Tinubu’s plan to invest in oil faces implementation challenges

How Chiroma defended the downtrodden when it mattered most - Tinubu
President Bola Tinubu

In Nigeria’s oil sector, three new guidelines have been put into place to try and stop the departure of international oil firms (IOCs). However, analysts believe that the largest challenge that lies ahead is getting these instructions put into action.

The largest economy in Africa depends heavily on oil. It contributes significantly to the government’s global presence, around half of its revenue, and almost all of its foreign exchange earnings.

However, in the 64 years since Royal Dutch Shell initially tapped a well in the Niger Delta’s marshes, it has also been underutilized as a resource for Nigeria’s 200 million people because of contracting delays, bureaucratic bottlenecks, and limited local engagement.

In an attempt to rewrite history, President Bola Tinubu last week announced financial incentives for oil and gas projects, shortened contracting times and prices, and encouraged the use of less expensive local content standards.

This came after “wide-ranging interactions, evaluations, and comparisons with other regions,” according to a statement endorsed by Ajuri Ngelale, the president’s special advisor on publicity and media.

The President oversaw the implementation of tax breaks for deepwater, midstream, and non-associated gas projects.

Streamlining the contracting procedure to reduce the contracting cycle to six months and applying the local content standards without impeding investments or cost competitiveness are two more policies that have been established.

Analysts are concerned that the government’s outdated practices of enforcing the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) laxly, prohibiting IOCs from sending all of their earnings overseas, creating uncertainty due to oil theft, and imposing an annual levy on expatriate workers will prevent new investments from entering the oil sector, where they have historically been few and far between.

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