Top Stories
Exposed! N100b road contracts scam rocks Edo
From COLLINS EKE, Benin
AN alleged
monumental fraud running into billions of naira allegedly squandered on the
Benin City road network, by Governor Oserhiemen Osunbor has sparked off a
cold war in Edo State....
'Independence Day is time to bless Nigeria...
Let's
celebrate our country’
Being a keynote address by Pastor Chris Oyakhilome, President, Believers Loveworld
Inc. (a.k.a Christ Embassy) at the Grand Launch of the 2008 edition of ReachOut
Nigeria...
Presidency
starves INEC of funds
By CHUKS EHIRIM, Abuja
THE Independent
National Electoral Commission (INEC), still gasping for breath, amid unending
attacks from the public, surprisingly, in recent times has been suffering
.....
Nigeria
at 48: No cause for cheers - AC leader
From CHUKS EHIRIM, Abuja
AS Nigerians take stock of the dividends of 48 years of freedom from colonial
rule, while curiously awaiting the mandatory Independence Anniversary...
MIKANO
Generators
By KELECHI DECA
MIKANO Generators
is a subsidiary of Mikano International Limited, a company with 27 years experience
in the areas of Building/Civil Engineering Construction and Steel...
ReachOut Nigeria
campaign reaches climax
By AZUKA MORDI
AT the grand launch of this year's edition of the ReachOut Nigeria with Rhapsody
of Realities campaign, President of Believers Loveworld (also known as) Christ
Embassy, Pastor Chris....
NEWS
• Shake-up imminent
in ANPP
• As Third Mainland bridge
re-opens: Lagosians heave sigh of relief
• Court orders arrest of
PDP chieftain in Kaduna
• Imo deputy governor clashes
with kinsmen
• Principal,
vice escape kidnap attack
• Village
head, four others quizzed
• Group alerts of plot to
rip-off Rivers officials
• Forum cautions Ijaws on
minister for Niger Delta
• National Identity Cards
in a fix
• Group wants WAEC probed
• Nobody can stop my judicial
commission of inquiry –Jang
• Fayose commends Oni's
unity govt plan
• Shun ostentatious living,
Moslems told
• NEMA advises stake-holders
on disaster management
• I'm
okay with JTF operations –New Defence Chief
• Monarchs endorse Akpabio
for second term
• Anambra PDP Crisis:
Ubah hails Gana's committee
• Rivers to get tourism
dev. commission
• COREN goes tough on erring
members
• 22 German students take
courses in Hausa
• Varsity don raises alarm
over materialism
• Speak your mother-tongue,
Ohakim tells Nigerians
• Telkom's takeover offer:
Adenuga still
interested
• FG goes tough on oil majors
• FG to cushion electricity
supply with N179b
• Ecobank, IFC to invest
N8.4b in SMEs
• No rift over passage of
2009 budget — Babalola
• Sound City
wins Glo Rock ‘n’ Rule account
• Downward trend persists
• Market Review
FG goes tough on oil majors
•Orders Shell, Mobil to increase domestic gas supply
THE Federal Government has come up with a decisive measure that will ensure
that Nigerians get domestic gas for use in their homes. The new initiative
which came as a directive to oil companies including Royal Dutch Shell Plc
and Exxon Mobil Corporation to come up with a plan to boost domestic gas supplies
by the end of October, or risk a suspension of all liquefied natural gas export
projects was issued by the Minister of Petroleum (Gas) Emmanuel Odusina.
Odusina said the companies must set aside between 280 million and 350 million
cubic feet of gas by the end of the year for domestic use. ``We must prioritize
domestic gas supply over any LNG project, since the country needs power,''
Odusina said. Nigeria, whose natural-gas reserves of 187 trillion cubic feet
are the world's seventh-biggest, is also Africa's most populous country and
suffers from chronic power shortages.
The country of 140 million people is currently generating only 3,000 megawatts
of power, out of an installed capacity of 6,000 megawatts. Parts of the country
go for days and weeks without power, leaving companies to rely on their own
generators.
President Umaru Yar'Adua is concerned that oil companies ignored his April
directive to boost domestic gas supplies, the minister was cited as saying.
The ``federal government's policy and regulations on gas supply to the domestic
market are not up for discussions or negotiations any more,'' Odusina said,
according to the statement.
The oil majors that run five joint ventures producing most of Nigeria's oil
also produce most of its gas. They are Shell, Exxon, Chevron Corp., Total
SA and Eni SpA. The biggest LNG project in the country is the $10 billion
Nigerian LNG Ltd.'s plant on Bonny Island, in which the state-owned NNPC has
a 49 percent stake, followed by Shell with 25.6 percent, Total's 15 percent
and Eni with 10.4 percent.
The Nigerian LNG company has long-term contracts with buyers in Italy, Spain,
Turkey, Portugal and France and also sells on the spot market.
Exxon and Chevron also run gas projects in the ventures they operate in which
NNPC has majority stakes. Precious Okolobo, Shell's spokesman in Nigeria,
had no immediate comment on the government directive. Gloria Essiene-Danner,
Exxon's spokeswoman in Nigeria and Scott Walker, Chevron's spokesman in Houston,
weren't immediately available for comment.
Gas projects in the planning stages include Brass LNG, in which NNPC has a
49 percent interest, leaving Total, Eni SpA and ConocoPhillips each with 17
percent, and OK LNG in which Chevron, Shell and British Gas are working with
the NNPC.