One of the President’s special advisers has assured Nigerians of a better country. Ms. Olu Verheijen,the Special Adviser to the President on Energy, said on Wednesday that the development of gas was a priority for Bola Tinubu’s administration.
Verheijen said this at the opening of the “Decade of Gas” secretariat in Abuja.
The “Decade of Gas” programme is a Federal Government project designed to ensure that Nigeria propagates the supply and distribution of gas as the main source of energy both to power- and gas-based industries on commercial bases.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), reports that this project is expected to be achieved between 2021 and 2030.
Verheijen said that the president placed a high premium on gas and, as such, was committed to seeing the country utilise it to its fullest.
“We have gone from being a major exporter of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), to looking into our future, when gas is going to play a big role in the industrialisation of our country,” she added.
Farouk Ahmed, Chief Executive, Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), said that the country was working towards becoming more of a gas-based country for local consumption and export.
“It is a matter of empowering Nigeria on the utilisation of gas, so the sponsors group agreed that there should be a secretariat.
“That is why we are here to commence the process of taking over and informing the former secretariat of the Energy office in Jabi,” Ahmed said.
The coordinator of the project, Mr. Ed Ebong, said that they were already working on about 15 different projects in the industry in the short term.
Ebong said that the projects would be the deciding factor of the country’s future if the right policy framework were put in place.
“A lot of work has been done; projects have been identified and we are now in the process of sitting with the operators to bring the issues to the surface; that is for the gas supply.
“Gas will not get to where it will get to if we do not begin to build physical and virtual pipelines.
“Physical pipelines are physical lines, while virtual pipelines will enable us to have Compressed Natural Gas (CNG), operators that can move gas from where it is today to the areas where it is needed.
“The last is building capacity and these are those that will work in the gas sector,” Ebong added.