The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation ( NNPC ) says it will establish 4,600 power plants in Abuja, Kaduna and Kano.
A
statement in Abuja by the NNPC spokesman, Mr Ndu Ughamadu, said this
would be done through the recently-approved contract for the
construction of Ajaokuta-Abuja-Kaduna-Kano Gas Pipeline project, dubbed
AKK Pipeline.
According to the statement, the AKK pipeline has
started yielding early benefits with the commitment by NNPC to build
power-generating plants with combined capacity of 4550 megawatts in
Abuja, Kaduna and Kano States.
Ughamadu quoted the NNPC Group
Managing Director, Dr Maikanti Baru, as saying that the Corporation in
partnership with private investors would build power-generating plants
to support Federal Government’s effort to providing stable electricity
in the country.
“As part of the drive to establish power plants
to augment the power supply to the nation, the Federal Executive Council
has recently approved the AKK Gas Pipeline project to be financed
through Public Private Partnership (PPP).
“The project comes with
other auxiliary ones which include, 1,350 megawatts, 900 megawatts and
2,350 megawatts of power generation plants in Abuja, Kaduna and Kano
respectively,” the statement quotes Baru.
It said the NNPC in
partnership with private investors would also build fertilizer plants in
some parts of the country, one of which would be located at Izzon,
Niger State.
The statement said in line with the presidential
mandate on oil exploration in all the frontier basins, the NNPC was
well-focused on the exploration in the Bida Basin.
“We have
contracted the geological mapping of the Bida Basin to Ibrahim Babangida
University, Lapai and the job would be completed in three months,” it
stated.
Ughamadu said the corporation would go into more detailed
seismic data acquisition in the Bida Basin by August 2018, to be
followed by an Environmental Impact Assessment exercise.
He said
as part of the corporation’s effort to decongest the highways, the NNPC
would encourage private investors to build tanker parking facilities
around Minna Depot, Suleja Depot, Tegina, Mokwa, amongst others and
charge the users of the facility appropriately.
The statement
said talks were ongoing with the Federal Ministry of Works, Power and
Housing to re-introduce weight bridges on the highways to checkmate the
issue of excessive loading by tankers above the recommended 46, 000ton
gross weight.
“The NNPC on its part has already directed all its
depots nationwide to stop loading tankers with loading capacity above
40, 000litres,” he said. NAN
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