Nathan Tamarapreye, Yenagoa
An oil services expert, Mr Victor Ekpenyong, has called for a boost in oil production ahead of the 2060 zero-emission target
Ekpenyong, who is the CEO of Kenyon International West Africa, said this at the just concluded Oloibiri lecture series and energy forum in Abuja.
It would be recalled that Nigeria at the 2021 COP 26 Climate Forum in Glasgow pledged to achieve a net-zero carbon emission by 2060.
The nation also plans to use gas as its transition energy source due to its low emission of greenhouse gases.
According to a statement issued on Monday by Mr Ifechukwu Muonyili, Public Affairs Manager at Kenyon International West Africa, Nigeria should leverage the current upsurge in oil prices to earn more revenue.
He proposed the deployment of an idle well management strategy and remote well control as key solutions to combating oil theft which can equally maximise oil production to increase revenue and facilitate Nigeria’s energy transition.
The statement noted that the lecture which took place at PTDF Towers, in Abuja has the theme ‘Global Energy Transition: Implications on Future Investments in the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry’ and was attended by industry dignitaries.
In Ekpenyong’s opening remark, he stated that oil theft has been the bane of our economy as it had led to the loss of revenue and environmental pollution.
He noted that since oil accounts for the major source of revenue in Nigeria, it behoves the federal government to maximise its oil production by putting measures that deter oil theft and vandalism.
Ekpenyong explained that an idle well management strategy will enable a well to be decommissioned safely to protect it from being vandalized and restore an abandoned well to its full potential when necessary.
On remote well control, he said it is a technology that can be deployed to protect oilfields facilities and the environment from hazards such as blowouts.
Ekpenyong appealed to the federal government to integrate the idle well management strategy and remote well control to help reduce the number of emerging idle wells.
He said the approach will boost oil production which can in turn help fund and facilitate a smooth transition into clean energy.