Seplat
Petroleum Development Company Plc’s has concluded arrangements to use its $700m
Assa North /Ohaji South (ANOH) gas and condensate field project, at completion,
to contribute significantly in addressing Nigeria’s deficit in thermal power
delivery.
This project straddles OML 53 (Seplat 40 per cent working interest and operator)
and OML 21 (Shell JV).
In a presentation titled ‘Stability, Performance, Growth’, the team of three
presenters provided the audience with comprehensive information on the
company’s existing gas business, market outlook and anticipated ANOH growth trajectory.
The ANOH gas processing project is managed by Anoh Gas Processing Company
(AGPC), an incorporated joint venture (IJV) between Seplat and the
Nigerian Gas Company. AGPC shall develop a 300 Mscfd midstream plant on OML 53
to process future wet gas production from the upstream unit.
The company was represented at the forum by its Chief Executive Officer, Mr.
Austin Avuru; Chief Financial Officer, Mr. Roger Brown; and the Managing
Director, AGPC, Mrs Yetunde Taiwo.
Avuru, in his address, said Nigeria holds 37 per cent of total proved gas
reserves on the continent, adding that the majority is concentrated in the
Niger Delta.
According to him, Domestic Supply Obligation (DSO) price has increased to
commercial levels and non- DSO prices are determined on a willing buyer/willing
seller basis; opening up new vista of growth for the seplat’s gas business.
The Seplat CEO said: “Nigeria is one of the largest economies in Africa with a
population today in excess of 201 million; 50 per cent are urban dwellers
while 62 per cent is less than 25 years in age and 93 per cent is less
than 55 years in age.
“Projected to grow to a population of 450 million people by 2050 (highest
population growth in Africa) and become the third most populated country
globally (behind only China and India). This will spur a high demand from power
industries and other commercial enterprises.
“Current capacity deficit in thermal power generation provides immediate
headroom to place additional gas volumes installed but non-operating generation
capacity seven per cent royalty on gas revenues as opposed to 20 per cent on
oil production”.
He said government’s ambition of using gas as an enabler for energy
independence, industrial development, commerce, environmental and social
sustainability is a real GDP growth driver for Nigeria, and would reduce
production cost with reduced power costs to businesses, raise standard of
living, develop human capital, and reduce environmental degradation and health
risks.
The AGPC, according to Roger, is a special purpose company formed to raise
$420m of equity to de-risk the project; of which equity investors – Seplat and
Nigeria Gas Company- granted equal share 50:50 in AGPC.
The Seplat CFO illustrated that it is essential to correlate a company’s
funding model and business model citing the company’s proactive pay-back of its
equity debt in the early years as a good example, he said.
Roger said equity and debt are to be scaled in line with final project cost
whilst maintaining a target debt:equity ratio of 60:40.
On the funding arrangement, Roger said local banks were on board the project
including but not limited to: UBA, Zenith, Stanbic, Fidelity, FCMB, FBN, Access
Bank, Union Bank and Nova.
He added: “International lenders include but not limited to: SCB, RMB, Standard
Bank, BHGE, and Nedbank.”
According to Taiwo, AGPC schedules synchronize with Seplat upstream development
plan.
The AGPC boss stated: “ANOH is unitized 50:50 across the two blocks. Shell is
the operator of the upstream unit. AGPC shall deliver a 300 MMscfd midstream
plant on OML 53 to process future wet gas production from the upstream unit.”