The Federal government is reviewing issues around the abandoned $1billion Kaztec Engineering Limited (KEL) fabrication yard, located in Ilase village, Snake Island, Amuwo Odofin Local Government Area of Lagos State.
The facility was designed as the first wholly indigenous engineering, procurement, fabrication, and offshore installation company to deliver complex offshore and onshore oil and gas projects, until the operational challenges set in.
An inter-ministerial committee drawn from the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Federal Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Justice and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), which was recently set up to review the compensatory contracts and other incentives, has concluded its assignment and submitted a report to the Minister of State, Petroleum, Mr. Timipre Sylva, in Abuja.
Chairman of the Committee and member of the board of the NNPC, Senator Magnus Abe, described the assignment as sensitive.
The chairman explained that the Federal government would not sit by and allow such huge waste of resources on the project, stressing that aside the 3,000 jobs lost to the collapse of the facility, over $650 million had already been expended on the abandoned project.
Abe noted that the facility was to add over 19 million barrels to the national oil reserve before Addax Petroleum declared a force majeure on the project, which has not been operational since 2015, due to contractual issues.
“This has been a very sensitive assignment. This committee was inaugurated August 14 last year and we sought an extension, and we have completed our task, submitted our interim report. But we thought the public needed to know what is happening on this project.
“In keeping with that, we thought we needed a formal report. It is important that Nigerians realise what happened on this project. As we speak, this is a project that was to extract or add 19 million barrels to our existing reserves, and would have been part of the daily national production.
“After that project was ready and everything was in place, contracts had been awarded and close to $1 billion had been invested in it, Addax Petroleum called a force majeure on issues that were totally unrelated to this particular project at hand,” he lamented.
The NNPC board member noted that the action put over 3,000 Nigerians out of work and wasted hard earned foreign currency that the country would have used for other things, adding that: “Nigerians will weep over what happened there, when allowed to visit the site.”
The committee chairman noted that Nigerians ought to know the extent of damage that was done not only to the indigenous oil company, but to the economic interest of the country.
He stated that not only were the workers affected, but a lot of jobs that were supposed to be done in-country, that would have been useful even in the execution of other projects, were still being done abroad.
“As a result of that, the entire investment of the Nigerian company went to waste, more than, 3,000 workers laid off, ships abandoned and the entire investment collapsed.
“So, when the president got wind of it, he set up this committee to go and find out the way it could help revitalise that project so that it isn’t lost or wasted. This project should not be abandoned,” he explained.
In his remarks, the minister lauded President Muhammadu Buhari for the directive to investigate the matter that has lingered for six years, noting that justice will be done to all parties involved.
“It is the president that directed that we should look into this and I must say you have done a great job.
“We are here as independent arbiters to ensure that there’s justice in this industry, justice for the investors and justice for Nigerians and I am happy you have done a great job,” Sylva said.
He promised to ensure that the recommendations are forwarded to the president, saying Buhari will thereafter look at the issues and act upon the recommendations.