they are doing much better,” she said.
Condotti highlighted regulatory overlaps as another complication, especially when power generation or distribution crosses state lines.
She said, “Investors would definitely have a problem. Say if you have a plant in Ogun State supplying power to another state, say Lagos State; you are automatically regulated by NERC. But the truth is that the state regulator of Ogun State and Lagos State wants you to comply with certain regulatory standards.”
With the growing demand for reliable electricity and an urgent need for infrastructure expansion, the ability to navigate these complex financial and regulatory landscapes would determine the pace at which new grid-connected power projects can be developed.
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