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Saturday 18 March 2017

Headquarters’ relocation: Why ExxonMobil, Chevron may shun FG’s order

•Govt to bear 50% of $200m relocation cost
•‘Relocation order more political’
ExxonMobli, Chevron and other International Oil Companies (IOCs) in Nigeria took the relocation of headquarter order given to them by then Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, with a pinch of salt, Saturday Telegraph investigation has revealed.


By virtue of this, it means that the IOCs are likely to shun the directive in the long run. Osinbajo had given the directive at a Town Hall meeting in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State capital, during his visit to the Niger Delta and South- South states of the region to dialogue with stakeholders on how to address the problems of the region.

Specifically, Osinbajo had urged the Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, to begin the process of engaging the IOCs on the way forward in order to actualise the directive, saying: “I think it is the right thing to do.”

However, all the IOCs, except Shell which has its headquarters in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, according to checks by this newspaper, expressed their displeasure over the directive, arguing that it was more ‘political than economic’.

An industry source, who maintained that the IOCs were not under constitution or contractual obligation to obey the rule, said: “It will cost both Chevron and ExxonMobil over $100 million each to replicate the edifices they have as headquarters in Lagos and in the Niger Delta.

“What the Acting President has not factored into this his order is that the Federal Government will bear over 50 per cent of this cost through the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC),” he added.

Spokesperson for Shell in Nigeria, Precious Okolobo, told Saturday Telegraph on the telephone that his company was not affected by the directive as it had long remained in the Niger Delta.

Okolobo, who is the Media Relations Manager for Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) of Nigeria Limited, confirmed that his company had its headquarters in Port Harcourt, suggesting that the order does not affect Shell.

The spokesperson for Chevron and ExxonMobil, however, could not be reached for comment as at the time of this report. Sources in the company, however, told this newspaper that the oil multi-nationals were not in a hurry to obey the order, which would cost millions of dollars. “This period is a tough one for oil industry.

You are aware that a lot of workers were already affected by the rightsizing and other measure put in place to mitigate this trouble time. The relocation of headquarters is no on he table for now. “I am afraid that only what we can have is a working office or headquarter and this will also need planning and budgetary provision,” he added.

Commenting on this, a Lagos-based constitutional lawyer, Mr. Moses Mekson, also said no amount of presidential directives of official commands would compel these companies to relocate their corporate headquarters’ unless a constitutional provision is involved.

“Even the recent directive given by the Acting President during his recent peace tour in oil rich Niger Delta will not perturb the companies because they are aware that there is no law under which they are breaching in remaining outside their host communities or anywhere around there,” he was quoted to have said in a report seen by Saturday Telegraph.

Continuing, he said: “For too long, government has been clamouring on that and no action is being observed because IOCs know that government is not actually serious in their quest for the relocation.
“There is no need for a new drafting of related law to do that job than to quicken action in the passage of the ageless petroleum Industry Bill (PIB).” While nothing that the bill could be said to be the most frustrated and pending bill in the history of National Assembly, Mekson said the had passed through the highest number of years without progress.

“Again, the government that is giving the relocation directives only need to go back to the PIB to make sure that it is clearly stated there and then see what they can do to pass the bill into law before the end of the present Senate.

“Not persuading the lawmakers to pass PIB on one hand and directing IOCs to relocate is an abuse of the collective intelligence of Niger Delta region and Nigerians in general,” he said.

Fear of the unknown grips IOCs
In the same vein, fresh facts emerged in Asaba, Delta State that the fear of the unknown has hoodwinked some of the multi-national oil companies from relocating their headquarters to the Niger Delta region as directed by the Federal Government.

The fear, Saturday Telegraph gathered, was aggravated as the factionalised militia group, the Niger Delta Greenland Justice Mandate (NDGJM), hailed the presidential order, describing it as a “sensible step”.

The Saturday Telegraph gathered that since the directive was handed down last week, oil firms, especially those operating in Delta State, including the Chevron Nigeria Limited (CNL), the Heritage Oil, that is operating in the upland axis of the state and three others, which have their headquarters outside the Niger Delta region, have been enmeshed in fears.

Their fears, it was further learnt, may not be unconnected with the resurgent activities of the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) and the NDGJM, which resulted in the destruction of oil and gas facilities throughout last year, before the ceasefire deal was struck.

A top management source at the Chevron (names withheld), made allusion to the threat handed down by the high command of the NDGJM recently, which warned recalcitrant oil companies against playing pranks with the relocation directive.

The factional group had said: “By now, all the oil companies operating in the upland areas should know that when we warn, we mean business, so the message to the incoming operators, like Heritage Oil is a call to caution.

“Don’t want to joke with us because we possess the capacity to do what we are intended to do and the legacy of ruins you are about to inherit are enough witness the last of which was the message passed by our gallant operatives on February 11, 2017. The Iyede-Opherin Delivery Line in Eriemu Field was brought down at about 1am of that day.

Don’t joke with us.” The Chevron source quoted “the period of quietness” which was conspicuously maintained in the latest statement of the spokesperson of the group, Gen. Aldo Agbalaja, as a moment to “observe how things unfold in the region and to give the Nigerian government the benefit of doubt”.

The source further reiterated that: “The movement (militancy) is not dead, neither is its spirit quelled, it is just in a process of repositioning for better impacts.” Another oil firm source also revealed that the directive was hard to obey, as according to him, since the “militant merchants”, which the militia group referred to in their statement, are still in charge, it would be difficult to reach a peaceful resolution with the militants.

Although, several phone calls and text messages to Public Relations Officers of notable oil companies in the region met brick walls as they refused to answer or reply the messages, but a field worker at the Nigeria Gas Limited (NGL) in Ubeji, however, told Saturday Telegraph that following the presidential order, jobbers have started approach some of the oil firms for settlement in the name of the militants.

Shell has base in Niger Delta-Shell PRO
Shell has a history of over 50 years’ operation in Nigeria and the largest footprint in the international oil and gas companies operating in Nigeria. Speaking on the development, the Public Relations Officer (PRO) of Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDCN), in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, Mr. Joseph Obari, who spoke to Saturday Telegraph on the telephone, said already it has a base in the Niger Delta. Apparently confirming its earlier statement on the relocation order, he retorted: “Where is the headquarters of SPDC. Find out.

Do your research before you come and ask me questions”, which showed that the company was not planning to relocate soonest. Also a call put across to the Chevron spokesman, Sola Adebawo, was not responded to while a text message put across to his phone didn’t get any response.

Shell has a history of over 50 years’ operation in Nigeria and the largest footprint in the international oil and gas companies operating in Nigeria while Chevron has an industrial base in Warri while their head office is at Lagos.

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