The Senate on Tuesday flagged off debate on the proposed amendments of the provisions of the Production Sharing Contract (PSC) Act.
The bill titled “Deep Offshore and Inland Basin Production Sharing Contract 2004 (amendment) Bill 2019” passed the second reading at plenary session and was subsequently referred to the Senate Committees on Petroleum (Upstream) and Finance for further legislative work.
The Special Assistant to the Senate President (Press), Jezrel Tabiowo, in a statement hinted that the sponsor of the bill, Oloibiri Oil and Gas Research Centre and MuseumSenator Bassey Akpan, explained that the “bill seeks to amend section 5 of the PSC Act to bring the provisions of that section into conformity with the generality of the provisions of the Act and into congruence with the intendment and essence of Production Sharing Contracts.
“The PSC arrangement was offered by the Federal Government of Nigeria as a contractual arrangement for the exploration and production of petroleum in the 1991 licensing round”, the lawmaker added.
He pointed out that the fiscal incentives from the arrangement were distinct and absent from the provisions of the Petroleum Act and the Petroleum Profit Tax Act which regulates the fiscal regime of other types of petroleum exploration and production arrangements.
Senator Akpan clarified: “The Act provided in section 16 that where the price of crude oil exceeds US$20 per barrel, the PSC Act will be reviewed to ensure that the share of the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) in the additional revenue is adjusted to the extent that the PSCs shall be economically beneficial to the FGN and that in any event, the PSC Act shall be liable to be reviewed after 15 years from its commencement in 1993 and every 5 years thereafter.”
“This amendment alters the royalty payable by the PSC contractors so that whenever oil and gas price increases the share of government increases with the automatic inception of the newly introduced royalty by price mechanism”, he maintained.
Meanwhile, the Senate also urged the Federal Government to prioritize the development of the Oloibiri Oil and Gas Research Centre and Museum.
The call was made sequel to the resolutions reached after considering a motion on “The need to ensure immediate commencement of the Oil and Gas Research Centre and Museum, Oloibiri, Bayelsa State -Nigeria’s first oil field”.
Senator Biobarakuma Degi-Eremienyo (Bayelsa East) who sponsored the motion, pointed out that in exhibition of the importance of the first oil field and the need to develop the foreign exchange earning tourism potentials of the area, the idea to build a world class museum of oil and gas was conceptualised, designed and foundation stone laid by President Shehu Shagari in 1953.
The lawmaker explained that though the Federal Government removed the project from the National Commission for Museum as rewarded and domiciled with the Petroleum Technology Development Fund in 2011, the project still remained moribund.
Consequently, the Upper Chamber urged the Federal Government to direct PTDF and contractors to mobilise to site to commence the construction of the Oil and Gas research Centre and Museum as well as directed relevant Senate committees to carry out intensive oversight on the implementation of the project.