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HomeOil & GasPENGASSAN Demands Urgent Refinery Reforms

PENGASSAN Demands Urgent Refinery Reforms

News Investigators/ The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) has called for urgent reforms in the country’s refineries and cautioned against political interference in the oil and gas sector.

Festus Osifo, President of PENGASSAN, made this known on Thursday in Abuja at the ongoing 4th PENGASSAN and Labour Summit 2025, themed “Building a Resilient Oil and Gas Sector in Nigeria: Advancing HSE, ESG, Investment and Incremental Production.”

Mr Osifo said that Nigeria’s refineries should operate under a model similar to the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG), where the government holds minority stakes while competent private operators take majority control for efficiency.

According to him, while Nigeria’s workforce possesses the expertise to manage refineries, the absence of proper tools and the persistence of political interference have led to inefficiency, waste, and recurring breakdowns.

“Government must divest majority control of the refineries, just as in the NLNG model, where private partners hold 51 per cent while government retains 49 per cent,” he said.

He further warned that Nigeria’s 37 billion barrels of crude reserves risk remaining underutilised if production continues to hover around two million barrels per day, urging authorities to intensify drilling and exploration.

The PENGASSAN president stressed that oil revenues should be reinvested in infrastructure, education, and healthcare to promote diversification, citing Dubai’s transformation funded by Abu Dhabi’s oil wealth as a model Nigeria could replicate.

Mr Osifo commended the recent marginal field bid round, describing it as the most transparent in Nigeria’s history, unlike previous politically influenced allocations that, he said, hindered development due to incompetence.

He also condemned alleged anti-labour practices, singling out 11PLC for reportedly forcing workers to sign agreements barring union membership.

He warned that PENGASSAN would resist any attempt to suppress workers’ rights.

In his remarks, the Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), Felix Ogba, underscored the need for human capacity development as the bedrock of Nigeria’s oil and gas growth.

Mr Ogba said the sector’s sustainability depends not only on reserves and infrastructure but also on equipping Nigerians with critical skills in engineering, safety, automation, and digital technologies.

He highlighted NCDMB’s investments in training, research, and technical innovation, noting that every major oil and gas project must include skill-transfer components.

He further stressed the importance of prioritizing STEM education, vocational training, and collaboration between government, industry, and labour to prepare a workforce that can adapt to energy transition and automation.

“Human capacity is the true oil that will sustain Nigeria’s industry for generations,” Ogba said.

NAN

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