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Reps Committee assures of aggressive oversight, improved energy security

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The House of Representatives Committee on Petroleum Resources (Midstream) has assured Nigerians that the era of relying on reports and presentations to determine performance of the midstream petroleum sector was over.

Chairman of the Committee, Odianosen Okojie,who spoke at a two-phased retreat and oversight activities of the committee in Port Harcourt and Lagos said henceforth, the committee will carry out more aggressive oversight of operators and regulators as it seeks to improve energy security, domestic gas utilisation and accountability across the industry.

He disclosed at that retreats, the committee in Port Harcourt and Lagos recently, where lawmakers reviewed challenges facing the sector and adopted measures aimed at strengthening parliamentary oversight within the ambit of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

Osiabosen insisted that legislators must engage directly with facilities and stakeholders to understand the realities of the industry.

“Recently, we did something that I believe should become standard practice for every legislative committee in Nigeria: we went to see for ourselves.

“We did not wait for briefing notes and ministerial reports. We travelled directly from the airport to Greenville LNG and to Indorama Petrochemicals Ltd, and we saw with our own eyes the scale, the complexity, and the realities of midstream operations in this country,” he said.

He said the committee conducted oversight visits to Greenville Liquefied Natural Gas Company Limited in Rumuji and Indorama Petrochemicals Limited in Rivers State before holding intensive sessions on legislative oversight and sector regulation.

According to Okojie, the committee intends to deepen its assessment of the firm’s operations and compliance framework before concluding.

“The Committee has resolved to conduct a follow-up visit to the Greenville facility upon receipt and satisfactory review of certain documents that the Committee has formally requested of the company.

“We expect Greenville’s full cooperation, and we look forward to deepening our engagement with a company that is doing genuinely pioneering work in Nigeria’s domestic gas distribution landscape,” he said.

The committee passed a formal vote of confidence in Indorama Petrochemicals Limited for its contribution to Nigeria’s petrochemical industry and its engagement with the legislative oversight process.

Okojie said the decision reflected the committee’s commitment to recognising excellence while maintaining strict oversight standards.

“Following our visit to Indorama Petrochemicals Ltd, this Committee passed a formal vote of confidence in the company, a recognition of Indorama’s significant contribution to Nigeria’s petrochemical and industrial value chain, and of the professionalism and transparency with which its management engaged with our oversight process,” he said.

At the Lagos retreat, lawmakers and industry stakeholders emphasised the strategic importance of the midstream segment, describing it as the bridge between hydrocarbon production and domestic consumption.

Okojie commended the Pipeline Infrastructure Nigeria Limited for its role in securing the nation’s oil and gas assets. PINL renders services across the petroleum value chain, particularly in pipeline security, engineering, procurement, and maintenance.

He said PINL “Has in the past few years done remarkably in construction, maintenance and security services in the oil and gas sector. The Committee is very proud of what PINL has been able to do for the industry. They have been very professional and patriotic in the execution of their mandate.”

The Edo lawmaker said “PINL is largely responsible for the protection and maintenance of oil and gas facilities over the years and this has helped to keep crude oil production steady and stable.

“Not only has PINL helped in rendering surveillance and security services, but they have also provided jobs to our teeming youths in the Niger Delta region and other areas of its jurisdiction. In all its corridors, the company has done well in providing cutting-edge technology services to the nation. As a Committee, we are proud of PINL achievements and we encourage to keep this momentum,” he added.

The committee’s discussions repeatedly returned to the need for stronger implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act.

According to Okojie, oversight would no longer be measured by the number of hearings held but by tangible improvements in the lives of Nigerians.

“Our theme, ‘Oversight in Action,’ was not chosen for its elegance. It was chosen because oversight that exists only on paper changes nothing,” he said.

“The Nigerian people do not feel the words of our resolutions. They feel the price of cooking gas in their kitchens, the reliability of power in their homes, the integrity of the pipelines that cross their communities, and the vitality of the industries that employ their children.”

Okojie, who represents Esan North-East/Esan South-East Federal Constituency of Edo State said the committee would hold both regulators and operators accountable while encouraging investment and industry growth.

“We will hold our regulatory authorities to the highest standards of transparency and accountability, and we will demand the same of every operator in this industry. Where there is excellence, we will commend it. Where there is failure, we will confront it without apology,” he added.

In its communiqué at the end of the Port Harcourt retreat, the committee reaffirmed its constitutional oversight mandate and pledged to translate the outcomes of the exercise into concrete legislative measures.

The committee said resolutions reached during the retreat would form the basis for future oversight hearings, committee directives and legislative instruments in the 10th Assembly.

“The findings and commitments of this retreat will be translated directly into concrete legislative instruments, oversight hearings, and binding directives,” the communiqué stated.

Lawmakers also called on regulators, investors, operators, host communities and civil society organisations to engage constructively with the legislative process as Nigeria seeks to build a more transparent and efficient midstream petroleum industry.

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