Log In
updated 10:20 AM UTC, Dec 13, 2023

Senate Summons Kachikwu Over Nigeria’s $115bn MoU With India, Chinese Firms

Leadership / Nigeria: The Senate on Tuesday resolved to invite the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, to appear before its Standing Committees on Petroleum (Upstream); Gas; and Foreign Affairs to provide a detailed explanation on different Memoranda of Understanding (MoU) signed with some Chinese oil firms and the proposed one with India and their anticipated impact on the Nigerian economy.

The resolution followed the adoption of a motion tagged “The need for a detailed explanation of the $15 Billion proposed MoU with Indian Government and over $80 Billion MoU signed by Minister of State for Petroleum Resources with Chinese Firms” sponsored by Senator Clifford Ordia (PDP, Edo) at plenary.

The Senate said it was ware that the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources negotiated a $15 billion investment with India where the Indian Government would make an upfront payment to Nigeria for Crude Oil purchases and that the two countries have agreed to sign an MoU to facilitate investments by India in the Nigerian Oil and Gas Sector and specifically in areas such as Refining, Oil and Gas Marketing, Upstream Ventures, the development of gas infrastructure and in the training of oil and gas personnel in Nigeria.

The Upper Chamber also noted that Kachikwu also carried out a roadshow in China where Memoranda of Understanding worth over $80 billion to be spent on investments in Oil and Gas Infrastructure, Pipelines, Refineries, Power, Facility Refurbishments and Upstream Financing spanning five years were signed with Chinese companies.

It gave the names of the Chinese firms involved in the MoU to include China North Industries Corporation (NORINCO Group), China Cinda Asset Management Company Limited (CINDA), China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC), China Petroleum & Chemical Corporation/Addax Petroleum (SINOPEC/ADDAX), and International Chamber of Commerce/ China’s National Development and Reform Commission (ICC-NDRC).

The Senate observed that outside the MoU for $80 billion investments, the two largest oil companies in China, Sinopec and CNOOC, signed investment MoU with the Minister thereby committing the companies to further investments in Nigeria’s Upstream Oil Sub-sector to the tune of $20 billion.

No date has been fixed yet for the Minister’s appearance before the Joint Committees of the Senate.

Tagged under

Leave a Reply