The Nigerian Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) has indicated that the new marginal field deals may fetch the federal government as much as N3.17 billion.
The Department announced the opening of the bids last week inviting indigenous oil firms and other investors willing to bid for any of the 57 marginal fields.
The investors are expected to pay fees amounting to N55.6 million per field.
According to DPR guidelines, applicable fees are N500,000 for registration; N2 million for application; N3 million for bid processing; $15,000 for data prying; $25,000 for data leasing; $50,000 for competent persons’ report, and $25,000 for field-specific report. Using an average exchange rate of N440/$ in the parallel foreign exchange market, the fees amount to N55.6m per field.
“In addition to the above-listed fees, the signature bonus shall be paid by successful bidders prior to award,” the DPR said at the opening.
It further directed that guidelines, registration, application and processing fees are to be paid into the Treasury Single Account; the fees for data leasing, data prying, CPR and field-specific report are to be paid into the National Data Repository Account, and Signature Bonuses to be paid into the Federation Account.
However, some industry stakeholders have described the fees as too high, given the current realities in the oil and gas industry, saying this could discourage many firms from participating in the exercise. “I fully support the bid round but I think the fees are too exorbitant,” a former board member of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Alhaji Abdullahi Bukar, was quoted last week.
Stressing the need for the government to support industry players, Bukar said, “If they lower the fees, people who have the capacity to make investments will latch onto the opportunity. I don’t think it will be all-comers’ affairs because everybody knows that the price of oil has crashed. What you will get are people who are serious.”
According to the DPR, the bid round is aimed at growing production capacity by expanding the scope of participation in Nigeria’s petroleum sector, and increasing oil and gas reserves base through aggressive exploration and development effort.
Other objectives include to promote indigenous participation in the sector, thereby fostering technological transfer, and to provide opportunity to gainfully engage the pool of high level technically competent Nigerians in the sector.
Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja