$1.1bn OML 17 investment to benefit FG, communities, Nigeria’s economy — TNOG
THE $1.1 billion Oil Mining License, OML 17 deal undertaken by TNOG Oil and Gas Limited, a related company of Heirs Holdings and Transcorp would be beneficial to the Federal Government, communities and the entire nation’s economy.
Chief Finance Officer, TNOG, Samuel Nwanze, who disclosed this on Arise Television, monitored by The Daily, http://www.thedaily-ng.
“Also, because of the growth plans that we have, we see significant benefits for the government in terms of royalties, levies, and taxes. We also see huge employment opportunities, because we are going to grow what we currently have there. These will also culminate in increased economic development, and employment, direct and indirect.
“Community engagement and relations are extremely important, not just only in the oil and gas business, but in every business. At Heirs Holdings, we have a track record of being able to relate and work with the communities across all our businesses. We have investments in financial services, health care, power, hospitality, and in all of these businesses, we have engaged and interacted with the communities. As part of our engagement in the communities, we’ve been doing quite a lot. Apart from what the businesses themselves do, our foundation, the Tony Elumelu Foundation, is actively involved in capacity building, and entrepreneurial development across the continent.
“So we intend to apply those kinds of principles that we’ve done across a lot of the assets that we’ve been involved in and acquired, also, in this particular transaction. And one of the things we are looking at doing is building a customized, targeted version of what we do in the foundation in capacity building and entrepreneurship development to these communities.
“We are already doing some of that. Tony Elumelu Foundation has already supported close to 900 entrepreneurs that come from these same communities in the Niger Delta. And so we are going to expand that programme. In addition, on top of what is currently being done in terms of, you know, developmental projects, you know, training development capacity building that will take place in the communities.”
He added: “We are acquiring a 45 per cent participating interest, including 30 per cent owned by SPDC 10 per cent by Total and 5 per cent by ENI and there is additional $300 million, which is part of the financing that is there to address transaction costs and provide sufficient working capital for us to be able to run the assets and begin to generate value initially.”