*Bill to become law before year-end
OpeOluwani Akintayo
03 November 2018, Sweetcrude, Lagos — The Senate Committee on Gas has assured that the Gas Flaring Prohibition Bill would be passed next month, and would become law before the end of the year.
Senator Bassey Albert, the chairman, of the Committee, hinted this in Lagos when he led his members on oversight functions to the Department of Petroleum Resources, DPR.
He said the bill is currently on third reading and would be giving accelerated attention to enable it to come to fruition.
He explained that the bill, when passed, would eliminate gas flaring and put punitive measure against perpetrators of the act by increasing the penalty fees paid from N10 per 1,000 Standard Cubic Feet, SCF of gas to three dollars 50 cents per 1,000 SCF of gas.
Albert expressed the National Assembly’s support for the 2020 final elimination of gas flare out date but expressed the need for Nigeria to be pragmatic on the new date.
He also expressed discontent over the manner gas resources are being treated like a byproduct, saying there was the need for a paradigm shift on the part of the country to see gas as an economic enabler.
The legislator said the Senate is not resting on its oars to ensure that all the grey areas spotted by the President in the botched Petroleum Industry and Governance Bill are addressed and resent to him for final assent.
He promised that the Senate will look at the other legs of the Petroleum Industry Bill as part of its contribution to ensure a robust oil and gas industry in Nigeria.
To him, the Department of Petroleum Resources has not fared badly in playing its watchdog roles in the industry, assuring that through its oversight functions, the Senate would collaborate with the agencies to nip in the bud challenges militating the delivery of its mandate.
In his remarks, the acting director of the DPR, Alhaji Ahmed Shakur, commended the Senate for its robust contribution and eventual submission of the Petroleum Industry Bill, PIGB to President Muhammadu Buhari.
Shakur said the roles played by the Senate in the PIGB showed that it was committed to ensuring the entrenchment of robust oil and gas laws in the country.
He also commended the lawmakers for the oversight visit, saying the DPR has always seen them as a partner in progress and assured that the agency would not derail in entrenching standards in the nation’s oil and gas sector.
He also told the visiting senators that the agency is committed to dedicated gas exploration, grow gas reserves to meet domestic and export needs.
The director added that the agency has embarked on an aggressive campaign for the elimination of gas flaring in Nigeria by 2020, as well as meeting the target of 200 trillion cubic feet of gas by the same year, which he said the agency has met in 2018.