The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited has dismissed reports that it gave contracts for the rehabilitation of pipelines throughout the nation to a “northern oil cabal.”
The Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI), the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, and the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) were all involved in the selection process, according to a statement released by the NNPC on Sunday and signed by its management.
It said: “To re-emphasise our commitment to transparency, NNPC subjected the selection process to a competitive tender guided by Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) standards, Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission expertise, and the active involvement of a Transaction Advisor.
“We also had representations from NEITI and the Ministry of Justice in the project development team and the evaluation exercise.”
According to the State-owned company, reports of it awarding the contracts to a ‘northern cabal’ are fallacious and designed to bring the firm’s name into disrepute.
The national oil firm said the process was transparent, adding that “NNPC Limited is deeply committed to adhering to the highest standards of transparency and global best practices in all our activities, and this includes our contracting process. These contracts, which were advertised, were awarded based on rigorous evaluation criteria and in line with industry norms.”
NNPC further stated that 17 oil firms were awarded the pipeline rehabilitation contracts.
The company said the list of the awardees that form a consortium shows that lot one was awarded to Oilserve Ltd, Chu Kong Steel Pipe Group Company Ltd, and Saudi Crown Oilserve.
Lot two, NNPC said, went to MacReady Oil and Gas Services, COBRA Instalicios S.A, Control Y Montajes Industriales & International De Pipelines, Iron Products Industries Ltd, Batelitwin Global Services Ltd, Bauen Empresa Constructora SAU, Sanderton Energy Ltd, and The Spanish National Association of Manufacturers.
According to the statement, lot three was allocated to AA Rano, Zakhem Construction Nigeria, Bablinks Resources Ltd, and VAE Controls S.R.O. Lot four was allocated to MRS Oil and Gas, CPPE Nigeria Ltd.
The contract is based on building, operating, and transferring, but according to NNPC, this does not include giving the firms control of the assets.
Although the selected partners would pay for the rehabilitation, according to NNPC, it still owns the pipelines.
Ada Peter