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Shell’s $5bn Bonga deep water investment affirms Nigeria as top investment destination, says group

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu (middle); Ms Olu Arowolo Verheijen, Special Adviser to the President on Energy; Malam Mele Kyari, Group CEO of NNPC Limited (far right), and Other Shell Top Officials in the State House, Abuja, FCT

*The Democratic Front, in Nigeria applauds the Nigerian Government for the investment as the ‘outcome of reforms introduced by the President through the Presidential Directives Numbers 40, 41, and 42 to fast-track regulatory approvals, reduce operational costs, and promote competitive fiscal incentives in the oil and gas sector’

Alexander Davis | ÂÌñÏׯÞ

Sequel to the International Oil Company’s (IOC) latest investment in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector, the Democratic Front (TDF) has said Shell’s announcement of a $5 billion final Investment Decision (FID) by Shell on the Bonga North Deep Offshore field is another proof of the investment-friendly mindset of the Bola Ahmed Tinubu administration.

Malam Danjuma Muhammad, Chairman, and Chief Wale Adedayo, Secretary of TDF, who noted this development in a statement, said the oil giant’s FID indicated that IOCs still find the West African country attractive for investments.

The group stated: “We join President Bola Tinubu in celebrating the Final Investment Decision (FID) by Shell on Bonga North Offshore Field.

“It is a thing of pride for us that the investment is the outcome of reforms introduced by the President through the Presidential Directives Numbers 40, 41, and 42 to fast-track regulatory approvals, reduce operational costs, and promote competitive fiscal incentives in the oil and gas sector.”

The TDF also asserted: “We have a conviction that the pertinence of the fresh investment in the sector, and indeed, the larger Nigerian economy is not only limited to the $5 billion value of the investment, but also extends to the field’s potential volume of 350 million barrels of crude oil.

“It is a development that is bound to further raise the nation’s oil output and revenue as well as bolster its position as Africa’s largest oil producer.”

It further said: “Like the President, we are elated about Shell’s $5bn deep water investment, especially as it came at a time of misconceptions about IOCs leaving Nigeria when, indeed, many of them are making strategic investment decisions in response to the administration’s incentives.

“We recall that earlier this year, the Ubeta upstream gas field known as OML 58, attracted a $500 million investment from TotalEnergies on account of President Tinubu’s fiscal incentives to drive foreign direct investments into the newly transformed oil and gas sector.”

Muhammad and Adedayo stated: “The Ubeta upstream field is estimated to produce 350 million standard cubic feet of gas per day when operational and will go a long way to raise the country’s profile as a major gas producer.

“This remarkable economic feat was unarguably achieved under the economic reform of President Bola Tinubu.”

They averred: “It is instructive that since its discovery in 1996, the Bonga deepwater field, located in OML 118, at water depth exceeding 1000 meters, has not witnessed such a humongous investment as the $5 billion coming from Shell and this is an attestation of President Tinubu’s pro-business approach to governance.

“Furthermore, this extraordinary display of confidence in Nigeria’s investment ecosystem is a confirmation of the success of the current reforms in eliminating investment encumbrances and the risks of doing business in Nigeria.”

TDF, therefore, expressed confidence that more IOCs would key into the fiscal incentives the Tinubu administration has introduced to make fresh investments in the oil and gas sector of the Nigerian economy.

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