Dr Ibe Kachikwu said this
in his welcome address at the public presentation of a roadmap for the
development of the nation’s oil and gas industry at the Presidential Villa,
Abuja, on Thursday.
The Minister of State,
Petroleum Resources, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, has said as part of efforts to end
insurgency in the Niger Delta, President Muhammadu Buhari will meet with some
stakeholders from the region on Tuesday next week.
The meeting, he stated,
would hold inside the Presidential Villa.
He explained that the
stakeholders that would attend the meeting would include traditional rulers
from the region, security chiefs as well as ministers who were indigenes of the
region.
The minister added, “On
Tuesday, the President will be meeting with the Niger Delta stakeholders of the
oil-producing areas. It is important that we continue to sustain the
institutional engagement and negotiations that are key to do this work.
“Our target is to have an
incident reduction by 90 per cent by 2018 and to target zero militancy and
shutdown by middle of 2017.
“Whatever shutdown
experienced by the middle of next year, we expect it to be production slippages
and not militancy issues. We must resolve current militancy problems and bring
back production to 2.2 million barrels per day. We are currently at 1.8
million.
“We will like to begin the
year once Exxon Mobil brings back its production this week with 2.2 million
barrels per day. But the reality is that 2.2 million barrels does not represent
the capacity of this nation.
“We have the capacity to
increase to three million barrels per day, the problem has been funding. We are
working with the oil sector players to find solutions to our cash call
problems.”
Also at the ceremony,
Buhari admitted that oil and gas resources remained the most practical key out
of the nation’s economic crisis.
He said although the era of
high oil prices might not be here now, the petroleum industry remained critical
to the nation’s economy now and in the future.
Tagged the 7Big Wins, the
roadmap is the short and medium term priorities to grow Nigeria’s oil and gas
industry from 2015 to 2019.
The big wins include policy
and regulation, business environment and investment drive, gas revolution,
refineries and local production capacity, Niger Delta and security,
transparency and efficiency as well as stakeholders’ management and
international coordination.
Buhari, who is the
substantive Minister of Petroleum Resources, stated, “Oil and gas still remain
a critical enabler for the successful implementation of our budget, as well as
the source of funds for laying a strong foundation for a new and more
diversified economy.
“As important as it is to
ensure that agriculture, solid minerals and other critical sectors of the
economy are supported to grow and contribute more to the nation’s economy, we
still need a virile and efficient oil and gas industry to take care of our
foreign exchange requirements.
“This is a national
imperative and a core thrust of our economic policy.”
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