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 Oil, Gas Industry Operators in Nigeria to Get 10-year Tax Vacation When Petroleum Act Takes Off Fully

He said government has taken steps to sustainably implement and operationalise the Petroleum Act 2021.

Nigeria’s Minister of State, Petroleum, Chief Timipre Sylva, said on Thursday that when the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) fully takes off, it will provide for a 10-year tax vacation for some oil and gas  investors in the industry.
Speaking at the Nigerian International Economic Partnership Forum at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York, the minister stressed that the PIA has provided for a smooth fiscal framework for operators in the sector.
Sylva, who spoke on the theme: ”Scaling Up International Economic Partnerships for Nigeria in a Post-Covid World”  described the PIA as a watershed moment for the nation.
“The PIA 2021 has established a legal, governance, regulatory, and fiscal framework for the petroleum industry, host community development, and associated matters.
“It provides fiscal certainty, improves regulations and incentives for investment, including up to 10-year tax vacations, while guaranteeing better take for both government and private investors, thereby balancing rewards with risk,” he noted.
According to the minister, in the past decades, the Nigerian oil and gas industry faced serious policy as well as fiscal and operational challenges, making reformation of the sector a priority of successive administrations.
These challenges, he said led to deferment of core investments, divestments, operational ambiguities, poor infrastructure, inadequate funding, and limited access to financing.
In addition, he explained that the absence of the right framework led to the  lack of funding for project decommissioning and abandonment, including poor environmental stewardship as well as insignificant direct benefits to resource host-communities.
Surmounting these challenges, Sylva noted, required strong determination to reform the industry in order to build a robust, thriving and resilient economic backbone for domestic growth in the era of global energy transition.
Sylva argued that Nigeria was already reaping positive results from the enactment of the PIA 2021, stressing that for example, existing and potential investors now have certainty on the regulatory regime, which were not available in the past.
“This has helped to clear one of the major challenges that held back the sanctioning of new projects,” he noted.
The minister maintained that government has taken the necessary steps to sustainably implement and operationalise the PIA 2021 within the timelines stipulated in the Act.
To this end, the government, the minister added, has inaugurated the steering committee, which he chairs and is responsible for PIA implementation immediately after the PIA was signed into law.
He added that the law will also aid Nigeria’s energy transition plan through efforts to focus on natural gas, a much less CO2 emitting energy source, to power the country’s energy sufficiency.
“Natural gas remains our transition fuel, a viable and sustainable pathway to a clean energy transition, as it provides the energy needed for our growing population in terms of power generation, transport, feedstock for industries and clean cooking solutions.
“Our reforms focus encompass  energy security, economic competitiveness, and a reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. Our abundant natural gas can conveniently meet all three priorities simultaneously.
“With over 200 Trillion Cubic Feet (TCF) of proven gas reserve, and a potential upside of up to 600TCF, the most extensive in Africa, and among the top 10 globally, natural gas will be a major component of our energy mix for the foreseeable future,” the minister explained.
He emphasised that the ministry of petroleum resources has launched the National Gas Expansion Programme (NGEP) to expand Nigeria’s domestic utilisation as part of the national gas policy, which includes the National Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme, as well as elevation of LPG as the fuel of choice compared to other competing fuels.
“With this programme, we have established a 20 million Cylinder Injection Scheme; 5-10 million of these are to be introduced in pilot states this year. We have also established an LPG Energy Fund in the order of $50 million, in its first phase, in partnership with AFREXIMBANK.  We have rolled out the autogas scheme with the aim of displacing PMS with CNG and LPG,” he stressed.
He noted that Nigeria has already embarked on an aggressive implementation of the nationwide gas infrastructure blueprint, constructing critical integrated gas pipeline system, including the AKK, across the nation.
“We are currently in partnership with the governments of Morocco and other West African countries, to construct a 7,000km gas pipeline to transport gas along the Atlantic coast from Nigeria to Morocco, meeting the regional gas demand with plans to extend the pipeline to Europe.
“The plan for a Trans-Sahara pipeline to Algeria through Niger Republic, and eventually to Europe, is also on the horizon.
“Let me conclude by saying that the current state of global energy security affords key opportunities to develop Nigeria’s energy landscape and execute critical infrastructure projects that will position the country as a key global energy supplier,” he said.
PIA 2021, at full implementation, Sylva noted, will create massive investment opportunities, improve transparency, attract investors, and reposition the Nigerian oil and gas industry for sustainable growth.
According to him, the PIA has set the foundation for a sustainable growth in the sector with the establishment of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC).
Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja

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