Abuja - Nigeria's state-owned NNPC Ltd, on Tuesday, started drilling for oil and gas at a field in northern Nigeria that has reserves of 1 billion barrels as the country seeks to produce crude outside the Niger Delta for the first time.
NNPC Ltd announced in 2019 the discovery of crude oil, gas and condensate in commercial quantity in the Kolmani region between Bauchi and Gombe states in north-eastern Nigeria, a region that is battling an Islamist insurgency.
President Muhammadu Buhari said over 1 billion barrels of oil reserves and 500 billion cubic feet of gas were discovered within Kolmani Oil Prospecting Lease 809 and 810.
No oil major is involved in the Kolmani project, which is being developed by NNPC, local firm Sterling Global Oil and New Nigeria Development Commission, a conglomerate owned by 19 states in northern Nigeria.
"It is, therefore, to the credit of this administration that at a time when there is near zero appetite for investment in fossil energy, coupled with the location challenges, we are able attract investment of over $3 billion (R51.4 billion) to this project," Buhari said at a ceremony to start the oil project.
Nigeria has for years been searching for oil in frontier basins in the largely poor north of the country, including the Lake Chad Basin, the heartland of the Islamist insurgency.
Buhari urged the NNPC and its partners to work with local communities and draw lessons from the restive Niger Delta, where militants have in the past blown up pipelines, accusing oil companies of neglecting locals.
Oil was first discovered in the Niger Delta more than six decades ago.
Oil majors in Nigeria are divesting from onshore projects to focus on offshore drilling due to increasing insecurity and oil theft, which has seen a decline in production and the country losing its status as Africa's top oil producer.
REUTERS