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HomeNewsEconomyNigeria eyes $15b scrapping JV Cash Calls

Nigeria eyes $15b scrapping JV Cash Calls

The Federal Government  is pushing to end the era of Joint Venture (JV) Cash Calls with oil majors by next year, the Minister of State, Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, has said.

Kachikwu, who stated this while briefing State House correspondents after making a presentation to the National Economic Council (NEC) meeting, yesterday, said the move would result in investments in excess of $15 billion by oil companies.

He sought the NEC’s endorsement for the proposal already approved by the Federal Executive Council (FEC), towards changing the funding configuration of JV for upstream companies.

He said the current cash call arrears in the oil sector over the last five years, up to December 2015, was about $6.8 billion, adding that the government has accumulated unpaid cash call arrears of over $2.5 billion as at 2016.

Kachikwu said the debt was accumulated due to failure to pay the joint cash calls when oil was selling for $110 – $120 per barrel.

He said: “There really wasn’t any justification why these monies shouldn’t have been paid in terms of the five years arrears. It’s become difficult to pay the debts as a result of militancy and the drop in oil prices from $110 to $40.”

The implication of this was government’s inability to meet its cash call obligations, he stated.

“When that happens, you find that your reserve begins to deplete, your ability to maintain production at current level will begin to dissipate and cost per barrel of production at joint ventures continues to rise because of the very little volumes chasing the cost and at the end of the day and the investors confidence begins to wane . So a lot of the projects that ought to have happened in this country basically, are abandoned.”

He said sometimes this year, government took on an initiative, working with NNPC and the Ministry of Petroleum to try and find a sustainable solution for funding JV cash call.

He said: “We  have been able to find that solution. What we have been able to put together has enabled us to shave over $1.7 billion savings for the  government on the $6.8 billion  that was previously owed. So we are going to be owing only $5.1 billion  as opposed to $6.8 billion.”

Kachilwu said the $5.1 billion will be paid within five years interest free and the barrels to pay  will come from incremental barrels generated by the oil companies not on the current 2.2 million barrels, pointing out  that if for any reason government did not meet those thresholds, it would not be able to pay the $5.1 and the $2.6billion outstanding for this year.

“We are trying to cover that through three thresholds: one is to continue to do an accelerated cash call payments between October and December, hopefully that will bring the figure down to about $1.5 billion and that $1.5 billion was sinking resources from FG either through some of our reserve or Nigeria LNG or a combination of that and alternative funding to try and train staff that should be completed hopefully by December.

“Beginning next year, if this goes into place, the issue of cash call era would have disappeared. The effect of what this is that investments in excess close to $15 billion  are likely to be announced by the oil companies bringing back most of the projects within couple of weeks once this is signed.

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“For the first time the oil industry will take responsibility for arranging their own funding and being able to produce oil and save the government the whole nightmare of cash calls every year.

“So this is a very dramatic move in the oil industry we are still going to make presentation to the National Assembly for them to understand this,” he said.

The new financing regime, he said, would help to save at least $1billion from 2017.

According to him, government would be looking at reducing the cost of barrel per production from the current 27 dollars per barrel which he said was one of the highest in the world to figure within the threshold of $18 per barrel over the next two years ultimately to about 15 over the next four years.

He expected the barrel reserve production to increase to about 2.5million  by 2019 and potentially to about 3 million barrels by 2021.

Meanwhile, the country will require at least $14 billion a year in new investment over the next five years to raise oil output to 2.2 million barrels a day (bpd) and even higher spending to lift it to three million bpd.

The Chief Executive of Shoreline Natural Resources, Ladi Bada, estimated that about $9 billion yearly investment is currently being invested in the oil industry from public and private sources.

“If we continue to invest $9 billion, we won’t grow volumes,” Bada told a business conference in Lagos yesterday.

He said at least, $14 billion a year in new investment was needed to produce 2.2 million bpd of oil, the production level which the national budget is based on.

Bada added that the country would require investment of between $18 billion and $20 billion every year for the next five years to boost output to three million bpd.

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