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NAPENews Magazine September 2022 Edition

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AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong><br />

EDITION<br />

Celebrating an<br />

ICON @ 80<br />

Theme:<br />

Asset Divestment:<br />

Operational Capability or<br />

Energy Security Challenges<br />

NAPE 40th AICE Calendar<br />

ASUU Strike and Data Accessibility<br />

for Research and Development<br />

Technical Review on<br />

Caritas University Gas Flare<br />

Excerpts from the<br />

Divestment Workshop<br />

Technical/Editorial Leads Interview<br />

NAPE Partners with<br />

African Energy Conference<br />

Mountain Top University Student<br />

Chapter Inauguration


Corporate Ad


EDITOR’S NOTE<br />

ollowing the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries<br />

F(OPEC's) Nigeria quota increase for crude oil production in<br />

August, <strong>September</strong> came with a new blow. Oil production fell<br />

below 1 million barrels per day, as reported by the regulators. This<br />

decline is a present threat to Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation's<br />

already strained finances, growth indices and fiscal policies. This<br />

reduction represents the ailing and depreciating state of our industry<br />

amidst serious oil theft and growing national insecurity.<br />

This <strong>September</strong>, exports were the lowest since about 1990, mainly<br />

due to pipeline theft. Puzzlingly, OPEC's data also highlights that at<br />

the high of the crippling militant attacks in the Niger Delta, the<br />

nation's output never fell below 1.4million bpd. These issues should<br />

worry each of us, as Nigeria has now slipped behind Angola as<br />

Africa's largest exporter in July <strong>2022</strong>. This begs the question: Where<br />

is Africa's Giant?<br />

At the recent NAPE divestment workshop, erudite Industry captains<br />

posited that years of declining IOC investments, lack of<br />

maintenance and operational challenges are to blame for this<br />

menacingly reduced capacity. While these are tenable, the polity,<br />

Nigeria's ever-changing socio-political landscape shall also take<br />

some of the blame for the current investment landscape.<br />

The outcome of the divestment workshop is the central theme in this<br />

edition, and the editorial team have collated short excerpts from two<br />

of these presentations. One given by Mr. Roger Brown, CEO Seplat<br />

Energy on Seplat's Opportunities Journey, Lesson Learnt, Best<br />

Practices and Vision 2030, the other by Mr. Austin Avuru FNAPE on<br />

Funding Challenges, Divestment Strategies, and Incentives. This<br />

edition doesn't do as much justice as being in the room, but it<br />

provides a lot of reflections that will get you thinking. There is an<br />

additional feature article on “Evolution Of Independents Into<br />

International Oil Companies”.<br />

A few changes were made to our elections campaigns modalities<br />

this year. The Executive Committee resolved to keep our<br />

electioneering campaigns within the NAPE community as much as<br />

possible. This decision was taken to ensure continued professional<br />

cordiality and to create a level playing field for all candidates running<br />

for election into the various positions in the Executive Committee, as<br />

well as keep our affairs private. This move not only helps us better<br />

manage the privacy & confidentiality of members, but also ensures<br />

that our Association does not breach any national or international<br />

data law.<br />

With this, we hope to show that volunteering and campaigning for<br />

elective positions can be cordial and without rancor. We believe as<br />

an executive body, that raising your hand to volunteer is always a<br />

win.<br />

The candidates for this year's election are showcased here and<br />

seizing the opportunity to remind you that voting is currently<br />

ongoing, and you should not forget to cast your votes.<br />

Over the course of this year, we have amplified our presence at<br />

various national and organizational events from the NIES, NOG,<br />

SPE and the recently concluded Association of Energy<br />

Correspondents of Nigeria (NAEC) Conference. We continue to<br />

leverage on our power houses: indefatigable Fellows, respected<br />

Advisory Board(s) and Board of Trustees members, members and<br />

organizations represented within the NAPE community.<br />

Collaboration has been a key focus for this administration; here we<br />

share the news of the <strong>2022</strong> Africa Energy Conference strategic<br />

partnership with NAPE.<br />

At a recent company road show visit, an executive made this<br />

comment that got me thinking. “We definitely will be coming to<br />

NAPE to seek the very deep experts' support for our upcoming<br />

educational program for the Oil & Gas Industry”. Comments such as<br />

these makes me wonder if we are leveraging enough on our inhouse<br />

subject matter experts to teach and mentor newer / younger<br />

technical professionals. Do you think we are? Personally, I think,<br />

there is room for more…<br />

Our Chapters continue to render top quartile presentations at their<br />

monthly fora. These are featured to grant you the opportunity to<br />

catch up with the recordings over the NAPE YouTube Channel for<br />

your continuous learning.<br />

Listed-in are featured articles on the seemingly non-ending ASUU<br />

Strike, NAPE's editorial team's detailed findings on the Caritas Fire,<br />

Young Professionals activities and the newly inaugurated NAPE<br />

Student Chapter of the Mountain Top University.<br />

Our Executive feature showcases the Technical Editorial team<br />

leadership duo of Dr. Christopher Jackson, NAPE Editor in Chief,<br />

and Victoria Okorie, the Assistant Editor in Chief. They spoke to<br />

various aspects of their volunteering experience, the virtual field trip<br />

that has come to stay, and shared a portfolio of their achievements to<br />

date.<br />

The danger of an editorial is that once you read it, you may assume<br />

you have read the full magazine. Not this one, because there are<br />

several other amazing articles, activities, and features as well as top<br />

industry news hidden within this edition. Our forthcoming 40th<br />

Annual Conference schedule of activities is one of such.<br />

As we share more information, kindly follow the news. This<br />

forthcoming conference is packed with note-worthy activities that<br />

will aid your personal development, professional growth and support<br />

your industry network portfolio. Register early and don't miss it.<br />

As you read, don't forget to Share, Grow and Live. Wishing you more<br />

success.<br />

To Your Feats<br />

Tunbosun Afolayan


<strong>NAPENews</strong> is the magazine of<br />

the Nigerian Association of<br />

Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE).<br />

<strong>NAPENews</strong> EDITORIAL<br />

BOARD<br />

Tunbosun Afolayan<br />

(NAPE Publicity Secretary/<br />

Editor, <strong>NAPENews</strong>)<br />

Adewale Sadiq<br />

(Deputy Editor, <strong>NAPENews</strong>)<br />

Victoria Okorie<br />

(NAPE Assistant Editor-in-Chief/<br />

Contributor)<br />

Promise Ekeh<br />

(Contributor)<br />

Timipire Potoki<br />

(YP Contributor)<br />

Elshalom Omokpariola<br />

(Contributor)<br />

Princewill Okechukwu<br />

(Contributor)<br />

Frank Phido<br />

(Media Consultant)<br />

Abieyuwa Ogbebor<br />

(Secretariat Support)<br />

Tunde Adedeji<br />

(Secretariat Support)<br />

Lawrence Osuagwu<br />

(Secretariat Support)<br />

Graphics Consultant<br />

Karoreva Resources Limited<br />

The Nigerian Association of<br />

Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE)<br />

Secretariat,<br />

47A Femi Okunnu Housing Estate,<br />

Lekki Expressway, Lekki Peninsula,<br />

Lagos, Nigeria.<br />

P.M.B. 12598, Marina, Lagos.<br />

Tel: +234 (0) 1 342 9082<br />

+234 (0) 909 214 3198<br />

info@nape.org.ng<br />

www.nape.org.ng<br />

Trustees of the Nigerian<br />

Association of Petroleum<br />

Explorationists (NAPE)<br />

Chief Chamberlain Oyibo, FNAPE<br />

(Chairman)<br />

Mr. Austin Avuru, FNAPE<br />

Dr. D. Lambert Aikhionbare, FNAPE<br />

Dr. ‘Layi Fatona, FNAPE<br />

Mavuaye James Orife, FNAPE<br />

Advisory Council of the<br />

Nigerian Association of Petroleum<br />

Explorationists (NAPE)<br />

Dr. ‘Layi Fatona, FNAPE (Chairman)<br />

Mrs. Patience Maseli, FNAPE (Secretary)<br />

Dr. Ebi Omatsola, FNAPE<br />

Mr. Abiodun Adesanya, FNAPE<br />

Mr. Austin Avuru, FNAPE<br />

Prof. C. S. Nwajide, FNAPE<br />

Dr. D. Lambert-Aikhiobare, FNAPE<br />

Mr. George Osahon, FNAPE<br />

Mr. Kanu Kanu, FNAPE<br />

Mr. Nedo Osayande, FNAPE<br />

Mrs. Patricia Ochogbu, FNAPE<br />

Mr. Reginald Mbah, FNAPE<br />

Mr. Abraham Udoh<br />

Mr. Aliyu Adamu<br />

Mr. Ekpei Ukam<br />

Dr. Gbolade Olalere<br />

Mrs. Rosina Basorun<br />

DISCLAIMER<br />

The Nigerian Association of<br />

P e t r o l e u m E x p l o r a t i o n i s t s<br />

(NAPE) accepts no responsibility<br />

for the views expressed in any<br />

article in this publication. All<br />

views expressed, except where<br />

explicitly stated otherwise,<br />

represent those of the author,<br />

and not The Nigerian Association<br />

of Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE). All rights reserved. No<br />

paragraph in this publication<br />

may be reproduced, copied or<br />

transmitted save with written<br />

permission. The information<br />

contained in this magazine has<br />

been provided as a public<br />

service. All effort has been made<br />

to ensure its accuracy and<br />

reliability, <strong>NAPENews</strong> makes no<br />

warranties, representations,<br />

e x p r e s s e d o r i m p l i e d ,<br />

c o n c e r n i n g t h e a c c u r a c y ,<br />

reliability or completeness of<br />

the information contained in<br />

t h i s p u b l i c a t i o n . T h e<br />

information in this bulletin is<br />

provided on an “as is” basis<br />

without warranty or condition.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 04


NAPE EXECUTIVE<br />

FEATURES<br />

13 Decadence of Nigerian Geoscience<br />

Education: ASUU Strike and Data<br />

Accessibility for Research and<br />

Development<br />

CONTENTS<br />

REGULAR<br />

Editor’s Desk<br />

President’s Desk<br />

03<br />

06<br />

14 NAPE Technical Team Review on ‘Natural<br />

Gas-induced Fire Outbreak’ At Caritas<br />

University<br />

18 African Energy Week collaborate(s) with<br />

NAPE<br />

19 Interview: Dr. Christopher Jackson<br />

22 Interview: Victoria Okorie<br />

37 NAPE <strong>2022</strong> Divestment Workshop<br />

45 Evolution of Independents into<br />

International Oil Companies<br />

50 Conference Schedule<br />

53 NAPE <strong>2022</strong> Election<br />

55 Pre-Conference Workshop Activities<br />

About NAPE<br />

Nigerian Oil and Gas<br />

Industry Activities<br />

Technical Paper: Depositional<br />

Evolution and Sequence<br />

Stratigraphy of the Amasiri<br />

Sandstone Member of the<br />

Eze-Aku Formation,<br />

Southern Benue Trough<br />

NAPE in the News<br />

Chapter Activities<br />

YP Reports<br />

08<br />

10<br />

24<br />

52<br />

57<br />

62<br />

63 Inauguration of the NAPE Students<br />

Chapter at Mountain Top University<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 05


President’s Desk<br />

Dear Esteemed Members,<br />

I welcome you to the second edition of NAPE News for the<br />

year <strong>2022</strong>. It is always my pleasure to engage with you.<br />

<strong>2022</strong> has been a kind of a year, from recovering from the<br />

COVID-19 pandemic to the pressure on OPEC to fill the<br />

void created by the Russia - Ukraine war and<br />

accompanying sanctions. Sadly, as a nation, we continue<br />

to grapple with decreasing production capacity, due to<br />

operational challenges and diminishing investments.<br />

In the second half of the year, award letters were finally<br />

issued to the 57 successful bidders from the 2020<br />

Marginal Fields Bid Round. The state-owned Nigerian<br />

National Petroleum Company (NNPC) transformed to<br />

NNPC Limited, a commercial venture, as mandated by the<br />

PIA, unveiling their new logo and corporate agenda, of<br />

plans to expand Nigeria's natural gas reserves, tackle<br />

flaring, and creating more opportunities for our growing<br />

young adult population.<br />

In Nigeria, oil theft, oil pipeline vandalism, weak and<br />

ageing infrastructure, and several other issues continue to<br />

plague our ability to meet our production quota, even for<br />

national energy consumption. Oil theft continues to rise<br />

high as a major source of concern. It is imperative that our<br />

government doubles up on its efforts to solve these<br />

problems.<br />

At NAPE, our Executive Committee continues to strive for<br />

excellence, and we are unrelenting in our public advocacy<br />

efforts for the betterment of the oil and gas community and<br />

the nation at large.<br />

“<br />

In Nigeria, oil theft, pipeline vandalism,<br />

weak & ageing infrastructure, and<br />

other issues continue to plague our<br />

ability to meet production quota, even<br />

for national energy consumption.<br />

In July we held a very successful workshop on<br />

divestments in the oil & gas industry, and what a brilliant<br />

outing we had. The event offered a unique blend of<br />

perspective as to various opportunities in the asset<br />

divestment conversation Many thanks to our brilliant array<br />

of speakers, panelists and moderators, many of whom are<br />

distinguished Fellows of our Association. This suggests<br />

”<br />

that our Fellowship Awardees continue to rise to provide<br />

much needed industry strategic insights & guidance and<br />

truly, stay deserving of their Fellowship,<br />

My most recent outing was at the annual conference of<br />

the Association of Energy Correspondents of Nigeria<br />

(NAEC), here, I presented on the theme: Energy<br />

Transition: "Shaping the future of Nigeria's energy<br />

industry, an appraisal of PIA, Evolving Benefits and<br />

Challenges."<br />

Beyond speaking to these focussed themes, I endeavour<br />

to always amplify and share what our Association, is<br />

doing to ensure smooth energy transition in the country.<br />

Some of which include educational empowerment and<br />

support through capacity development & application of<br />

transferable skills through our UAP / Technical programs.<br />

Others are:<br />

• Inclusion & advocacy for net-zero emissions to<br />

build economic efficiency<br />

• Shared business & technical know-how on<br />

strategies for harnessing divestment opportunities<br />

through the recently held divestment workshop<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 06


To celebrate our 40th outing, several Pre- Conference<br />

events have been planned, they include, a Charity Walk<br />

on the 15th of October, Pre-Conference Workshop on the<br />

26th of October, Golf Tournament from 4 - 6 November,<br />

Short Courses and a Virtual Field trip from 11 - 12<br />

November.<br />

The Pre-Conference Workshop will x-ray the topic of<br />

Energy Security & Transition Strategies: Opportunities<br />

and Challenges in Nigeria. The prestigious Management<br />

Session and All Convention Luncheon also feature very<br />

interesting themes.<br />

This will be a conference you will not forget, as the<br />

President-Elect, Mr. Elliot Ibie FNAPE and his team of<br />

volunteers within the Conference Planning Committee are<br />

working extra smart to ensure we have a great event. I<br />

invite you to register for this event via our website:<br />

www.conference.nape.org.ng<br />

• Technical support to public & private industry<br />

policies through technical fora, workshops and<br />

conferences.<br />

Our flagship event, the Olympics of Oil & Gas events in<br />

Nigeria and sub-Sahara, the 40th Annual International<br />

Conference & Exhibition (AICE) is the 40th edition in our<br />

47-year history. It is slated to hold physically at the Eko<br />

Hotels & Suites, Victoria Island, Lagos from 13 - 17<br />

November <strong>2022</strong>. The theme for this year is Global Energy<br />

Transition and the Future of the Oil and Gas Industry:<br />

Evolving Regulations, Emerging Concepts &<br />

Opportunities.<br />

“<br />

...educational empowerment<br />

and support through capacity<br />

development & application of<br />

transferable skills through our<br />

UAP / Technical programs.<br />

”<br />

“<br />

NAPE's roots have sunken deep<br />

in fostering professionalism<br />

and advocacy in the Nigerian<br />

Upstream Oil & Gas Industry.<br />

”<br />

In closing, I would like to say a big thank you to our<br />

sponsors, exhibitors and registered participants, and<br />

particularly to organisations who at our road shows<br />

continue to assure us of their commitment to our<br />

Association. To hear of their assurance at every turn is not<br />

only comforting, but it is also a reflection of how deep<br />

NAPE's roots have sunken in fostering professionalism<br />

and advocacy in the Nigerian Upstream Oil & Gas<br />

Industry.<br />

As you read this edition of NAPE news, I urge you to<br />

remain proud of your membership of this great Association<br />

and your continuing relevance in belonging to this<br />

prestigious profession. Kindly stay committed to being a<br />

solution provider and top contributor at your workplace.<br />

Keep demonstrating ethos & integrity, and continue to<br />

volunteer for NAPE programmes and activities.<br />

Thank you for your time and enjoy your read.<br />

Yours' in Service<br />

Dr. James Edet, FNAPE<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 07


APE, an acronym for “Nigerian Association of<br />

NPetroleum Explorationists” is the largest<br />

professional association of petroleum<br />

geologists and related disciplines in Nigeria and<br />

Africa. Members include geologists, geophysicists,<br />

CEOs, managers, consultants, other professionals,<br />

and students academicians.<br />

NAPE was founded in August 1975 by Akomeno<br />

Oteri.The society which started with only 10 people<br />

attending the inaugural meeting at Federal Palace<br />

Hotel in August 1975 now has 12,535 individual<br />

members and 178 supporting corporate members.<br />

This Association is undeniably the largest Upstream<br />

Oil & Gas professional body for Geoscientists. There<br />

are currently six (6) regional NAPE Chapters in<br />

addition to the Lagos Headquarters (Foundation<br />

Chapter). The NAPE Chapters are located both in and<br />

outside Africa and the Chapters are Abuja, Benin,<br />

Port-Harcourt, UK/Europe, Uyo/Calabar and Warri<br />

Chapters. Each Chapter is headed by a Chapter<br />

Chairman who is a member of the NAPE Executive<br />

Committee.<br />

Our vision and mission statements are “To be the<br />

preferred professional petroleum geosciences<br />

association with a global reach” and “To promote the<br />

study and practice of petroleum geosciences for the<br />

benefit of members and other stakeholders”<br />

BENEFITS OF NAPE MEMBERSHIP<br />

Membership provides a platform to network, promote<br />

and learn about the geological sciences with<br />

emphasis on the exploration of petroleum. NAPE's<br />

mandate is to continuously promote the propagation<br />

and exchange of technical knowledge in Petroleum<br />

Exploration and Production for the overall benefit of<br />

the oil and gas industry. All these culminate to inspire<br />

high professional conduct among its membership.<br />

In its efforts to fulfil its mandate, NAPE works diligently<br />

to become vital to the careers of its members and the<br />

industry it serves by providing access to best<br />

practices, operational experience, lessons learned,<br />

technological innovations and a peep into the future<br />

through our diverse platforms and forums such as our<br />

Annual International Conference & Exhibition (AICE),<br />

Monthly Technical/Business Meetings, subsidized<br />

Short Courses, Workshops, University Assistance<br />

Program, Summer school program, Chapters<br />

Program, Young Professional Presentation series,<br />

Student/Post Graduate Scholarships, etc.<br />

Our Individual and Corporate Members receive a<br />

unique suite of valuable NAPE membership benefits.<br />

Which include but not limited to:<br />

Ÿ Invites to Monthly Technical/Business Meetings<br />

Ÿ Discount on in-house continuing education<br />

courses<br />

Ÿ Discount on NAPE Annual International<br />

Conference & Exhibition<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

Right to publish affiliation with NAPE<br />

Free subscription to NAPE bulletins and<br />

newsletters, etc.<br />

MEMBERSHIP CLASSIFICATION<br />

Membership of this Association consists of the<br />

following classifications:<br />

1. INDIVIDUAL MEMBERSHIP<br />

Ÿ Student Member: Any undergraduate student<br />

majoring in any of the geosciences or petroleum<br />

related sciences at a tertiary institution of an<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

acceptable academic standard. The duration of<br />

such student membership shall not exceed six<br />

years.<br />

Associate Member: Any person not qualified for<br />

any other class of membership who is a graduate<br />

of an educational institution of acceptable<br />

academic standard with major studies related to<br />

or generally associated with geosciences or<br />

petroleum related sciences.<br />

Active Member: Any graduate with a major in any<br />

o f t h e g e o s c i e n c e s o r p e t r o l e u m<br />

related sciences from an educational institution of<br />

an acceptable standard. Prospective Member<br />

may be engaged in or a graduate student in<br />

geosciences or petroleum-related sciences/<br />

exploration/exploitation or currently unemployed<br />

but maintains adequate affinity with the<br />

profession and activities of the Association.<br />

2. CORPORATE MEMBERSHIP<br />

Any Company or institution registered in Nigeria or<br />

elsewhere and engaged in the practice or teaching of<br />

petroleum exploration, exploitation or research<br />

activities either as an operator, service company,<br />

training or financial institution may apply for Corporate<br />

Membership. Such a Company shall not have less<br />

than five (5) employees.<br />

Other special membership status includes<br />

Emeritus: When an Active Member in good standing<br />

in the Association, with all dues paid to date attains the<br />

age of seventy (70) years and shall have been an<br />

Active Member of the Association for at least thirty<br />

(30) years he shall become an Emeritus Member of<br />

this Association upon advising the Head of<br />

Administration of the NAPE Secretariat that he has<br />

passed his seventieth (70th) birthday, and by<br />

requesting such classification of his membership.<br />

Thereafter upon confirmation in writing by the<br />

Executive Committee, he shall be excluded from<br />

membership dues and will qualify for all the rights and<br />

privileges of membership of the Association.<br />

Young Professionals: A Graduate with a major in<br />

any of the geosciences or petroleum related sciences<br />

with 0-10 years post university experience and less<br />

than 35 years of age<br />

FINANCIAL REQUIREMENTS<br />

The Annual Membership fees for <strong>2022</strong> are as follows:<br />

Individual<br />

Membership<br />

Corporate<br />

Membership<br />

Further enquiries can be directed to the NAPE Membership Officer, see contact details;<br />

Abieyuwa Ogbebor;<br />

Technical - Membership Officer<br />

Tel: +234 (0)8030432784, +234 (0)9092143198<br />

Email: abieyuwa.o@nape.org.ng<br />

Application<br />

Fee ( N)<br />

Registration<br />

Fee ( N)<br />

Student 2,000<br />

Associate 1,000<br />

3,000<br />

12,000<br />

Active<br />

1,000<br />

3,000<br />

12,000<br />

10,000<br />

NAPE AWARDS<br />

Fellows: The NAPE Fellowship Award honor NAPE<br />

members who have distinguished themselves by their<br />

long-term service and commitment to advancing the<br />

science, practice and profession of petroleum<br />

geology and to the Nigerian Association of Petroleum<br />

Explorationists (NAPE).<br />

Aret Adams: This Award is named in honour of the<br />

Late Chief Aretanekhai (Aret) Godwin Adams and his<br />

commitment to excellence, is the highest award<br />

bestowed by NAPE. It is given to deserving Earth<br />

Scientists of any nationality, in recognition of<br />

distinguished and outstanding contributions to, or<br />

achievements in the sciences and practice of<br />

petroleum exploration and exploitation in Nigeria for a<br />

continuous period of 15 years or more.<br />

Honorary Members: This Award honors nonmembers<br />

who by their profession, position/office,<br />

career or business have had a significant and<br />

positive, impact on the affairs of NAPE and the<br />

Nigerian Oil & Gas industry at large. He or she does<br />

not have to be a professional in the Oil & Gas industry.<br />

Ben Osuno: The NAPE Ben Osuno Pioneering<br />

Excellence Award recognizes and celebrates<br />

excellence and outstanding contributions by<br />

individuals or groups in pioneering activities in the<br />

field of the earth sciences in general and the Nigerian<br />

Oil and Gas industry.<br />

Young Professionals: The NAPE Outstanding YP<br />

Service Award honor NAPE members who are under<br />

the age of 35 and have distinguished themselves by<br />

their long-term service and commitment to advancing<br />

the science, practice and profession of petroleum<br />

geoscience and NAPE.<br />

More details available in the NAPE constitution:<br />

Please pay membership dues to:<br />

United Bank for Africa (UBA) PLC.<br />

Account No: 1005158666<br />

Account Name: Nigerian Association of Petroleum<br />

Explorationists<br />

30,000<br />

Annual Dues ( N)<br />

50,000<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 08


NEW MEMBERSHIP LIST<br />

JUNE <strong>2022</strong> - SEPTEMBER <strong>2022</strong><br />

NEW ACTIVE MEMBERSHIP<br />

NEW STUDENT MEMBERSHIP<br />

MEMBERSHIP<br />

STATUS<br />

NAME<br />

(SURNAME FIRST)<br />

MEMBERSHIP<br />

STATUS<br />

NAME<br />

(SURNAME FIRST)<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

ACTIVE<br />

Cliff-Ekubo Woyinpreye Cathy<br />

Maduakor Edmund Chidubem<br />

Imuzeze Omomere<br />

Ukpong Idara michael<br />

Ekundayo Ropo Ibrahim<br />

Adeniran Ayodeji James<br />

ELISHA JAMES AKINOLA<br />

Ekom Joseph Clement<br />

Oyegwa Akomeno<br />

Gbadegesin Hammed Sijuade<br />

Akintoye Nwakaego<br />

Achukwu-Ononye Onyema Uchenna<br />

Giwa Aisha Abisola<br />

Idehen Igbinigie Philip<br />

STUDENT Ogunkunle Oluwaferanmi Elisha<br />

STUDENT Lawal Rumeizah Oyinade<br />

STUDENT Salawu Kehinde Robiah<br />

STUDENT Ajasa Sheriff Olatunji<br />

STUDENT Awolaja Mary Anumofe<br />

STUDENT Ajumobi Olashile Balqees<br />

STUDENT Shittu Roheemat Ikeoluwa<br />

STUDENT Adeapin Oyindamola Precious<br />

STUDENT ATOKI ANUOLUWAPO BLESSING<br />

STUDENT Oluwagbenga Joshua Prince<br />

STUDENT Fadeyi Kehinde Samso<br />

STUDENT Akpan Victor<br />

STUDENT Olapade Moses Oladayo<br />

STUDENT Joseph-Odebunmi Joshua Olaleke<br />

STUDENT Chukwuemeka Hapuruchukwu Doreen<br />

STUDENT Agunbiade Tolugbemi Osinachi<br />

STUDENT Olaitan Oluwasemilore Daniel<br />

STUDENT Olufemi Oluwatobiloba Christiana<br />

STUDENT Osinaya Temitayo Augustine<br />

STUDENT EGO UDUOGHENE CYRUS<br />

STUDENT Ezealuma Nneoma Anne<br />

STUDENT Olulade Timilehin Emmanuel<br />

STUDENT Odewale Paul Oluwaloni<br />

STUDENT Ismail Aminullahi Olamide<br />

STUDENT Olaleye Idayat Eniola<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 09


NIGERIAN OIL & GAS<br />

INDUSTRY REPORT<br />

A REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES IN THE<br />

NIGERIAN OIL & GAS SPACE<br />

COURTESY AFRICAN OIL + GAS REPORT<br />

WAEL SAWAN TAKES HOLD AT<br />

SHELL, AS BEN VAN BEURDEN<br />

STEPS DOWN<br />

UK oil major Shell has announced that<br />

Ben van Beurden will step down as<br />

Chief Executive Officer (CEO) at the<br />

end of <strong>2022</strong>, and that his successor will<br />

be Wael Sawan.<br />

Sawan's appointment is effective<br />

January 1, 2023, when he will also join<br />

Shell's Board of Directors.<br />

Ben van Beurden will continue working<br />

as adviser to the Board until June 30,<br />

2023, after which he will leave the<br />

group.<br />

The incoming CEO is currently the<br />

Director Integrated Gas, Renewables<br />

and Energy Solutions, and was<br />

previously the Director Upstream. He is<br />

based in The Hague and has been a<br />

m e m b e r o f S h e l l ' s E x e c u t i v e<br />

Committee (EC) for three years. Prior to<br />

joining EC, he was the Executive Vice<br />

President Deepwater and a member of<br />

the Upstream Leadership Team, and<br />

Executive Vice President Qatar and a<br />

member of the Integrated Gas<br />

Leadership Team.<br />

"Ben can look back with great pride on<br />

an extraordinary 39-year Shell career<br />

culminating in nine years as an<br />

exceptional CEO.", says Andrew<br />

Mackenzie, the company's nonexecutive<br />

Chairman, "During the last<br />

decade, he has been in the vanguard for<br />

the transition of Shell to a net-zero<br />

emissions energy business by 2050<br />

and has become a leading industry<br />

voice on some of the most important<br />

issues affecting society He leaves a<br />

financially strong and profitable<br />

company with a robust balance sheet,<br />

very strong cash generation capability<br />

and a compelling set of options for<br />

growth. These were all enabled by bold<br />

moves he has led, including the 2016<br />

a c q u i s i t i o n o f B G a n d t h e<br />

transformational $30Billion divestment<br />

of non-core assets that followed. He<br />

took firm, decisive action to marshal the<br />

company through the global pandemic,<br />

seizing the opportunity for a major reset<br />

to ensure we emerged fitter, stronger<br />

and equipped to succeed in the energy<br />

transition. Powering Progress, Shell's<br />

detailed strategy to accelerate our<br />

profitable transition to a net zero<br />

emissions energy business by 2050,<br />

was unveiled in February 2021 and was<br />

quickly followed by moves to simplify<br />

both our organisational and share<br />

structures. Ben's legacy will frame<br />

Shell's success for decades to come.”<br />

WAEL SAWAN HAS WORKED IN<br />

EUROPE, Africa, Asia and the Americas<br />

during his 25-year Shell career, and has<br />

also held roles in Downstream Retail,<br />

and in various commercial and New<br />

Business Development projects. Wael<br />

was born in Beirut, Lebanon, and is a<br />

dual Lebanese-Canadian national. He<br />

grew up in Dubai and holds a Master's<br />

degree in Chemical Engineering from<br />

McGill University in Montreal and an<br />

MBA from Harvard Business School. He<br />

is married to Nicole and they have three<br />

sons.<br />

CHEVRON APPOINTS NIGERIAN<br />

ENGINEER AS CEO OF ITS CHINA<br />

BUSINESS UNIT<br />

American oil major Chevron Corp. has<br />

appointed Segun Kuteyi as Managing<br />

Director at Chevron China Business<br />

Unit.<br />

He will lead Chevron's value chain<br />

business strategies in the world's<br />

second largest economy.<br />

As the President of Chevron China<br />

Energy Company (CCEC) Pte. Ltd. and<br />

Unocal East China Sea Ltd (UECSL),<br />

Kuteyi will navigate the company's<br />

partnerships with all stakeholders in the<br />

south east Asian country.<br />

UECSL has a contract with China<br />

National Petroleum Corporation<br />

(CNPC) for natural gas development<br />

and production in Chuandongbei Block<br />

in the Sichuan Basin in southwestern<br />

China. CCEC works with partners to<br />

develop offshore energy resources in<br />

the South China Sea and in Bohai Bay<br />

"Operating under Chevron (China)<br />

Investment Co., Ltd and Chevron Hong<br />

Kong Limited, ChevronR and Caltex®<br />

brands have become an established<br />

marketer of lubricants and fuels<br />

products in China", the company says<br />

on its website. Kuteyi will have oversight<br />

of these portfolios.<br />

A 1 9 9 3 g r a d u a t e o f C h e m i c a l<br />

Engineering from the Obafemi Awolowo<br />

University in Nigeria's south west,<br />

Kuteyi has had executive education at<br />

Rice University, Harvard Law School<br />

and SMU Cox School of Business.<br />

He joined Chevron as a process<br />

engineer on the Escravos Gas Plant<br />

(EGP) in 1996, He has moved up the<br />

r u n g s i n r o l e s w i t h i n c r e a s i n g<br />

responsibility across the value chain,<br />

including stints in Facilities/Project<br />

engineering, Terminal engineering,<br />

Asset Management. Strategy &<br />

Business Planning, Downstream Gas<br />

Operations and Pipeline & Power.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 10


NIGERIAN OIL & GAS<br />

INDUSTRY REPORT<br />

A REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES IN THE<br />

NIGERIAN OIL & GAS SPACE<br />

COURTESY AFRICAN OIL + GAS REPORT<br />

Kuteyi's career breakthrough came in<br />

2011, with the promotion to Project<br />

Manager for EGP3B, a crucial position<br />

that superintends Chevron Nigeria's<br />

600Million standard cubic feet per day<br />

capacity plant, in which a significant<br />

fraction of gas delivered in Nigeria's<br />

domestic market is processed. Kuteyi is<br />

going to China from Houston, Texas,<br />

where he was part of the Chevron<br />

Pipeline & Power team.<br />

SEPLAT/EXXONMOBIL D EAL:<br />

INTRA GOVERNMENT PUBLIC SPAT<br />

PROJECTS POOR OPTICS FOR<br />

INVESTMENT<br />

The public exhibition of disagreement<br />

between various agencies of the<br />

N i g e r i a n g o v e r n m e n t o v e r t h e<br />

ExxonMobil/Seplat Energy share<br />

acquisition reinforces a troubling image<br />

for the country's investment climate.<br />

In the space of three hours, three press<br />

releases had gone out to the media, two<br />

of them declaring that ministerial<br />

consent had been granted and one<br />

clearly saying 'no' with some ambiguity.<br />

In the afternoon of August 8, <strong>2022</strong>, a<br />

press statement by the media aide to<br />

P r e s i d e n t M u h a m m a d u B u h a r i<br />

declared that the president, as Minister<br />

o f P e t r o l e u m R e s o u r c e s , h a d<br />

"consented to the acquisition of<br />

ExxonMobil shares in the United States<br />

of America by Seplat Energy Offshore<br />

Limited".<br />

That statement, coming from the office<br />

of the highest office in the land, seemed<br />

so sacrosanct that industry watchers<br />

were declaring victory for orderly exit of<br />

International Oil Companies from the<br />

Nigerian E&P sector.<br />

A ministerial consent for E&P asset<br />

sale, delivered in six months, would be<br />

one of the fastest in Nigeria's recent<br />

history.<br />

The content of the statement from the<br />

Presidency was the core material in the<br />

news stories by global news agencies<br />

Bloomberg and Reuters.<br />

Seplat Energy's external affairs<br />

directorate corroborated the Presidency<br />

statement, but in what must be seen as<br />

an important data point, the company's<br />

statement declared it had received "a<br />

letter from the Honourable Minister of<br />

State for Petroleum Resources notifying<br />

Seplat Energy that His Excellency,<br />

President Muhammadu Buhari has<br />

graciously approved that Ministerial<br />

Consent be granted to Seplat Energy<br />

Offshore Limited's cash acquisition of<br />

the entire share capital of Mobil<br />

Producing Nigeria Unlimited from its<br />

shareholders, Mobil Development<br />

Nigeria Inc and Mobil Exploration<br />

Nigeria Inc, being entities of Exxon<br />

Mobil Corporation registered in<br />

Delaware, USA (ExxonMobil). There<br />

had been a statement from the<br />

presidency and a letter from the Minister<br />

of State for Petroleum.<br />

But just about the close of business, the<br />

N i g e r i a n U p s t r e a m P e t r o l e u m<br />

Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) sent<br />

o u t a s t a t e m e n t t h a t a t o n c e<br />

contradicted those from the Presidency<br />

and the Minister of State but left open,<br />

doubts as to the conclusion of the<br />

transaction. "The Chief Executive of the<br />

NUPRC Engr. Gbenga Komolafe<br />

clarified that the Commission in line with<br />

the provisions of the Petroleum Industry<br />

Act 2021 is the sole regulator in dealing<br />

with such matters in the Nigerian<br />

upstream sector", the Commission<br />

stated, adding, "the issue at stake is<br />

purely a regulatory matter and the<br />

Commission had earlier communicated<br />

the decline of Ministerial assent to<br />

ExxonMobil in this regard. As such the<br />

Commission further affirms that the<br />

status quo remains"..<br />

Even as the Commission talked of<br />

commitment "to ensuring predictable<br />

and conducive regulatory environment<br />

at all times in the Nigerian upstream<br />

sector", it is hard for anyone to read its<br />

statement, check with the others, and<br />

conclude that this is a "predictable<br />

regulatory environment".<br />

PANORO FINALLY EXITS NIGERIA<br />

Three years after it first announced a<br />

deal to sell all its Nigerian assets,<br />

Panoro ASA has finally got it done. The<br />

Norwegian minnow has completed the<br />

sale of its fully owned subsidiaries Pan-<br />

Petroleum Services Holdings BV and<br />

Pan-Petroleum Nigeria Holding BV to<br />

PetroNor E&P ASA for an upfront<br />

consideration of $10Million plus a<br />

contingent consideration of up to<br />

$16.67 Million based on future gas<br />

production volumes.<br />

The Divested Subsidiaries hold 100% of<br />

the shares in Pan-Petroleum Aje<br />

Limited ("Pan Aje"), which participates<br />

in the exploration for and production of<br />

hydrocarbons in Nigeria and holds a<br />

6.502% participating interest, with a<br />

16.255% cost bearing interest,<br />

representing an economic interest of<br />

12.1913% in Offshore Mining Lease no.<br />

113 (OML 113). Following completion of<br />

the Transaction Panoro has no<br />

operational presence remaining in<br />

Nigeria.<br />

"The upfront consideration of $10Million<br />

is expected to the paid within fifteen<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 11


NIGERIAN OIL & GAS<br />

INDUSTRY REPORT<br />

A REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES IN THE<br />

NIGERIAN OIL & GAS SPACE<br />

COURTESY AFRICAN OIL + GAS REPORT<br />

business days via the allotment and<br />

issue of 96,577,537 new PetroNor<br />

shares", the company explains in a<br />

release. "The volume of PetroNor<br />

shares issued to Panoro has been<br />

determined with reference to the<br />

contractually determined 30-day<br />

volume weighted average price (VWAP)<br />

of PetroNor's shares which are listed on<br />

the Oslo Børs with the Ticker "PNOR”.<br />

Once the Consideration Shares are<br />

issued and received, Panoro will<br />

implement steps to distribute these new<br />

P e t r o N o r s h a r e s t o P a n o r o<br />

shareholders as a dividend in specie.<br />

Panoro will communicate separately in<br />

due course the timetable for this<br />

process and key dates<br />

Following receipt of the Consideration<br />

Shares, Panoro will temporarily hold a<br />

6.78% shareholding with voting rights in<br />

PetroNor, until such Consideration<br />

Shares are distributed in specie to<br />

Panoro shareholders.<br />

37 ENTITIES GET LICENCES TO<br />

START OPERATING MARGINAL<br />

FIELDS IN NIGERIA<br />

Nigeria has awarded Petroleum<br />

Prospecting Licences (PPLs) for 37<br />

undeveloped discoveries (aka marginal<br />

fields) in the country's prolific Niger<br />

Delta Basin.<br />

At a glittering ceremony witnessed by<br />

over 300 guests in Abuja, the country's<br />

political capital, 37 of the 57 oil and gas<br />

fields offered in a bid round launched<br />

two years ago were issued with the<br />

PPLs, having satisfied all conditions for<br />

award.<br />

As of the date of the ceremony on June<br />

28, <strong>2022</strong>, 41 fields had been fully paid<br />

for, but four of those fields are having<br />

one challenge or the other in terms of<br />

partner relationships for the fields'<br />

development.<br />

Each of the 57 fields on offer was<br />

provisionally awarded to more than one<br />

company and each group of "potential<br />

awardees" were meant to set up a<br />

Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV), some<br />

incorporated joint venture (IJV) that will<br />

then operate the fields.<br />

The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum<br />

Regulatory Commission NUPRC, which<br />

is superintending the award exercise,<br />

has said that those who had not paid<br />

signature bonus as of February <strong>2022</strong><br />

were deemed to have been disqualified.<br />

As 41 fields have been duly paid for,<br />

there are 16 fields that are still open, in<br />

varying degrees, for awards.<br />

Timipre Sylva, Nigeria's Minister of<br />

State for Petroleum, gushed with pride<br />

as he spoke at the ceremony. "The<br />

implementation of the Petroleum<br />

Industry Act (PIA 2021) is in top gear, he<br />

d e c l a r e d , r e f e r e n c i n g t h e n e w<br />

petroleum regulation that governs the<br />

industry. "Consequently, the new<br />

awardees should note that their assets<br />

will be fully governed by the provisions<br />

of the PIA 2021".<br />

Mr. Sylva told the awardees to ensure<br />

that good oilfield practice is employed,<br />

environmental considerations and<br />

community stakeholders' management<br />

are not neglected", as they develop their<br />

assets. "It is my strong belief that the<br />

awardees would take advantage of the<br />

current attractive oil prices to bring<br />

these fields into full production within a<br />

short period to increase production,<br />

grow reserves and reduce cost of<br />

production.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 12


Nigerian Geoscience Education: The impact<br />

of ASUU Strikes and Data Accessibility for<br />

Research and Development<br />

A common feature in the Nigerian Universities' ecosystem are recurring strike actions by the Academic Staff Union of Universities<br />

(ASUU) and the challenge of access to data for geoscience students to carry out research.<br />

ASUU strikes date back to 1973 under the umbrella of the Nigerian Association of University Teachers (NAUT) (Figure 1). The<br />

formation of ASUU from NAUT five years later (in 1978), still didn't bring a halt to the strike actions as the newly created union also<br />

embarked on a nationwide strike in 1980.<br />

As a result of the strike action in 1988 by the union to obtain fair wages and university autonomy, ASUU was proscribed on 7th of<br />

August 1988 with all of its property seized. It was allowed to resume in 1990, but was banned after another strike action on 23rd of<br />

August 1992.<br />

All of these were resolved on 3rd of <strong>September</strong> 1992, when an agreement that met several of the union's demands including the right<br />

of workers to collective bargaining was reached.<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

Some students on graduation and after completing the<br />

mandatory national youth service scheme ended up not<br />

meeting prospective employers' entry age criterion.<br />

Possibility of some students engaging in delinquent<br />

activities by being idle during the period of the strike<br />

action.<br />

Risk of loss of life or injury in the course of violence that<br />

may ensue during protests for or against the strike<br />

actions by students or during the intervention of security<br />

agencies.<br />

Another common challenge faced by geoscience students in<br />

Nigerian universities is the bottleneck faced with accessing<br />

industry data to aid academic research or unavailability of these<br />

data, which may sometimes result in the data not being<br />

accessible to students for the intended research purpose.<br />

The importance or relevance of geoscientific data for research<br />

by geoscience students cannot be overemphasized. In addition<br />

to the conventional studies and interpretation of specific regions<br />

of the earth that can be carried out with this dataset, they can<br />

also be applied in training, machine learning/artificial<br />

intelligence algorithms or models for improvement of these<br />

models, hence, resulting in the advancement of geoscience<br />

studies in Nigeria.<br />

Figure 1. Calendar of ASUU strikes since inception till 2020.<br />

The various strike actions embarked on by the union have been<br />

due to the Federal Government's refusal to uphold their part of<br />

the agreement reached and signed by both parties. This has left<br />

students of the concerned universities on the receiving end of<br />

the tussle between the federal government and ASUU,<br />

resulting in and not limited to these;<br />

Ÿ Period of hiatus in the schools' calendar until the strikes<br />

were called off.<br />

Ÿ<br />

Extension of years of study for students.<br />

For oil and gas industry related data (which has the most<br />

structured data repository in the country), the issue lies with the<br />

processes involved in making these data available to the<br />

students; whereas, other geoscience related fields (such as<br />

hydrogeology, geochemistry, petrology, marine geology, etc.)<br />

suffer from lack of a structured data repository to make these<br />

data available for geoscience studies and advancement.<br />

Hence, it is important that structured data repositories in the<br />

various fields of geoscience are put in place, as well as debottle<br />

necking the process of making these data available to students<br />

and academics for research and development purpose.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 13


NAPE Technical Team Review<br />

On ‘Natural Gas- induced<br />

Fire Outbreak’ At<br />

Caritas University<br />

INTRODUCTION<br />

This report is based on site observation and rst-hand information from the Deputy Vice Chancellor(DVC)<br />

of Caritas University, Enugu.<br />

The natural gas-induced re incident occurre data water borehole drilling site at Caritas University, Amorji<br />

Nike, Enugu East Local Government Area, Enugu State.<br />

The Natural Gas-induced Fire Incident started on Wednesday, 25th of May, <strong>2022</strong> and the re has been<br />

on till the time of this report - June 02, <strong>2022</strong>.<br />

Based on the pre-drilling geophysical survey for Water Borehole at Caritas University, the contractor<br />

was expected to drill to a depth of 350m.<br />

Drilling Site<br />

Location Map of Caritas University, Enugu, Nigeria<br />

La tude N 06° 30 I 27 II ;<br />

Longitude E 007° 34 I 59 II,<br />

The borehole drilling actually progressed from the<br />

surface but at the depth of 290m (approx. 1,000 ft), an<br />

artesian reservoir was encountered which led to the<br />

outow of water under pressure.<br />

In like manner, the drillers suspected natural gas<br />

(based on the odour) owing out along with the water.<br />

Environmental<br />

Impact and<br />

Mitigation<br />

The re incident was triggered by an individual on site<br />

who tried to conrm the natural gas by igniting it. As a<br />

result, the individual sustained injury (face burnt, etc.)<br />

and was hospitalized.<br />

At the borehole site, it was observed that highpressured<br />

steam (water) was gushing out on one side<br />

of the borehole while gas re was blazing from the<br />

same hole.<br />

Several government agencies, professional Bodies and<br />

the state governor have visited the site of the incident.<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

S e v e r a l a t t e m p t s<br />

have been made by<br />

s o m e e m e r g e n c y<br />

m a n a g e m e n t<br />

personnel to extinguish the Fire and clear the Site.<br />

Some emergency measures carried out include the deploy<br />

ment of Federal and State Fire service men to extinguish the<br />

burning flame but they could not arrest the situation.<br />

A bull dozer was also brought in to clear the site for easy<br />

access.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 14


LIMITATIONS<br />

There were no measures on the rig site to<br />

handle a case of natural gas outow and no kill<br />

mud or facility for well control.<br />

The entire drilling string was pulled out of hole<br />

and the rig moved from the borehole location.<br />

There was no possibility to run in hole, with the<br />

heavy gas thrust due to overpressure.<br />

No ditch-cutting sample or uid sample has<br />

been provided for laboratory tests<br />

Inferences were based on the knowledge of<br />

the Regional Geology of the underlying<br />

formations in Enugu and it environs.<br />

Subsurface Geology of the Area<br />

From the geometry of the basin, the wellbore is located at the eastern flank, penetrating through thin packages of<br />

the Campanian and Pre-Santonian Sediments.<br />

Correlation of the Wells in the Environs<br />

(A er Onuoha and Dim, 2017)<br />

The interval of occurrence of the Natural gas at Caritas University is correlatable with that of Anambra River-1 that shows<br />

hydrocarbon presence at depth1, 200m and could be matched with near by Amansiodo-1 well.<br />

Correlation of the Wells in the Environs<br />

Therefore, the well penetrated the basal part of the<br />

Anambra Basin and probably part of the upper Agwu<br />

Formation in the Southern Benue Trough.<br />

A er Onuoha and Dim, 2017<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 15


Possible location of Caritas<br />

University Well Bore<br />

(A er Onuoha and Dim, 2017)<br />

Conceptual Depositional Model/Schematic Cross-section<br />

MITIGATION: Short-term<br />

Short term (3 days to 1 Week):<br />

Construction of a temporarily gas diverter, with a shut-in valve<br />

leading to a gas-lift hose.<br />

Once shut-in only for seconds, the ame will go out without oxygen,<br />

then the valve is immediately opened before gas build-up, then<br />

vented or tapped by mobile gas tankers. This can be constructed in<br />

Enugu<br />

Note that the increasing height of gas ow (as would be simulated<br />

in a well test, suggest increased downhole connectivity /<br />

overpressure and relatively major source)<br />

MITIGATION: Middle-term<br />

Middle-term (2 Week to 1 month):<br />

If the situation does not abate after 1 Week<br />

Quick Shallow Seismic acquisition and Processing (approximately 1000m depth)<br />

extending further away to look ahead laterally and vertically, to verify the structure and<br />

source of leak, which is possibly: Shallow Gas Pocket, Fractured/Coal Seam Methane,<br />

or Reservoir Gas.<br />

The type of gas (most likely methane) was not ascertained before the ame, and may<br />

be ascertained after ame is controlled using the diverter.<br />

Note that the increasing radius of ow gives an inference in the nature of the upper<br />

layer, suggesting weak upper cover and forced shut-in may lead to more problems.<br />

Measures currently being used, such as re service water hose, sand ll, etc., will not<br />

extinguish the re.<br />

Disclaimer: This is a quick look based on notes taken at site and reported as an initial mitigation proposal in the emergency.<br />

Orientations, azimuth and dips were estimated for situating an offset relief well, and benchmarks used.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 16


MITIGATION: Short-, Middle- and Long-term<br />

The afore-mentioned suggestions are<br />

emergency assistance measures, which<br />

may be carried out in close consultation<br />

with the stakeholders viz:- government<br />

regulatory bodies, relevant industries and<br />

local authorities.<br />

Summary<br />

The incident occurred on Wednesday, 25 th of May, <strong>2022</strong> at a water borehole drilling site at Caritas<br />

University, Amorji Nike, Enugu, East Local Government Area Enugu State At the depth of 290m (approx.<br />

1,000 ft), an artesian reservoir was encountered which led to the outow of water under pressure.<br />

The re incident was triggered by an individual on site who tried to conrm the natural gas by igniting it.<br />

Hence, the incident is a case of Natural Gas-Induced Fire outbreak associated with high pressure<br />

artesian water outow from a water borehole.<br />

The geometry of the basin indicated that the wellbore is located at the eastern ank and penetrated<br />

thin packages of the Campanian and Pre-Santonian Sediments. Hence, the well penetrated the basal<br />

part of the Anambra Basin and probably penetrated the Upper Part of the Agwu Formation in the<br />

Southern Benue Trough.<br />

The natural gas could be from either of the following sources: Shallow Gas Pocket, Fractured/Coal<br />

Seam Methane or Reservoir Gas at the boundary of the Southern Benue Trough and Anambra Basin.<br />

In retrospect, unveried information has it that similar occurrence was recorded many years ago while<br />

drilling in search for petroleum at the agricultural settlement in Ugwuoba, Enugu State. The blowout<br />

lasted for about three months but the well was corked and the blazing ame was eventually stopped.<br />

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS<br />

NAPE Awka-Owerri Chapter for the data capture and onsite report.<br />

NAPE Editorial Board/Technical Committee for the technical inputs<br />

and support<br />

NAPE for the opportunity to carry out this investigation.<br />

The management of Caritas University, Amorji Nike, Enugu State for<br />

the access to the site and rst-hand information.<br />

.<br />

NAPE Awka-Owerri Chapter Team:<br />

Dr. C. I. Princeton Dim<br />

(AOCC)(Team Lead)<br />

Prof. A. W. Mode FNAPE, FNMGS<br />

Dr. Livinus Nosike<br />

Dr. A. Ifeanyi Oha<br />

Mr. Okonkwo Ikenna<br />

Dr. C. G. Okeugo<br />

Mrs. Ijeoma Umeadi<br />

Dr. Austin Okonkwo<br />

NAPE Technical/Editorial<br />

Committee:<br />

Dr. Chris Asuquo Jackson<br />

(Editor-in-Chief)<br />

Prof. A. Adabanija<br />

Dr. Adekunle Sofolabo<br />

Prof. Taok Adedosu<br />

Mr. Afolabi Fatunmbi<br />

Dr. Lawrence Fadiya<br />

Mr. Kola Fabiyi<br />

Mr. Francis Ezeh<br />

Prof. O. Adekeye<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 17


African Energy Week collaborate<br />

with NAPE<br />

As an official partner for AEW <strong>2022</strong>,<br />

Nigerian Association of Petroleum<br />

Explorationists will help drive<br />

important discussions around how<br />

Africa can modernize oil and gas<br />

upstream operations.<br />

The African Energy Chamber (AEC) is<br />

proud to announce that the Nigerian<br />

A s s o c i a t i o n o f P e t r o l e u m<br />

Explorationists (NAPE) has become<br />

an official partner of the African<br />

Energy Week (AEW) conference and<br />

exhibition, Africa's premier event for<br />

the oil and gas sector which will take<br />

place from 18 – 21 October <strong>2022</strong>, in<br />

Cape Town.<br />

Representing the largest professional<br />

association of petroleum geologists,<br />

geophysicists, Chief Executive<br />

Officers, consultants and academia in<br />

Nigeria – one of Africa's largest<br />

hydrocarbon producers – having<br />

NAPE as an official partner of the<br />

continent's biggest energy event is<br />

critical for shaping discussions around<br />

current trends, challenges and<br />

opportunities across both the Nigerian<br />

and continent's oil and gas upstream<br />

sector.<br />

Since its establishment in 1975, NAPE<br />

has played a critical role in fostering<br />

interaction between Nigerian, African<br />

and international oil and gas<br />

professionals, promoting industry<br />

growth by sharing and encouraging<br />

the adoption of best practices,<br />

business models and standards. With<br />

Nigeria seeking to increase oil and gas<br />

production to address domestic<br />

energy security issues while boosting<br />

the monetization of hydrocarbons to<br />

drive GDP and economic growth,<br />

organizations such as NAPE are<br />

critical for driving local content<br />

development and ensuring innovative<br />

and next-generation end to end<br />

workflow solutions are implemented to<br />

optimize operations across the African<br />

E&P sector.<br />

In this regard, with targets to increase<br />

Nigeria's proven gas reserves from<br />

200 trillion cubic feet (tcf) to 600 tcf for<br />

domestic utilization and export – as<br />

the energy transition intensifies and<br />

the global gas market expands –<br />

organizations such as NAPE will be<br />

k e y , u p - s k i l l i n g t h e d o m e s t i c<br />

workforce and creating a competitive<br />

market in-country.<br />

At AEW <strong>2022</strong>, NAPE representatives<br />

will participate in high-level meetings<br />

and panel discussions to shape<br />

dialogues around how African<br />

c o u n t r i e s c a n a c c e l e r a t e<br />

hydrocarbons exploration and<br />

production, thereby increasing<br />

socioeconomic development while<br />

lifting the over 600 million people<br />

across the continent out of energy<br />

poverty. In addition, with global energy<br />

transition-related policies hindering<br />

the flow of investments required to<br />

optimize oil and gas exploration,<br />

representatives from NAPE are well<br />

positioned to drive AEW <strong>2022</strong><br />

discussions around best practices and<br />

technologies for Africa to attract<br />

i n v e s t m e n t , m a x i m i z e t h e<br />

development of hydrocarbons while<br />

remaining a climate champion.<br />

“The Chamber is honored to partner<br />

with NAPE for AEW <strong>2022</strong>. With the<br />

partnership, conversations during the<br />

event will be centered around<br />

exploration and production, with<br />

insight into how African countries can<br />

improve capacity building and skills<br />

transfer provided. We believe that<br />

drilling more oil and gas wells are key<br />

to ending energy poverty in Africa and<br />

having modern geosciences and<br />

practices is vital for addressing<br />

c h a l l e n g e s a n d k i c k s t a r t i n g<br />

development. This very narrative will<br />

be driven at AEW <strong>2022</strong> with the help of<br />

NAPE,” states NJ Ayuk, the Executive<br />

Chairman of the AEC.<br />

Under the theme, 'Exploring and<br />

Investing in Africa's Energy Future<br />

w h i l e D r i v i n g a n E n a b l i n g<br />

Environment,' AEW <strong>2022</strong> will host<br />

NAPE representatives in various<br />

forums and keynote sessions on how<br />

Africa can modernize its oil and gas<br />

workforce whilst ensuring gender<br />

diversity and inclusivity. As an official<br />

partner of AEW <strong>2022</strong>, NAPE will<br />

shape powerful discussions around<br />

local content development across<br />

Africa's oil and gas sector as well as<br />

effective technical approaches to<br />

addressing industry challenges.<br />

AEW <strong>2022</strong> is the AEC's annual<br />

conference, exhibition and networking<br />

event. AEW <strong>2022</strong> unites African<br />

energy stakeholders with investors<br />

and international partners to drive<br />

industry growth and development and<br />

promote Africa as the destination for<br />

e n e r g y i n v e s t m e n t s . K e y<br />

organizations such as the African<br />

Petroleum Producers Organization,<br />

as well as African heavyweights<br />

including Equatorial Guinea and<br />

Nigeria, have partnered with AEW,<br />

strengthening the role the event will<br />

play in Africa's energy future.<br />

To know more about this conference,<br />

click link below<br />

https://aecweek.com/<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 18


Interview<br />

Dr. Christopher Asuquo<br />

Jackson<br />

Editor-in-chief<br />

1. What publications are run under the<br />

auspices of the Editor in Chief?<br />

Answer:<br />

The Editor-in-Chief (EiC) has general<br />

supervision and final authority on soliciting,<br />

accepting, and rejecting all material on<br />

technical subjects for publication in the<br />

Bulletin or in special publications. As a<br />

result, the publications under the auspices<br />

of the Nigerian Association of Petroleum<br />

Explorationists (NAPE) Editor-in-Chief<br />

include but not limited to the following: -<br />

Ÿ NAPE Bulletin – two editions each year<br />

(First <strong>Edition</strong> in April and Second <strong>Edition</strong><br />

in November).<br />

Ÿ NAPE Petroleum Business Bulletin -<br />

one <strong>Edition</strong> yearly.<br />

Ÿ NAPE Annual International Conference<br />

and Exhibition (AICE) Book of Abstracts<br />

and Conference Proceedings – during<br />

NAPE AICE in November.<br />

Ÿ NAPE Field Trip Handbook/Guide –one<br />

edition yearly.<br />

2. In your role as EIC, you must review a<br />

plethora of articles, papers, and<br />

abstracts. How would you assess the<br />

quality of these presentations and what<br />

kind of Papers would you like to consider<br />

for NAPE Publications?<br />

Answer: -<br />

NAPE memberships cut across Industries<br />

and the Academia. Therefore, NAPE values<br />

knowledge sharing of technical works and<br />

finding from the Energy industry (upstream<br />

oil and gas sector) as well as academic<br />

research from institutions of higher learning<br />

globally.<br />

Given the wide range of professional<br />

backgrounds and experiences that NAPE<br />

members possess, industry-based<br />

professionals frequently submit and present<br />

very high-quality technical works in the<br />

fields of geoscience (geology and<br />

geophysics - G&G), data acquisition,<br />

processing, and interpretation, integration,<br />

and application, as well as research from the<br />

academic world (Professors, Readers, PhD<br />

holders, post-graduate students, and final<br />

year student projects).<br />

To guarantee that only papers of the highest<br />

caliber are accepted for technical<br />

presentation and subsequent NAPE<br />

publications, the Editorial Board/Technical<br />

Programme Committee Chaired by the<br />

NAPE Editor-in-Chief is charged with the<br />

duties of calling for abstracts and papers,<br />

peer review, evaluation and selection,<br />

plagiarism check, and backend QA/QC of<br />

these technical works. Based thereon, the<br />

Technical/Business<br />

Bulle n<br />

Subcommi ee<br />

Indexing/IT<br />

Subcommi ee<br />

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF<br />

(Chairman)<br />

Dr. Christopher Asuquo Jackson<br />

Assistant Editor-in-Chief<br />

Victoria Okorie<br />

Oral<br />

Presenta on<br />

Subcommi ee<br />

kinds of papers I'd like to consider for<br />

NAPE Publications before going through<br />

the scrutiny must include or demonstrate the<br />

following key elements: a brief, concise and<br />

well-structured abstract with keywords,<br />

introductions, materials and methods,<br />

results, discussions, and applications,<br />

S u m m a r y a n d c o n c l u s i o n s ,<br />

recommendations, acknowledgements, and<br />

references. In the same vein, abstracts and<br />

papers are assessed during the peer-review<br />

process based on the logical flow of the<br />

technical content, the uniqueness/novelty of<br />

the study, and relevance to the industry.<br />

3. Innovation and research are often<br />

essential to achieving organizational and<br />

economic growth. Can you highlight<br />

some of the innovative products,<br />

processes, or services you have<br />

introduced as EIC?<br />

Answer: -<br />

In the course of my tenure as EiC, I<br />

s u s t a i n e d d e l i v e r y o n t h e u s u a l<br />

c o n s t i t u t i o n a l a n d c o n v e n t i o n a l<br />

responsibilities of the EB-TP Committee<br />

which includes the following:<br />

Ÿ Timely Call for Abstracts and peerreview<br />

of submitted abstracts / papers<br />

for technical sessions at NAPE AICE<br />

(conference).<br />

Ÿ Issuance of Acceptance letters to<br />

technical paper presenters as well as<br />

Letters of Invitation to judges and<br />

NAPE TECHNICAL PROGRAM<br />

Poster<br />

Presenta on<br />

Subcommi ee<br />

Short<br />

Courses/Summer<br />

School<br />

Subcommi ee<br />

Field Trip<br />

Subcommi ee<br />

Figure 1: NAPE Editorial Board / Technical Programme (EB-TP) Committee Structure<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 19


In like manner, state-of-the-artinnovations<br />

introduced include but not limited to the<br />

following:<br />

Ÿ A yearly Gantt Chart to track timely<br />

delivery of our set goals.<br />

Ÿ Current trends in NAPE Conference<br />

technical presentations include:<br />

Ÿ<br />

§ Sustaining the use of oral<br />

presentation timer software while<br />

addressing any associated<br />

c h a l l e n g e s t h a t m a y a r i s e<br />

proactively.<br />

§ The transition from analogue<br />

poster presentation to digital<br />

electronic Poster presentation on<br />

wideTV screens<br />

§ Introduction of a Standard<br />

template (Design) for both oral and<br />

poster presentations<br />

§ D e v e l o p e d a T e c h n i c a l<br />

Programme Application (App on<br />

Windows, Android, and iOS<br />

devices) that will allow for easy<br />

access to conference activities per<br />

time. This was discontinued and<br />

migrated to the Virtual Conference<br />

Platform during the Covid-19<br />

pandemic<br />

§ Upload of the Book of Abstracts<br />

and other conference activitiesto<br />

the NAPE AICE App but also print<br />

out some hard copies of the Book<br />

of Abstracts<br />

§ Set up of NAPE YP IT Support<br />

team for assistance during NAPE<br />

AICE.<br />

§ Selection of best papers and<br />

poster for Technical Awards and<br />

subsequent publication<br />

The use of emerging technologies in the<br />

21st century (Zoom App) to carry out<br />

parallel Technical Sessions successfully<br />

and seamlessly in the fully virtual NAPE<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

A I C E 2 0 2 0 ( d u r i n g t h e C o v i d - 1 9<br />

pandemic lockdown) - a feat that initially<br />

appeared impossible but was later<br />

executed successfully with applause and<br />

commendation.<br />

Acquisition of a new, authentic and<br />

verifiable ISSN for NAPE Bulletin.<br />

Developed the NAPE Plagiarism Policy<br />

for protection of data confidentiality,<br />

intellectual property, and code of practice<br />

for disciplining defaulters.<br />

Update of the NAPE Editorial Policy that<br />

provides for the standard, format and<br />

structure of NAPE Bulletin and its<br />

contents<br />

QA/QC of the contents of technical<br />

publications.<br />

Ÿ Regular publication of NAPE bulletin –<br />

two editions each year (First <strong>Edition</strong> in<br />

April and Second <strong>Edition</strong> in November);<br />

NAPE Petroleum Business Bulletin - one<br />

E d i t i o n y e a r l y ; N A P E A n n u a l<br />

International Conference and Exhibition<br />

( A I C E ) B o o k o f A b s t r a c t s a n d<br />

Conference Proceedings – during NAPE<br />

AICE in November; NAPE Field Trip<br />

Handbook/Guide – one edition yearly.<br />

Ÿ<br />

A c h i e v e d o n l i n e v i s i b i l i t y a n d<br />

accessibility for papers published in the<br />

NAPE Bulletin by uploading them to the<br />

NAPE Website.<br />

Ÿ Ensuring the recreation of a functional E-<br />

Library with online download capabilities<br />

for the sequential archiving of NAPE<br />

technical materials and Bulletins.<br />

Ÿ Engaging with Elsevier SCOPUS for the<br />

Indexing of NAPE Bulletin in order to<br />

obtain international impart factor rating.<br />

Ÿ Ensured best quality print of NAPE<br />

Ÿ<br />

Ÿ<br />

Bulletins on digitized CTP direct imaging<br />

Co-ordination of Post-Conference<br />

technical sessions Evaluation /<br />

Assessment form for feedback. This was<br />

discontinued at the advent of the<br />

M o n i t o r i n g a n d E v a l u a t i o n<br />

Subcommittee of the NAPE CPC.<br />

Active participation in the drafting of<br />

Conference Themes and Subthemes<br />

with the goal of ensuring the formulation<br />

of pertinent subthemes that represent the<br />

main conference theme and will<br />

accommodate the diverse geoscience<br />

subject areas.<br />

4. What has been the most challenging<br />

part of your role as EIC?<br />

Answer: -<br />

In my role as NAPE EiC, I experienced a few<br />

challenges during the discharge of my<br />

responsibilities viz:<br />

I. Time Constraint: The place of effective<br />

t i m e m a n a g e m e n t c a n n o t b e<br />

overemphasized in the course of balancing<br />

my enormous workload as a paid employee<br />

in my organisation and delivering on my<br />

responsibilities in the office of the NAPE<br />

EIC. In order not to allow one to suffer at the<br />

expense of the other, I had to set deadlines<br />

ahead of the generally expected time of<br />

delivery and thereafter put in quality time to<br />

handle NAPE work at night; then switch to<br />

my office work in the daytime. Usually,<br />

several meetings are fixed for engagements<br />

with the different Technical Subcommittees<br />

to ensure synergy in the work done; these<br />

requires hard work, and sacrifice in terms of<br />

t i m e , e n e r g y a n d r e s o u r c e s . F o r<br />

effectiveness, we leveraged on the available<br />

means of technology to hold virtual<br />

meetings, sharing materials for peer-review<br />

ahead of every meeting, etc.<br />

i i . R e s t r u c t u r i n g o f t h e E B - T P<br />

Committee: Active participation, effective<br />

performance and accountability of<br />

committee members was a major concern.<br />

The plan to change the status quo was<br />

formally discussed in our meetings and the<br />

modalities spelt out accordingly. As a result,<br />

the EB-TP Committee now consists of<br />

enthusiastic, passionate, and committed<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 20


epresentative professionals drawn from the<br />

Energy industry and the academia.<br />

Consequently, performance and results<br />

have been optimal and impressive.<br />

iii. Non-optimal Functioning of the NAPE<br />

E-Library to allow for NAPE Bulletin<br />

Indexing: This was a major challenge faced<br />

during my tenure as EiC. Going down<br />

memory lane, it was advised that NAPE<br />

Bulletins be moved from the NAPE website<br />

to NAPE E-Library.However, for a long time,<br />

the E-Library was not functioning optimally.<br />

Hence, NAPE Bulletins that have been duly<br />

published were not accessible to members.<br />

I had to step-in to engage with the E-Library<br />

Website developer to ensure that the<br />

expected deliverables as contained in the<br />

Award contract were delivered to enable us<br />

to use the URL of the Bulletins among other<br />

requirements to conclude the process of<br />

NAPE Bulletin Indexing. The key delays and<br />

c h a l l e n g e s i n c l u d e i n e f f e c t i v e<br />

Cataloguing/Archiving of the Technical<br />

Contents in the previous NAPE E-<br />

Library;lack of download option; lack of a<br />

handle on the NAPE Website home page for<br />

Article Submission (access/template);lack<br />

of Editorial Policy, Plagiarism Policy, and<br />

Reviewers guideline/Template; No handle<br />

(link) to 'Access Bulletin' on the NAPE<br />

Website home page. However, the good<br />

news is that all these numerous challenges<br />

have been addressed and a new E-Library<br />

Website has been designed, and upload of<br />

Bulletins and other resource materials are<br />

ongoing. Following this E-Library<br />

breakthrough, the EB-TP Committee has<br />

reactivated the engagement with Elsevier<br />

Scopus for the indexing of the NAPE<br />

Bulletin. The plan is to achieve this feat<br />

before NAPE AICE <strong>2022</strong>.<br />

5. What are some of the most important<br />

qualities for an EIC to have?<br />

Answer: -<br />

a. Competence / Experience: subject<br />

matter experts from the industry or<br />

institutions of higher learning with good<br />

understanding based on previous<br />

volunteering or hands-on experience in the<br />

NAPE Editorial Board or in a similar role.<br />

This will aid swift decision making, setting of<br />

SMART Goals, and effective tracking of<br />

results.<br />

b. Passion/Diligence: - Given that the<br />

office of the EiC is a volunteer role, an EiC<br />

must be a professional with powerful or<br />

compelling emotion and drive borne out of<br />

love for technical service to NAPE and<br />

Editorial responsibilities.<br />

c. Availability: This is a very important<br />

quality that is key in selecting an EiC. S/he<br />

should be someone that has time, will make<br />

time and be available to carry out the tedious<br />

responsibilities that the office demands.<br />

From my experience, no matter how highly<br />

experienced and passionate a member of<br />

NAPE may be, if S/he will not have adequate<br />

time at his or her disposal, then such a<br />

person is not qualified for the office of NAPE<br />

Editor-in-Chief.<br />

d. Human Relations/Human Capital<br />

Management: The NAPE Editorial<br />

Board/Technical Programme Committee is<br />

arguably the largest committee of NAPE in<br />

terms of membership and direct interface<br />

with NAPE members. This is a committee<br />

with membership and volunteers in some<br />

hundreds of high-profile professionals of<br />

NAPE viz: captains of the oil and gas<br />

industries, managers, subject matter<br />

experts, a great number of professors and<br />

Doctors drawn from universities studying<br />

G e o s c i e n c e c o u r s e s l o c a l l y a n d<br />

internationally. These volunteers serve as<br />

Editors, Associate Editors, Session Chairs,<br />

Judges in IT Support/QA/CQ, Short<br />

Courses/Summer Schools, Field Trip, etc<br />

Subcommittees. The act of getting people<br />

together to accomplish desired goals and<br />

objectives is imperative. As a result, an EiC<br />

must be very good in human relations,<br />

e f f e c t i v e c o m m u n i c a t i o n s k i l l s ,<br />

understanding of human psychology and<br />

human capital management in order to chair<br />

and manage such high profile individuals,<br />

delegate responsibilities and action items,<br />

encourage and motivate, take feedback,<br />

mutual respect, track results in a timely<br />

fashion and close out on expected<br />

deliverables per time; focus on policies,<br />

structure and systems to drive and<br />

maximize performance; have the capacity<br />

to develop talent, deploy talent, and<br />

generate results. In doing these, the EiC is<br />

t o u p h o l d a “ N o h a r a s s m e n t o r<br />

discrimination policy”. This helps in<br />

succession planning.<br />

e. Interested in high Standard and<br />

Quality: NAPE members deserve the best.<br />

Therefore, an EiC must be tech-savvy with<br />

high value placed on excellent quality of<br />

contents, graphic design, and printing.<br />

f. Result Oriented:- To qualify as NAPE,<br />

EiC one must have the ability to ensure that<br />

processes are followed through to<br />

successful delivery of set goals without<br />

excuses for failure.<br />

Dr. Chris Jackson at NAPE AICE 2021 Best Papers<br />

and Poster Winners<br />

Dr. Chris Jackson listening to a poster presentation<br />

at 2021 NAPE Conference<br />

Dr. Chris Jackson at NAPE/NMGS 2021 Student Confernce<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 21


Interview<br />

Victoria Okorie<br />

Assistant Editor-in-chief<br />

association. This support is evident in our<br />

sojourn in this space, even after three years<br />

and counting. However, it goes without<br />

stating the obvious; that this unhackneyed<br />

resource is yet to have its potentials fully<br />

harnessed as sponsorship remains the<br />

bedrock and gap-filler to the technological<br />

attainment of our set goal of disseminating<br />

knowledge, expertise and practical field<br />

skillsets to our dear members and<br />

associates.<br />

1. What is the role of the Assistant Editor<br />

of NAPE?<br />

As stipulated in the NAPE constitution, the<br />

role of the<br />

Assistant Editor of NAPE is tied to the<br />

following, amongst others:<br />

I) Coordinating of annual geological field<br />

trips.<br />

ii) Active membership and participation<br />

on the editorial board both for NAPE<br />

publications – NAPE News, bulletin<br />

etc.<br />

iii) Coordinating of technical short<br />

iv)<br />

courses and summer schools.<br />

Assisting role-playing with the Editorin-Chief.<br />

v) C o m m u t i n g t o r o l e s a n d<br />

responsibilities as assigned by the<br />

president and executive committee.<br />

2. The COVID - 19 pandemic and the<br />

social distancing protocol necessitated<br />

the introduction of the concept of Virtual<br />

Field trips to NAPE's AICE. What were<br />

the challenges and benefits of adopting<br />

this innovation?<br />

The idea of a virtual field was birthed, not<br />

only to address the global pandemic at the<br />

time, but to leverage evolving technology,<br />

especially to assumingly inaccessible<br />

terrains and to arrest security concerns. As<br />

novel and futuristic as this was, the passion<br />

demonstrated by all members of the<br />

unveiling team was the needed catalyst.<br />

Nevertheless, as with any change, financial<br />

constraints continue to have a firm grip on<br />

this priceless jewel despite the leadership<br />

attention and support enjoyed by the<br />

3. How well has the concept of virtual<br />

field trips been received by members of<br />

NAPE in particular and the oil and gas<br />

community in general?<br />

This year would be our third year, running<br />

this program and the responses and<br />

feedback has been enormous. Last year, it<br />

ranked #1 on the list of top achievements by<br />

the association, following a survey<br />

conducted. However, with the potential of<br />

what this can do for association and the<br />

world of geology, we think, it could and<br />

should be given more attention.<br />

4. Does NAPE possess bespoke or<br />

requisite technology to carry out virtual<br />

field trips?<br />

NAPE is a technical and leading geological<br />

association not just in Nigeria but the whole<br />

of Africa. Our association embraces<br />

evolving technology in almost all facets of its<br />

dealings. We believe the association has<br />

what it takes to project this glass-ceiling<br />

breaking program and we stay hopeful that<br />

in no distant time, an uprise of its potential<br />

will be harnessed.<br />

5. Are you collaborating or considering<br />

collaborating with other professional<br />

Associations?<br />

We have had and continue to have in house<br />

discussions around this and we stay open to<br />

such constructive collaborations with other<br />

professional bodies both within and outside<br />

the continent.<br />

6. What would you describe as the<br />

highlights of your tenure as Assistant<br />

Editor ?<br />

Prior to embarking on this journey, l<br />

understudied the technical and socialnetworking<br />

needs of the association and<br />

being an individual with a growth mindset, l<br />

had envisioned this kickoff, amongst others.<br />

To make it even better, l was privileged to<br />

work with the best of teams. This enabled<br />

the recorded successes to date. Now, if l<br />

were to pick, l would place the virtual field<br />

trip, top on my list. Other achievements l feel<br />

very humbly proud of, were the quarterlyorganized<br />

technical sessions, summer<br />

schools, pre-conference short courses, and<br />

of course, the most-celebrated social event;<br />

the African Night.<br />

I feel very honoured to have been given the<br />

opportunity to serve our great Association<br />

and as l take a bow… temporary, l would like<br />

to thank everyone whose path has crossed<br />

mine in the course of serving. Thank you<br />

and GOD bless.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 22


Photo Gallery of Technical/Editorial Activities<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 23


Depositional Evolution and Sequence Stratigraphy of the<br />

Amasiri Sandstone Member of the Eze-Aku Formation,<br />

Southern Benue Trough<br />

Ogechi C. Ekwenye, AyonmaW. Mode, and Ogechukwu A. Moghalu*<br />

Department of Geology, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Nigeria<br />

Peer Reviewed Technical Article<br />

ABSTRACT<br />

Integrated lithofacies and sequence stratigraphic analyses of the Late Cenomanian to Turonian Amasiri Sandstone Member of the Eze-<br />

Aku Formation in the Southern Benue Trough, was carried out, to decipher the depositional evolution and establish the sequence<br />

stratigraphic framework. Results from facies analysis reveals 16 facies, which occur in associations that are characteristic of a<br />

predominantly shallow marine environment. The interpreted sub-environments include shallow offshore, subtidal sandwave, shorefaceforeshore,<br />

tidal sandridges, fluvial channel, and tide-influenced fluvial channel settings. Parasequence delineation of the facies<br />

associations reveal retrograding, aggrading, and prograding packages which were deposited during relative sea-level rise and fall. Three<br />

depositional sequences which document the depositional evolution of the Amasiri Sandstone Member from the Late Cenomanian to<br />

Turonian, were recognized based on the parasequence stacking patterns. Sequence 1 is an incomplete sequence, comprising of a<br />

transgressive systems tract, consisting of subtidal sandwave encased in shallow offshore sediments. Sequence 2 is a more complete<br />

sequence that comprises of fluvial channel and shoreface sediments as the lowstand systems tract, foreshore and tidal sand ridge<br />

sediments as the highstand systems tract, and offshore sediments as the transgressive systems tract. The third sequence is an also an<br />

incomplete one with tide-influenced fluvial channel and offshore sediments as the lowstand and transgressive systems tracts respectively.<br />

Key words: Amasiri Sandstone, palaeodepositional environments, sequence stratigraphy, relative sea level changes.<br />

INTRODUCTION<br />

The Amasiri Sandstone, a member of the<br />

Eze-Aku Formation in the Southern Benue<br />

Trough (Murat, 1972; Nwachukwu, 1972),<br />

comprises of mud, sandstone, heterolith<br />

and limestone facies, whose characteristics<br />

indicate a range of palaeoenvironmental<br />

conditions. Previous research on the<br />

sandstone member has focused on its<br />

sedimentology with the aim of interpreting<br />

the palaeodepositional environment(s)<br />

(Banerjee, 1980;Amajor, 1987; Dim et al.,<br />

2016; Okoro and Igwe, 2014). The<br />

depositional evolution of the member in<br />

relation to relative sea-level change is<br />

however, relatively less studied. In the<br />

absence of this, the sequence stratigraphy<br />

of the lithostratigraphic unit is not known.<br />

Deposited in a predominantly shallow<br />

marine setting, the facies of the Amasiri<br />

Sandstone Member are grouped into facies<br />

a s s o c i a t i o n s t h a t i n d i c a t e<br />

palaeoenvironments that prevailed during<br />

periods of transgression and regression. In<br />

this study, the lithofacies identified within the<br />

Amasiri Sandstone are subjected to<br />

analysis with the aim of interpreting the<br />

evolving palaeoenvironment(s) that<br />

prevailed as the lithostratigraphic unit was<br />

being deposited. These environments are<br />

then linked to eustatic changes and used to<br />

interpret the sequence stratigraphy of the<br />

lithostratigraphic unit.<br />

GEOLOGIC SETTING<br />

The formation and subsequent deposition in<br />

the Benue Troughis regarded as Abakaliki-<br />

Benue tectonic phase (Murat, 1972), which<br />

is the first of three tectonic phases that<br />

controlled the evolution of the southern<br />

Nigeria sedimentary basins and subsequent<br />

deposition within the basins. The evolution<br />

of the Benue Trough began with the spread<br />

of the South Atlantic in the Late Jurassic.<br />

This sea-floor spread allowed for the<br />

separation of the Africa and South American<br />

plates around a triple junction. With the<br />

complete spread of two arms of the triple<br />

junction, the third arm failed to spread. This<br />

failed arm was a transcurrent fault zone that<br />

runs through the African Plate, forming the<br />

West and Central African Rift System, which<br />

opened up a series wrench basins on the<br />

continent; one of which is the Benue Trough<br />

(Genik, 1993). The Benue Trough is a linear<br />

NE-SW trending basin that extends from the<br />

southern part of the Nigerian sector (Figure<br />

1) into Cameroun, extending over 1000km.<br />

The opening of the Benue Trough is<br />

controlled by a N60°E fault system that<br />

passes along the axis of the trough (Maurin<br />

et al., 1986). Upon creation of the basin,<br />

deposition began with fanglomerates, which<br />

deposited by activated river streams that<br />

trended into the basin. The first marine<br />

sediments, were deposited during the<br />

Albian. A transgression of the Gulf of Guinea<br />

deposited the Asu River Group in the<br />

southern and central Benue Trough. A<br />

retreat of the South Atlantic from its far<br />

reaches in the trough allowed for deposition<br />

of the marginal marine Mfamosing<br />

Formation in the Calabar Flank by the<br />

Cenomanian (Akpan, 1990). The Turonian<br />

saw the deposition of the Eze-Aku<br />

Formation (Figure 1) during a second<br />

transgressive phase. This phase also saw<br />

the subsequent deposition of the Awgu<br />

Formation during the Coniacian. However,<br />

the termination of this transgressive phase<br />

is evidenced in the deposition of regressive<br />

Agbani and Ogugu Sandstone members.<br />

Following these in the Santonian was the<br />

folding and inversion of southern Benue<br />

Trough. This lead to the formation of the<br />

Abakaliki Anticlinorium and the beginning of<br />

the second tectonic phase (Anambra-Benin<br />

phase). With the uplift of the southern<br />

Benue Trough, the depo-centre shifted to<br />

the northwest and southeast of the<br />

anticlinorium, where the resulting Anambra<br />

Basin and Afikpo Sub-basins were created<br />

respectively. Subsequent deposition began<br />

in the basins with the Nkporo Group during<br />

the Campanian. This was succeeded by the<br />

Mamu, Ajali and Nsukka formations, whose<br />

ages range from Maastrichtian to Danian.<br />

METHODOLOGY<br />

The area of focus covers the Amenu,<br />

Akpoha, Ibi, Ozara-ukwu, Amasiri and<br />

Afikpo areas, defined by latitudes N 5° 50'<br />

00'' and N 6° 00' 00''; and longitudes E 7°51'<br />

00'' and E 8° 00' 00'' (Figure 1). The study<br />

was carried out using detailed field studies<br />

within the study area. Field mapping<br />

involved locating and sedimentological<br />

logging of outcrop sections. The data<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 24


obtained by sedimentological<br />

logging include rock type and<br />

textures, sedimentary structures,<br />

nature of bedding and contacts,<br />

attitudes and thicknesses of<br />

bedding, lateral extents of<br />

outcrops, as well as ichnofossils<br />

occurrence, size, degree of<br />

b i o t u r b a t i o n , e t h o l o g i c a l<br />

diversity. The data obtained were<br />

then subjected to facies analysis.<br />

T h i s a n a l y s i s i n v o l v e d<br />

identification of lithofacies, which<br />

w e r e u s e d t o i n t e r p r e t<br />

p a l a e o d e p o s i t i o n a l<br />

environments based on their<br />

a s s o c i a t i o n s . T h e s e<br />

p a l a e o d e p o s i t i o n a l<br />

e n v i r o n m e n t s w e r e t h e n<br />

reconstructed according to their<br />

order of occurrence in relation to<br />

relative sea-level changes.<br />

These reconstructions, that<br />

showed which environments are<br />

products of transgression and<br />

regression, were then used in<br />

interpreting the sequence<br />

stratigraphy of the Amasiri<br />

Sandstone Member.<br />

Figure 1: Geologic setting of the study area. (A) is a map of Nigeria showing the<br />

sedimentary basins and basement complex (modified after Obaje, 2009); (B) is<br />

a geologic map of the study area.<br />

RESULTS<br />

LITHOFACIES ANALYSIS<br />

Facies Descriptions:<br />

T w e l v e ( 1 2 ) f a c i e s a n d s i x t e e n ( 1 6 ) s u b - f a c i e s w e r e i d e n t i f i e d f r o m t h e s t u d i e d o u t c r o p s e c t i o n s i n<br />

the study area (Table 1). A summary of the facies well as their descriptions and their interpretations is thus presented (Table 1).<br />

Table 1: Summary of description and interpretation of lithofacies in the Amasiri Sandstone, Southern Benue Trough, southeastern Nigeria.<br />

Lithofacies<br />

and Facies<br />

code<br />

Conglomerate<br />

facies (G)<br />

Sub-facies<br />

G1:<br />

Horizontally<br />

stratified<br />

conglomerate<br />

G2:<br />

Planar crossstratified<br />

conglomerate<br />

G3: massive<br />

conglomerate<br />

Textures<br />

Clast-supported with<br />

coarse-grained sand matrix;<br />

poorly sorted; angular to<br />

subrounded clasts;<br />

monomictic; clast size<br />

ranges from granule to<br />

cobble.<br />

Clast-supported, very<br />

coarse-grained sand matrix<br />

with little clay;<br />

monomictic, poorly sorted,<br />

angular to rounded clasts<br />

Clast-supported, coarsegrained<br />

sand matrix with<br />

fair amount of clay;<br />

polyomictic, poorly sorted,<br />

angular to subrounded<br />

clasts<br />

Sedimentary<br />

structures<br />

Horizontally<br />

bedding<br />

Planar crossstratification<br />

Structureless,<br />

mud flasers<br />

Ichnology<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Depositional process<br />

Longitudinal bars, channel<br />

lag deposit, sieve deposit<br />

Linguoid bars<br />

Sediment-gravity flows or<br />

debris-falls in an environment<br />

with fluctuations in flow<br />

strength, which permits the<br />

transportation of sands in<br />

ripples followed by low<br />

energy periods where mud<br />

drapes the ripples (Boggs,<br />

2001).<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 25


Planar crossbedded<br />

sandstone<br />

facies (Sp)<br />

Trough crossbedded<br />

sandstone<br />

facies (St)<br />

Herringbone<br />

crossstratified<br />

sandstone<br />

facies (Sxh)<br />

Sp1:<br />

Angular-based planar<br />

cross-bedded<br />

sandstone facies with<br />

erosional contacts<br />

Sp2:<br />

Muddy fine to<br />

coarse-grained<br />

cross-bedded<br />

sandstone facies<br />

Sp3:<br />

Large-scale, angularbased<br />

planar crossbedded<br />

sandstone<br />

facies with mud<br />

drapes.<br />

Sp4:<br />

Medium-grained<br />

planar cross-bedded<br />

sandstone with<br />

angular based toesets<br />

Sp5:<br />

Small-scale planar<br />

cross-bedded<br />

sandstones with<br />

asymptotic toesets.<br />

Sp6:<br />

Large-scale planar<br />

cross-beds with<br />

concave-upward<br />

toesets.<br />

-<br />

-<br />

Medium to coarse-grained;<br />

well-sorted.<br />

Fine to coarse-grained;<br />

muddy, poor sorting.<br />

Medium to coarse-grained;<br />

poor sorting<br />

Medium-grained; poor to<br />

moderate sorting<br />

Fine to coarse-grained;<br />

moderately sorted<br />

Fine to coarse-grained;<br />

moderately sorted<br />

Fine to coarse-grained;<br />

poorly sorted<br />

Fine to medium-grained;<br />

poor to moderately sorted.<br />

Non-tangential<br />

planar cross-beds<br />

Single set or<br />

cosets of smallscale<br />

angular- or<br />

tangential- based<br />

cross-beds; mud<br />

drapes<br />

Large scale,<br />

angular-based<br />

cross-beds, mud<br />

drapes; mud<br />

lenses<br />

Large planar<br />

cross-beds with<br />

angular toesets<br />

Cosets of planar<br />

cross-beds with<br />

tangential<br />

toesets.<br />

Single sets of<br />

large scale planar<br />

cross-beds with<br />

tangential<br />

toesets.<br />

Large-scale<br />

trough crossbedding<br />

Herringbone<br />

crossstratification<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Moderately bioturbated<br />

by Thalassinoides<br />

Migration of straight-crested<br />

dunes during the lower flow<br />

regime<br />

Migration of straight-crested<br />

dunes with deposition of<br />

mud-drapes during slack<br />

water<br />

Migration of straight-crested<br />

dunes with deposition of<br />

mud-drapes during slack<br />

water.<br />

Movement of sediments<br />

along the slipface of dunes by<br />

grain fall or avalanche.<br />

Increasing velocity during the<br />

migration of straight-crested<br />

dune<br />

Movement of sediment along<br />

the slip surface by flow<br />

separation and grain fall.<br />

Migration of lunate or<br />

sinuous-crested dunes<br />

Periodic reversals in current<br />

direction as a result of tidal<br />

actions.<br />

Horizontal<br />

laminated<br />

sandstone<br />

facies (Sh)<br />

Bioturbated<br />

sandstone<br />

facies (Sb)<br />

Structureless<br />

sandstone<br />

facies (Sm)<br />

Sh1:<br />

Siliceous finegrained<br />

sandstones<br />

with horizontal<br />

laminations<br />

Sh2:<br />

Calcareous finegrained<br />

sandstones<br />

with horizontal<br />

laminations.<br />

Sh3:<br />

Horizontal bedded<br />

sandstone facies.<br />

Sb1:<br />

Fine-grained<br />

bioturbated<br />

sandstone facies<br />

Deposition from very highly<br />

concentrated sediment<br />

dispersions during sediment-<br />

gravity flows<br />

Sb2:<br />

Medium to coarsegrained<br />

bioturbated<br />

sandstone facies.<br />

Sm1:<br />

Fine to mediumgrained<br />

structureless<br />

sandstone facies<br />

Sm2:<br />

Coarse-grained<br />

structureless<br />

sandstone facies<br />

Fine-grained, well sorted<br />

Fine-grained, well sorted<br />

Medium to coarse-grained;<br />

moderate sorted.<br />

Fine-grained; moderate to<br />

well sorted<br />

Medium to coarse-grained;<br />

moderately sorted<br />

Fine to medium-grained,<br />

poorly to moderately sorted<br />

Coarse-grained, poorly to<br />

moderately sorted<br />

Horizontal<br />

laminations<br />

Horizontal<br />

laminations<br />

Horizontal<br />

laminations<br />

Relics of planar<br />

cross beds and<br />

horizontal<br />

stratification and<br />

structureless<br />

beds<br />

Structureless<br />

beds<br />

Structureless<br />

beds<br />

Structureless<br />

beds<br />

Moderately bioturbated<br />

by Thalassinoides<br />

Intensely bioturbated<br />

by Skolithos,<br />

Planolites,<br />

Paleophycus and<br />

Diplocraterion.<br />

Not observed<br />

Skolithos, Planolites,<br />

Paleophycus,<br />

Chondrites and<br />

Opiomorpha.<br />

Thalassinoidesburrows.<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Lamination formation in the<br />

upper flow regime produced<br />

by high flow velocity<br />

Plane/flat bed produced by<br />

high flow velocity in the<br />

upper flow regime<br />

Lower flow-regime flat bed<br />

produced by decelerating<br />

current<br />

Stressful to favourable<br />

conditions in a marginalmarine<br />

to shallow marine<br />

environment<br />

High energy sedimentation<br />

Very rapid deposition from<br />

suspension in sediment-laden<br />

flows<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 26


Sandy<br />

heterolith<br />

facies (Hs)<br />

Muddy<br />

heterolith<br />

facies (Hm)<br />

Shale facies<br />

(Fsc)<br />

Fosiliferrous<br />

limestone (Lf)<br />

Dolerite<br />

facies (D)<br />

Millimetre to centimetre<br />

scale intercalations of<br />

dominant fine-grained<br />

sands, with silt and mud<br />

Millimetre scale<br />

intercalations of dominant<br />

silt/mud, with very finegrained<br />

sand<br />

Grey coloured shale;<br />

locally mottled<br />

Limestone made up of<br />

mineralized brachiopod<br />

shells.<br />

Medium-grained<br />

melanocratic igneous rock<br />

with vitreous lustre.<br />

Horizontal<br />

laminations<br />

Horizontal<br />

laminations<br />

Horizontal<br />

laminations<br />

Abundant whole<br />

and fragmented<br />

shells of<br />

brachiopods<br />

Igneous sill<br />

Not observed<br />

Moderately bioturbated<br />

by Planolites<br />

and Paleophycus<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Not observed<br />

Lateral accreting point bars<br />

Low or waning energy flow<br />

condition<br />

Low energy and oxygendepleted<br />

conditions<br />

Deposition in a low-energy<br />

environment with poor<br />

winnowing activity ; most<br />

likely interrupted by<br />

catastrophic event such as a<br />

storm<br />

Emplacement during tectonic<br />

activity that uplifted the<br />

southern Benue Trough<br />

Facies Associations<br />

Facies Association 1 (FA 1): Shallow<br />

offshore<br />

FA 1 is comprised of shale (Fsc) and<br />

sandy heterolith facies (Hs) (Figure 2A).<br />

Exposures of FA 1 occur at Amenu,<br />

Akpoha, Aba-omege, Ozara-ukwu and<br />

Afikpo. Thickness of exposures range<br />

from 4m to over 50m. FA 1 occurs as the<br />

basal and topmost parts of the Amasiri<br />

Sandstone.<br />

Facies Association 2 (FA 2): Subtidal<br />

sandwave<br />

FA 2 is characterized by large scale planar<br />

cross-bedded sandstone facies (Sp4),<br />

with subordinate planar crossbedded<br />

sandstone facies (Sp1), horizontal<br />

laminated sandstones facies (Sh1 and<br />

Sh3), and structureless sandstone facies<br />

(Sm1 and Sm2) (Figure 2B). FA 2 is<br />

exposed at Akpoha and extends to Abbaomege.<br />

Exposures of FA 2 at both<br />

locations show that it overlies offshore<br />

deposits (FA 1). Generally coarse-grained<br />

in texture, the sandstone is poorly to<br />

moderately-sorted. Outcrops of the<br />

sandstone occur as extensive sheets of<br />

sand, with tabular geometry. Estimated<br />

total thickness of the outcrop is about<br />

28m. the large-scale crossbeds that<br />

characterize the outcrop are interpreted<br />

as tidal sandwaves (Allen, 1980; Stride et<br />

al., 1982). Their forests dip at angles<br />

ranging from 4 to 24°. The forsets show a<br />

gradation in sand size from coarse to fine,<br />

indicating decreasing peak current<br />

strength (Stride et al., 1982). The crossbeds<br />

are unidirectional, indicating a<br />

south-west paleo flow that ranges<br />

between 232 and 236 . Tidal sandwaves<br />

are produced during the lower flow regime<br />

at near-surface mean spring tidal current<br />

-1<br />

speeds of more than 65cms (Stride et al.,<br />

1982; Johnson and Baldwin, 1996). A tidal<br />

origin is attributed to the sandstone due to<br />

the presence of mud drapes on the crossbeds<br />

and reactivation surfaces. A similar<br />

interpretation has been assigned to the<br />

lowermost sandstone member of the Imo<br />

Shale (Ekwenye et al., 2014).<br />

Facies Association 3 (FA 3): Fluvial<br />

channel<br />

FA 3 comprises of conglomerate facies<br />

(G1 and G2), trough crossbedded<br />

sandstone facies (St), horizontal<br />

laminated sandstone facies (Sh1 and<br />

Sh3), structureless sandstone facies<br />

(Sm1 and Sm2), and planar crossbedded<br />

sandstone facies (Sp1) (Figure 3A). FA 3<br />

is exposed within the premises of the<br />

Government Technical College, Akpoha.<br />

Estimated thickness of the outcrop is<br />

about 11m. A fining-upward motif is<br />

observed, starting with conglomerate<br />

facies at the base, through trough<br />

crossbedded sandstone facies, to<br />

horizontal laminated sandstone facies<br />

and structureless sandstone facies (Sh3,<br />

Sm1 and Sm2). Different parts of the<br />

outcrop correspond to different fluvial subenvironments.<br />

G1 and G2 correspond to<br />

the base of the channel. They are<br />

interpreted as longitudinal and linguoid<br />

bars respectively (Miall, 1977; 1978;<br />

1981). The conglomerate facies are<br />

stacked into multistory sheets, which are<br />

likely products of laterally mobile highenergy<br />

bedload streams Collinson (1996).<br />

Paleo flow indicators in G2 show a net<br />

northeast paleocurrent direction.<br />

St, Sh3, Sm2 and Sp1 make up the<br />

channel sandbody. This exposure is<br />

about 2m thick, and is dominated by upper<br />

part of the lower flow regime (Miall, 1977;<br />

1978). This crossbedding is similar to that<br />

of Singh (1972) who referred to them as<br />

“channel-fill cross-bedding”. He opined<br />

that trough crossbedding of this scale are<br />

a result of channels cutting across a levee<br />

during high-water periods of the river.<br />

Sh1, Sh3, Sm1, and Sm2 make up the<br />

floodplain deposits. An initial facies<br />

succession shows a coarsening upward<br />

motif interpreted to be a result of the<br />

formation of levees, which are banks of<br />

sediments fed by the deposition of coarser<br />

sediments at the channel edge by the<br />

rapidly flowing river (Nichols, 2009).<br />

However, this subsequently changes to a<br />

fining upward succession, which may<br />

signify the dissipation of current velocity<br />

and energy as the flood leaves the<br />

confines of the channel and spread out<br />

(Nichols, 2009), or the abandonment of a<br />

crevasse-splay which is formed by the<br />

breaching of a levee (Collinson, 1996).<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 27


Facies Association 4 (FA 4): Shorefaceforeshore<br />

FA 4includessiliceous and calcareous finegrained<br />

horizontal laminated sandstone<br />

facies (Sh1 and Sh2), fine to mediumgrained<br />

structureless sandstone facies<br />

(Sm1), fine-grained bioturbated sandstone<br />

lithofacies (Sb1), muddy heterolith<br />

lithofacies (Hm), and fossiliferrous<br />

limestones (Lf). Parts of FA 4 are exposed at<br />

the Amenu and Ibi. These sections will be<br />

discussed in order of stratigraphic<br />

occurrence.<br />

The section of FA 4 at Amenu is exposed at<br />

the Setraco Quarry, Amenu. The outcrop is<br />

about 20 m thick and is characterized by<br />

alternations of fine-grained bioturbated<br />

sandstone facies (Sb1) and laminated<br />

muddy heterolith facies (Hm) which overlie<br />

offshore sediments (FA 1). Both facies are<br />

bioturbated by trace fossils which include<br />

Skolithos, Ophiomorpha, and Paleophycus.<br />

Based on the sedimentology, sedimentary<br />

structures, ichnology and stratigraphic<br />

position of the outcrop in relation to other<br />

parts of FA 4, the outcrop at the Setraco<br />

Quarry is interpreted to be deposited in the<br />

offshore-transition zone (Figure 3B).<br />

Buatois et al. (1999) made similar<br />

interpretations for a similar succession<br />

(Facies M) within the Lower Pennsylvanian<br />

Morrow Sandstone of southwest Kansas,<br />

USA.<br />

Another section of FA 4 is exposed at the<br />

Julius Berger Quarry atIbi. The sandstone<br />

outcrop, about 4m thick, is dominated by<br />

very poorly sorted, intensely bioturbated<br />

sandstones (Sb1). Trace fossil assemblage<br />

includes ichnofossils from the Skolithosand<br />

C r u z i a n a i c h n o f a c i e s s u c h a s<br />

Ophiomorpha, Skolithos, and Planolites. A<br />

low-energy environment with abundant<br />

nutrients that favoured benthic organisms is<br />

suggested due to the intense bioturbation<br />

that destroyed the physical sedimentary<br />

structures (Buatois et al., 1999). The<br />

succession at the Julius Berger Quarry in Ibi<br />

is interpreted to be the lower shoreface<br />

section of FA 4 (Figure 3B). Similar<br />

Figure 2: Offshore and subtidal sandwave facies associations. (A) and (B) are<br />

representative logs of the offshore and subtidal sandwave facies associations<br />

in the study area respectively. (C) is an outcrop image of offshore deposits<br />

along the Asu River at Akpoha. (D) and (E) are outcrop images of at subtidal<br />

sandwave deposits at Akpoha.<br />

ichnoassemblages have been described<br />

from cores of Cretaceous lower to middle shoreface deposits by Raychaudburi and Pemberton (1992), and cores of Facies K of Buatois et<br />

al. (1999) in the Lower Pennslyvanian Morrow Sandstone.<br />

Facies interpreted as the upper shoreface of FA 4 (Figure 4A) are observed close to the Amaoha Development Centre, Ibi. The outcrops<br />

observed are dominated by structureless sandstone facies with subordinate fine-grained bioturbated sandstone facies (Sb1). At the base<br />

of one of the structureless bed were shells of bivalves. Trace fossil assemblage is dominantly Ophiomorpha, which belong to the<br />

Skolithosichnofacies. The low occurrence of trace fossils is a feature of upper shoreface sediments (Pemberton et al., 1992; Raychaudburi<br />

and Pemberton, 1992).<br />

Further south, the facies assemblage changes to a mixture of siliciclastic and carbonate sediments. Facies that make up this section of FA<br />

4 include calcareous fine-grained sandstones with horizontal laminations (Sh2), fine-grained bioturbated sandstones (Sb1) and<br />

subordinate fossiliferrous limestones (Lf).The exposures of these facies in artisan quarries in Ibi and Ozara-ukwu show a succession from<br />

intensely bioturbated fine-grained sandstones, to horizontal laminated sandstones, which also a contain fossiliferrous limestone bed and<br />

floating limestone clasts. Identified trace fossils include Gyrolithes, Skolithos, Ophiomorpha, Paleophycustubularis, and<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 28


Planolitesmontanus. The fossiliferrous limestone is made up essentially of mineralised bivalve shells. The abundance of trace and body<br />

fossils suggest aerobic conditions in the water column in which organisms thrived (Ekwenye et al., 2014). This part of FA 4 is interpreted as<br />

the foreshore (Figure 4A).<br />

Figure 3: Fluvial and shoreface facies associations. (A) and (B) are<br />

representative logs of the fluvial and shoreface facies<br />

associations in the study area respectively. (C) is an<br />

outcrop image of fluvial channel deposit at Government<br />

Technical College, Akpoha. (D) and (E) are outcrop<br />

images of shoreface deposits at Setraco Quarry, Amenu,<br />

and Julius Berger Quarry, Ibi.<br />

Figure 3: Shoreface-foreshore facies associations. (A) is a<br />

representative log of the upper section of the shorefaceforeshore<br />

facies associations. (C) and (D) are outcrop<br />

images of shoreface and foreshore deposits at Ibi.<br />

Facies Association 5 (FA 5): Tidal sand<br />

ridges<br />

FA 5 is dominated by planar cross-bedded<br />

facies (Sp1 and Sp5), in addition to<br />

h o r i z o n t a l l a m i n a t e d<br />

s a n d s t o n e f a c i e s ( S h 1 a n d S h 3 ) ,<br />

structureless sandstone facies (Sm1 and<br />

Sm3), herringbone sandstone facies (Sxh),<br />

and fine-grained bioturbated sandstone<br />

facies (Sb1). Exposures of FA 5 are<br />

observed at Ozara-ukwu. The sandstone<br />

occurs as elongate ridges. Estimated<br />

outcrop thickness is about 26m. The<br />

outcrops are dominated by large and smallscale<br />

cross-beds which are interpreted to<br />

results of the migration of large- and smallscale<br />

sand waves (Stride et al., 1982;<br />

Bridges, 1982). The predominantly<br />

southwest azimuths of the cross-beds<br />

indicate unimodal paleocurrent flow<br />

direction. However, herringbone cross-beds<br />

as well as single sets of cross-beds in the<br />

reverse direction are evidence of<br />

subordinate bimodal paleocurrent flow. The<br />

NE-SW strike/trend of the tabular beds and<br />

ridge axes are oriented at oblique angles to<br />

the paleo flow direction, indicating that the<br />

sands are longitudinal bedforms which are<br />

interpreted to be tidal sand ridges (Stride et<br />

al., 1982; Belderson et al., 1982); otherwise<br />

referred to as offshore or shorelineassociated<br />

tidal sand ridges (Johnson and<br />

Baldwin, 1996), tidal current sand ridges or<br />

offshore sand ridges (Nichols, 2009). They<br />

are large-scale asymmetric bedforms with<br />

long axes oriented up to 20° to the direction<br />

of the strongest tidal currents (Off, 1963;<br />

Kenyon et al., 1981). Tidal sand ridges form<br />

at near-surface mean spring tidal current<br />

- 1<br />

velocities of about 50 to 100cms<br />

(Belderson et al., 1982). The sandstones<br />

are observed to be bioturbated by<br />

Ophiomorphaburrows.<br />

Facies Association 6 (FA 6): Tideinfluenced<br />

fluvial channel<br />

FA 6 is comprised of conglomerate facies<br />

(G3), structureless sandstone facies (Sm1<br />

and Sm2), muddy heterolith facies (Hm),<br />

sandy heterolith facies (Hs), horizontal<br />

laminated sandstone facies (Sh3), the<br />

angular-based planar crossbedded<br />

sandstone facies with mud drapes (Sp3),<br />

and the bioturbated sandstone facies (Sb1)<br />

(Figure 5A). FA 6 is exposed at the road cut<br />

section of the “Waterworks” sandstone,<br />

located midway between the Government<br />

College Roundabout in Afikpo and the Y-<br />

junction (Amasiri Junction) which connects<br />

the Afikpo-Okigwe Road and the Afikpo<br />

Abakaliki Road. The exposure which is<br />

about 50m thick, is made up of steeplydipping<br />

sandstone and heterolithic facies,<br />

which are observed to show increasingly<br />

tidal influence with successive rock<br />

deposition. The succession begins with<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 29


conglomerate facies (G3), which overlies<br />

offshore deposits (FA 1), and then fines<br />

upward into coarse-grained structureless<br />

sandstone facies (Sm2) and subsequently<br />

into muddy heterolith facies (Hm). G3 is<br />

interpreted to be a product of fluvial stream<br />

f l o w s ( C o l l i n s o n , 1 9 9 6 ) . G 3<br />

make up the channel deposits with the<br />

coarsest sediments at the base. Their<br />

erosive base mark the base of the channels<br />

(Collinson, 1996). Mud flasers are observed<br />

within G3 and these suggest sediment<br />

fallouts during periods of slack water<br />

(Buatois et al., 1999). The muddy heterolith<br />

f a c i e s ( H m ) , a r e d e p o s i t e d f r o m<br />

suspension. Such occurrence of heterolithic<br />

facies on top of conglomerate facies may be<br />

attributed to an interference of tides with the<br />

fluvial process, which causes a countereffect<br />

that results in standing water and<br />

subsequent deposition of fine-grained<br />

materials from suspension in a low-energy<br />

environment (Buatois et al., 1999; Nichols,<br />

2009).<br />

The middle part of the outcrop is<br />

characterized by more frequently-occurring<br />

and thicker muddy heterolithic facies (Hm),<br />

and sandy heterolithic facies (Hs). These<br />

deposits occur as inclined beds, which are<br />

interpreted to be laterally accreted deposits<br />

on a channel point bar (Rebata et al., 2006).<br />

Thickness of the heterolithic beds range<br />

from 0.6m to 4m. They directly overlie<br />

coarse-grained structureless sandstone,<br />

whose bed thicknesses range from 0.9 to<br />

1.6m, and are likely tidal creeks. The muddy<br />

nature of the deposits reflectsrelatively<br />

weak tidal current.<br />

A change in conditions is observed towards<br />

the upper part of the outcrop where<br />

heterolithic facies and coarse-grained<br />

structureless sandstone facies (Sm2)<br />

succeed each other in an alternating<br />

pattern. The thickness of the heterolithic<br />

units is reduced, ranging from 0.1 to 0.9m<br />

and show rhythmic alternation of mm scale<br />

fine-grained sandstone and mudstone,<br />

which get sandier with each succeeding<br />

d e p o s i t i o n . T h e c o a r s e - g r a i n e d<br />

Figure 4: Tidal sand ridge facies associations. (A) is a representative log of the tidal sand<br />

ridge facies associations. (B), (C) and (D) are outcrop images of tidal sand ridge<br />

deposits at Ozara-ukwu.<br />

structureless sandstones on the other hand range in thickness from 0.3 to 0.4m. The alternation of sand and heterolithic layers is<br />

interpreted to reflect fluctuations in tidal currents (Nio and Yang, 1991; Chakraborty, et al., 2003). In each sand-heterolith couplet, the sand<br />

represents deposition from higher flow velocities followed by suspension fallout of fines during the slack water period; thus reflecting a<br />

single tidal fluctuation in a diurnal or semidiurnal system (Archer, 1995).<br />

The uppermost part of the outcrop is characterized by planar crossbedded facies with mud drapes (Sp3), structureless sandstone facies<br />

(Sm1 and Sm2), and bioturbated sandstone facies (Sb2). Sp3 indicates the migration of dunes (Dalyrmple and Choi (2012). Paleocurrent is<br />

unidirectional with a northwest net sand transport. Other sedimentary structures include reactivation surfaces and mud drapes, which are<br />

evidence of tidal influence. Mud drapes reflect waning of currents down when the tide turns (Nichols, 2009). The reactivation surfaces<br />

which are observed to cut through the bedforms are evidence of water-stage fluctuations and are indicative of opposing currents which<br />

erode the tops of dune bedforms (Rust and Jones 1987; Nichols, 2009). The structureless facies are most likely products of rapid<br />

deposition (Walker, 1995; Collinson, 1996). They contain mud lenses, which may be a result of deposition in channels within the turbidity<br />

maximum zone, where rapid accumulation of suspended fines are deposited as fluid mud (water-rich mud) during slack-water periods<br />

associated with high and low tides (McIlroy, 2004; Pontén and Plink-Bj rklund, 2009). The bioturbated sandstone facies (Sb2) is<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 30


characterized by a monospecific suite of<br />

Ophiomorphaburrows which occur<br />

predominantly as endichnial traces, most<br />

likely created by infaunal species. The<br />

presence of trace fossils belonging to the<br />

Skolithosichnofacies indicates normal<br />

marine water deposition (Pemberton et al.,<br />

1992; Gingras et al., 2002). The lowdiversity<br />

ichnofossils assemblage is<br />

suggestive of environmental duress typical<br />

of marginal marine/brackish-water settings<br />

(Pemberton et al., 1992; MacEachern and<br />

Pemberton, 1994; Rossetti and Santos<br />

Júnior, 2004; Buatois et al., 1999; Gingras<br />

and MacEachern, 2012). The dominance of<br />

infaunal traces suggest a survival<br />

adaptation of organisms the seek refuge in<br />

the deep-infaunal habitats due to rapid and<br />

extreme salinity fluctuations at the sediment<br />

surface (Sanders et al., 1965; Rhoads,<br />

1975; Buatois et al., 1999). Low diversity,<br />

monospecific and infaunalichno fossil suites<br />

have been recorded for marginal marine<br />

sequences by Hakes (1976), Archer and<br />

Maples (1984), and Martin (1993).<br />

DISCUSSIONS<br />

Palaeogeography<br />

The facies interpretation shows evidence<br />

that the sediments of the Amasiri Sandstone<br />

are of a shallow marine depositional setting,<br />

with local evidences of fluvial processes.<br />

The initial occurrence of the offshore<br />

deposits suggests a marine incursion<br />

(Figure 6A). Associated with the shales are<br />

extensive sand bodies, which are<br />

interpreted as subtidal sandwaves (Figure<br />

6B). These sand bodies are over 20m thick<br />

and are characterized by large-scale<br />

crossbedding, with forsets dipping at angles<br />

of up to 24. Unidirectional paleocurrents as<br />

well as reactivation surfaces suggest a tidal<br />

influence on the crossbeds. These largescale<br />

cross beds are interpreted to betidal<br />

sand waves. Despite the high energy<br />

associated with the tidal sand waves,<br />

evidence of energy fluctuations is<br />

evidenced in the occurrence of gradations<br />

within the forsets, and the occurrence of<br />

sparsehorizontal Thalassinoides and<br />

Paleophycus burrows that dominate some<br />

intervals. Depositional energy must have<br />

slowed enough for more offshore shale to be<br />

deposited over the sandwaves (Figure 6C).<br />

Locally in the Akpohaarea, a fluvial setting<br />

becomes prevalent, depositing channelized<br />

sandstone bodies (Figure 6D) which are<br />

characterized by large scale trough crossbeds.Shelf<br />

building commences and<br />

shoreface sediments were deposited<br />

( F i g u r e 6 E ) . T h e s u c c e s s i o n i s<br />

characterized by muddy and intensely<br />

bioturbated sandstones at the base and<br />

grades up into moderately sorted<br />

sandstones which are characterized by<br />

Figure 5: Tide-influenced fluvial channel facies associations. (A) is a representative log of<br />

the Tide-influenced fluvial channel facies association. (B) is an outcrop image of<br />

tide-influenced fluvial channel deposits at Afikpo.<br />

Ophiomorpha burrows and bivalve shells.<br />

The siliciclastic sediments are replaced by a<br />

combination of siliciclastic and carbonate<br />

facies, indicating a change to a shallow<br />

mixed siliciclastic-carbonate shelf setting<br />

( F i g u r e 6 F ) . T h e s e d e p o s i t s a r e<br />

characterized by intensely-bioturbated<br />

sandstones and fossili ferrous limestones.<br />

The deposition of calcareous facies is<br />

suggestive of sediment starvation.<br />

Continuous slow sedimentation of clastics,<br />

shoaling and warming of the sea water<br />

probably increase deposition of limestone<br />

(Dill et al., 1997) in the basin. The<br />

precipitation of carbonate in the basin was<br />

induced when the sea water became more<br />

alkaline. Aerobic conditions, shallow depth<br />

and warm temperature of the environment<br />

most likely encouraged thriving of benthic<br />

organisms such asbivalves. The favourable<br />

environmental conditions are evidenced in<br />

the intense bioturbation and large sizes of<br />

bioturbation structures in the sandstones.<br />

The fossili ferrous nature of the limestone<br />

suggest that the foreshore setting was<br />

prone to catastrophic events such as<br />

storms, which most have caused mass<br />

mortality of the organisms, whose shells<br />

were then incorporated into the limestones<br />

(Nwajide, 2013).While the foreshore may<br />

have indicated an imminent return to marine<br />

conditions, the shallow nature ofthe sea<br />

must have allowed a reworking of sediments<br />

by tides, which produced the sand ridges<br />

(Figure 6G). These sandbodies are<br />

characterized by their elongated ridge-like<br />

form and are oriented parallel to paleo flow<br />

direction indicated by their characteristic bidirectional<br />

cross-bedding. The presence of<br />

a monospecific suite of Ophiomorpha<br />

burrows, indicates fluctuating energy<br />

conditions. The transition from tidereworked<br />

sands to offshore facies, indicates<br />

a return to marine conditions. The lowenergy<br />

energy conditions favoured the<br />

deposition of the thick pile of shallow<br />

offshore shales which seal the sand bodies<br />

(Figure 6H).Depositional conditions<br />

changed again from marine to brackish<br />

water setting as observed in succeeding<br />

tide-influenced fluvial channel deposits<br />

(Figure 6I). Reactivation of fluvial channels<br />

probably led to the deposition of massive<br />

coarse to medium-grained sandstone and<br />

c o n g l o m e r a t e . H o w e v e r , a n o p e n<br />

interaction with thesea, allowed influence of<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 31


the tides on the sediments, causing the channelized sand bodies to<br />

be capped by heterolithic deposits and/ or be characterized by<br />

mud-raped cross-bedding. The brackish or marginal marine setting<br />

must have been intolerable for most marine organisms, and only in<br />

faunal communities were able to survive. The response of these<br />

organisms to environmental stress such as salinity fluctuations was<br />

the creation of thickly-lined Ophiomorpha burrows buried deep in<br />

the substrate, which would act asa buffer to reduce harsh effect of<br />

fluctuating salinity. The offshore shales which cap the uppermost<br />

sandstone bodies (Figure 6J) indicate a revert to marine conditions,<br />

prior to the Santonian tectonic phase that emplaced the dolerite<br />

silland uplifted the Southern Benue Trough, causing a shift of the<br />

depo-center to the Anambra Basin. Based on the spatial<br />

distribution of facies association and ichnofossils assemblages,<br />

simple conceptual models are proposed for the palaeo depositional<br />

environment of the Amasiri. Each model depicts different facies<br />

associations in space and time.<br />

Figure 6: Palaeogeographic reconstruction of the Amasiri Sandstone Member.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 32


Sequence Stratigraphy<br />

The Shale Member (Eze-Aku Shale) of<br />

the Eze-Aku Formation is interpreted to be<br />

of shallow marine origin based on<br />

documentation of rich ammonite content<br />

in the shales (Barber, 1957; Reyment,<br />

1965; Murat, 1972; Nwachukwu, 1972;<br />

Umeji, 1984). The widespread nature of<br />

t h i s s h a l e , a s o b s e r v e d i n t h e<br />

study area, suggests a marine incursion.<br />

Initial age dating of the shales using<br />

a m m o n i t e c o n t e n t p l a c e t h e<br />

age of the shales as Turonian (Simpson,<br />

1955). Early works posited that Eze-Aku<br />

Group was deposited during the extensive<br />

marine transgression at the beginning of<br />

the Turonian when the sea invaded the<br />

Benue Trough from the Gulf of Guinea<br />

(Reyment, 1965; Kogbe, 1989). More<br />

recent work by Igwe et al. (2015)dated the<br />

Eze Aku shale facies as Late Cenomanian<br />

to Turonian. Kogbe (1989) suggested that<br />

t h e p e r i o d o f T u r o n i a n m a r i n e<br />

transgression was also characterized<br />

local regression, which is evidenced in the<br />

occurrence of the Amasiri Sandstone.<br />

Igwe and Okoro (2016) divided the Eze-<br />

A k u G r o u p i n t o a t r a n s g r e s s i v e<br />

component, which is the Eze-Aku Shale of<br />

Late Cenomanian to Early Turonian, and<br />

the regressive component, which is the<br />

Amasiri Sandstone of Middle to Late<br />

Turonian age. The range of depositional<br />

environments interpreted for the Amasiri<br />

Sandstone is tied to relative sea-level<br />

changes which affected sedimentation in<br />

the basin. This is used to describe the<br />

sequence stratigraphy of the Amasiri<br />

Sandstone.<br />

Sequence 1<br />

The sedimentary succession of the<br />

Amasiri Sandstone begins with a<br />

transgression which started in the Late<br />

Cenomanian and reached a maximum in<br />

the Early Turonian. This caused a relative<br />

increase in sea level (sea level 1 – sea<br />

level2), and a landward shift in the<br />

shoreline. Shallow offshore sediments<br />

were deposited on the older Abakaliki<br />

Formation of Albian-Cenomanian age.<br />

T h e c o n t a c t b e t w e e n b o t h<br />

lithostratigraphic units marks a candidate<br />

flooding surface (FS-1).The transgression<br />

also brought in sands into the basin. With<br />

the predominantly marine conditions of<br />

the basin, tidal action prevailed and<br />

unidirectional tidal currents reworked the<br />

sands into subtidal sandwaves, which are<br />

which comprises of poor to moderately<br />

sort, medium to coarse-grained sands,<br />

characterized by tabular-planar crossbeds<br />

with erosional surfaces. The offshore<br />

and the subtidal sandwave deposits make<br />

up a candidate transgressive systems<br />

tract (TST-1).<br />

A drop in energy levels causes a change<br />

from sand to shale deposition and the tidal<br />

sandwave deposit is capped by another<br />

offshore shale deposit, though of lesser<br />

thickness compared to the initial one. The<br />

deposition of a relatively lower amount of<br />

dark grey shale over the subtidal<br />

sandwaves suggests the attainment of a<br />

maximum reach of the sea level (sea level<br />

2 – sea level 3). The overlying shale<br />

represent a candidate highstand systems<br />

tract (HST-1) and its lower contact<br />

represents a candidate maximum flooding<br />

surface (MFS-1) which is likely associated<br />

with a global transgressive phase, such as<br />

that which characterized the Early<br />

Turonian. MFS-1 is characterized by<br />

opportunistic Ophiomorpha burrows,<br />

which were most likely produced during<br />

the period of low energy.<br />

Sequence 2<br />

Sequence 2 begins with deposition of<br />

fluvial channel sediments, which are most<br />

likely the initial record of a regressive<br />

phase thatcommenced in the Middle<br />

Turonian. This regression brought about a<br />

drastic relative sea-level fall (sea level 3 –<br />

sea level 4) and basin ward shift in the<br />

shoreline, decreasing accommodation in<br />

the basin. This activated fluvial systems to<br />

flow in the direction of the basin. These<br />

rejuvenated fluvial streams cut channels<br />

into the underlying sediments where<br />

fluvial sediments, which include<br />

conglomerates and trough cross-bedded<br />

sandstones, were deposited. The channel<br />

base in which the sediments occur<br />

probably represents an incised valley, and<br />

a candidate sequence boundary (SB-1)<br />

which underlies a lowstand systems tract.<br />

The fluvial streams are most likely the<br />

source that fed sediments into the basin,<br />

commencing shelf building. This led to the<br />

deposition of coarsening upward<br />

successions of shoreface sediments.<br />

Hence, the fluvial channel as well as the<br />

shoreface deposits make up a candidate<br />

lowstand systems tract (LST-1).<br />

With subsequent sediment input into the<br />

basin, sea level begins to rise relatively<br />

(sea level 4 – sea level 5) and aforeshore<br />

formed above a candidate maximum<br />

flooding surface (MFS-2). The prograding<br />

siliciclastic shoreface deposits are<br />

replaced with a mixture of siliciclastics and<br />

carbonates. This transition signifies a<br />

s i g n i f i c a n t s h i f t f r o m s h o a l i n g<br />

(progradation) of theshoreline to<br />

deepening (retrogradation) and is<br />

characterized by low sediment input and<br />

increase in accommodation. Tidal action<br />

ensues while relative sea level continues<br />

to rise(sea level 5 – sea level 6) and some<br />

sediments are reworked to form tidal sand<br />

ridges, which are characterized by<br />

bidirectional and herringbone crossbedding.<br />

The foreshore and tidal sand<br />

ridge deposits represent the second<br />

candidate highstand systems tract (HST-<br />

2).<br />

A continuation of relative sea level rise<br />

(sea level 6 – sea level 7) leads to another<br />

transgression that deposits offshore<br />

deposits which make up the second<br />

candidate transgressive systems tracts<br />

(TST-2). The contact between the tidal<br />

sand ridges and the offshore deposits<br />

becomes a third candidate flooding<br />

surface (FS-2).<br />

Sequence 3<br />

Sequence 3 begins with a relative drop in<br />

sea level (sea level 7 – sea level 8), which<br />

is just enough to activate fluvial channels<br />

which depositfining-upward successions<br />

of fluvial channel sands (conglomerate<br />

and very coarse sands). However, the<br />

fluvial channels most likely had interaction<br />

with the sea. Evidence of this include mud<br />

streaks, mud-draped crossbedding,<br />

reactivation surfaces and heterolithic<br />

units which overlie the channel sands.<br />

The occurrence of aconglomeratic to very<br />

coarse grained sandstone over offshore<br />

sediments marks the second candidate<br />

sequence boundary (SB-2). The tideinfluenced<br />

fluvial sands represent a<br />

candidate lowstand systems tract (LST-<br />

2). This regressive phase was terminated<br />

by a relative rise in sea level (sea level 8 –<br />

sea level 9) that continued the deposition<br />

of offshore deposits, which most likely<br />

makes up a third candidate transgressive<br />

systems tract (TST-3). The contact of<br />

TST-3 with the underlying sands<br />

represent a third candidate flooding<br />

surface (FS-3). The transgressive<br />

sedimentary package (TST-3) marks the<br />

end of the Amasiri Sandstone deposition.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 33


Figure 7: Sequence stratigraphic model of the Amasiri Sandstone Member.<br />

CONCLUSION<br />

The Amasiri Sandstone outcropping in the<br />

A f i k p o a r e a i s i n t e r p r e t e d a s a<br />

predominantly tide-influenced shallow<br />

marine deposit with some fluvial influences.<br />

This is evidenced in the facies associations<br />

as well as the dominance of Skolithos and<br />

Cruziana ichnofacies. The purely fluvial<br />

sediments are devoid of any trace fossils.<br />

The tide-influenced fluvial sediments on the<br />

other hand, show low diversities and<br />

abundance of Ophiomorpha, which signify<br />

the stressful conditions associated with<br />

m a r g i n a l m a r i n e e n v i r o n m e n t s .<br />

Palaeogeographical reconstructions shows<br />

that the facies associations of the Amasiri<br />

Sandstone bear imprints of relative sealevel<br />

changes as it is deposited. This is<br />

f u r t h e r e x p o s e d i n t h e s e q u e n c e<br />

stratigraphy, which shows that the Amasiri<br />

Sandstone Member has both transgressive<br />

and regressive components. Sequence<br />

stratigraphic interpretation of the Amasiri<br />

Sandstone reveals three stratigraphic<br />

sequences. Sequence 1 is an incomplete<br />

sequence made up of a transgressive<br />

systems tract and a highstand systems<br />

tracts. It begins the transgressive phase that<br />

introduced offshore and tidal sandwave<br />

deposits of the Amasiri Sandstone into the<br />

Benue Trough. Sequence 2 is a complete<br />

sequence that consists of fluvial channel<br />

a n d s h o r e f a c e d e p o s i t s a s t h e<br />

lowstandparasequence, foreshore and tidal<br />

s a n d r i d g e d e p o s i t s a s t h e<br />

highstandparasequence, and offshore<br />

deposits as the highstandparasequence.<br />

This second sequence is overlain by an<br />

i n c o m p l e t e s t r a t i g r a p h i c s e q u e n c e<br />

(Sequence 3) which starts with tideinfluenced<br />

fluvial deposits, and ends with<br />

offshore deposits, both of which represent a<br />

lowstand and transgressive systems tracts<br />

respectively.<br />

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT<br />

This research was financed by the<br />

Petroleum Technology Development Fund<br />

(PTDF) scholarship. The research also<br />

benefitted from discussions with the<br />

Academic Board of the Department of<br />

Geology and Prof. A. U. Okoro. Special<br />

thanks go to Chidubem O. Emedo for his<br />

immense help during the fieldwork.<br />

Anonymous reviews of the manuscript are<br />

also acknowledged.<br />

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NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 36


The NAPE divestment workshop held on Thursday 21st of<br />

July <strong>2022</strong> at the Eko Hotel in Lagos. For those who attended<br />

physically, there was the additional benefit of the direct oneon-one<br />

conversations during the networking breaks, as well<br />

as interaction with sought-after business leaders and<br />

authority in the oil and gas sector.<br />

The workshop audience included executives in the following<br />

roles and positions.<br />

Ÿ Leaders and captains of oil and gas industry<br />

(upstream, midstream, and downstream).<br />

Ÿ Decision makers in the Ministries, Department and<br />

Agencies that perform Regulatory functions and<br />

oversights, including the members of the oil and gas<br />

sub-committee members of the National assembly of<br />

the Federal Republic of Nigeria.<br />

Ÿ Oil and gas servicing companies.<br />

Ÿ Leaders of affiliate and relevant professional bodies.<br />

Ÿ Executives of key advisory institutions in finance, IT,<br />

legal, maritime, technology, trade, shipping and other<br />

support services.<br />

Herein are few excerpts and photos from this important<br />

discourse for your reading pleasure.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 37


THE BIG SALE... OPPORTUNITIES IN THE NIGERIAN OIL & GAS<br />

INDUSTRY FROM ASSET DIVESTMENTS<br />

OVERVIEW/BACKGROUND<br />

Globally, the oil and gas industry is<br />

undergoing an accelerated evolution to<br />

respond to the world's growing demand for<br />

cheaper, cleaner, and sustainable energy.<br />

Nigeria is not exempt from these<br />

substantial considerations; however, the<br />

70 years old Nigeria oil & gas upstream<br />

industry is going through additional major<br />

significant transformations that is<br />

completely changing its business<br />

landscape and primarily these changes are<br />

driven by the passing into law of the<br />

'Petroleum industry Act', asset divestments<br />

and insecurities of critical upstream<br />

facilities.<br />

DIVESTMENT WORKSHOP<br />

In the last 15 years, there have been<br />

multiple divestments of oil and gas assets<br />

in Nigeria's onshore and shallow offshore<br />

area. And the scale of these divestments is<br />

larger and are more frequent. Several<br />

conversations and engagements have<br />

focused on 'why divestment?'. However,<br />

there is a need to discuss the possible<br />

benefits of divestment to all stakeholders.<br />

The Nigerian Association of Petroleum<br />

Explorationist (NAPE), led this critical<br />

conversation on Divestment via a<br />

workshop to examine the overall Nigerian<br />

oil & gas divestment activities to enable the<br />

identification of opportunities for all,<br />

including local players, operators, servicing<br />

companies and upstream to midstream to<br />

downstream infrastructure owners.<br />

WORKSHOP FOCUS<br />

T h i s w o r k s h o p g a t h e r e d c r i t i c a l<br />

stakeholders, decision makers and<br />

eminent speakers of the Nigerian oil & gas<br />

industry to discuss opportunities, barriers,<br />

and solutions to challenges to harness the<br />

opportunities in the Nigerian oil & gas<br />

divestments. Focused presentations were<br />

delivered on the following topics at this<br />

workshop,<br />

1. Divestment opportunities and the<br />

challenges of insecurity, crude<br />

theft, and asset decommissioning.<br />

2. Funding challenges, divestment<br />

strategies and incentives.<br />

3. PIA the new laws and policies;<br />

regulator's role in divestments.<br />

Also, there was a moderated 6-man panel<br />

session on the main theme of the workshop<br />

who discussed along the following themes<br />

and considerations:<br />

Ÿ Opportunities from divestment for<br />

local players, operators, servicing<br />

companies and upstream to<br />

midstream infrastructure owners.<br />

Ÿ S o l u t i o n s t o k e y b a r r i e r s ,<br />

challenges, and issues that<br />

prevent access to divestment<br />

opportunities.<br />

Ÿ<br />

Implication of Divestment on<br />

National Revenue, Community<br />

Engagement and Local content.<br />

The IPPG (Independent Petroleum<br />

Producer Group) is a fast-growing group of<br />

companies with investment of more than<br />

$25billion over the last 10 years; covering<br />

over $10billion in acquiring assets and<br />

$15billion in CAPEX development, to<br />

reiterate the business idea of working<br />

assets and growing them. With over 20%<br />

growth in oil and condensate, 10% growth<br />

in gas production, the IPPG is committed to<br />

domestic gas supply, with 60% of the<br />

majority of domestic gas coming from<br />

Seplat and ND Western (leading).<br />

The indigenous players have achieved a lot<br />

and still have more to achieve in the future.<br />

In terms of reserves and production growth,<br />

the IPPG current gas production capacity is<br />

over 600MMscf/d while making IPPG the<br />

best place to further grow reserves onshore<br />

and also in shallow water. Nigerian LNG is<br />

very important in gas for domestic power as<br />

it develops the gas and monetises it for<br />

foreign earnings. Mr Roger sternly<br />

reiterated that Nigeria cannot continue as a<br />

nation to flare gas or reinject gas without<br />

providing enough for the local market. We<br />

must be able to build domestic gas and stop<br />

importing generators (over 50million<br />

currently in the country) and diesel, at the<br />

most expensive prices in the world. Host<br />

communities are dependent and therefore<br />

are shared stakeholders, hence, they must<br />

be provided with employment, education,<br />

healthcare, local capacity building and a<br />

future to look forward to, in the midst of their<br />

fast-growing population. He mentioned that<br />

Nigeria must also refine her products incountry<br />

to add value and this is evident by<br />

efforts from the IPPG members, such as<br />

Dangote Refinery to build these refineries<br />

in-country.<br />

Excerpt from Mr. Avuru’s presentation<br />

o n F u n d i n g C h a l l e n g e s a t t h e<br />

Divestment Workshop<br />

Divestment opportunities in the oil industry<br />

involves the combination of diverse<br />

parameters in asset development,<br />

strategies, business development,<br />

regulations, and multidisciplinary<br />

incentives. The ability to direct the<br />

research and development needed to<br />

further explore the Nigerian sedimentary<br />

basin is a measure of how Nigeria<br />

proposes to get the best of this current<br />

divestment opportunity.<br />

Nigeria has experienced a production<br />

decline of about 50% in the last 10 years in<br />

the overall 40 years of onshore and<br />

offshore production. This is commensurate<br />

with reduction in investment capital over<br />

the same period.<br />

In 2012, when the IOCs first broached the<br />

idea of leaving the Joint Ventures, this<br />

move marked the beginning of production<br />

decline. They stopped spending resulting<br />

in to decline in production. The crisis led to<br />

the suspension of evacuation facilities<br />

s u c h a s s u r v e i l l a n c e , p i p e l i n e<br />

maintenance and more. If all these<br />

processes was well managed by a forward<br />

looking regulatory body, we would have<br />

had a process that mitigated these exits.<br />

In reversing this decline, we must attempt<br />

to do the following:<br />

Ÿ Strengthen our regulation<br />

Ÿ Inject massive capital into the industry.<br />

Ÿ Re-establish transparency and<br />

International confidence.<br />

A $30 billion spend can accelerate the<br />

meeting of current production demand.<br />

The way forward also involves focussing<br />

on the domestic refinery and ensuring host<br />

community inclusiveness, strengthen<br />

surveillance using kinetic technology and<br />

reconfiguring our industry architectural<br />

framework. This will come with emerging<br />

indigenous companies having strong<br />

exploration programs to back up current<br />

development to reverse the decline, while<br />

harnessing the opportunities in the current<br />

divestment.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 38


Seplat's Divestment Opportunities Journey.<br />

Lessons Learned, Best Practices<br />

and Success Story .<br />

The special presentation on Seplat's Divestment Opportunities Journey, Lessons Learned, Best Practices, and Our Success Stories… What Next Post<br />

Divestments – Vision 2030 by Mr. Roger Brown, CEO of Seplat Energy PLC, at NAPE's Divestment Workshop captured the following:<br />

The Evolving Landscape (What You do to Address the Future Change)<br />

funds raised at its IPO as dividends, showing that<br />

it has a strong ability to raise capital and pay<br />

dividends. This is an indication of Seplat's<br />

capacity to participate in the divestment process.<br />

The Independent Petroleum Producers<br />

Group(IPPG) is an association of indigenous<br />

Exploration and Production (E&P) companies.<br />

The association boasts of membership of fastgrowing<br />

companies with investments of more than<br />

$25billion over the last 10 years; covering over<br />

$10billion in acquired assets and $15billion in<br />

CAPEX development. With over 20% growth in oil<br />

and condensate, 10% growth in gas production,<br />

the IPPG is committed to domestic gas supply,<br />

with 60% of the majority of domestic gas coming<br />

from Seplat and ND Western (leading).<br />

Indigenous players have achieved a lot and still<br />

have more to achieve in the future. In terms of<br />

reserves and production growth, the IPPG's<br />

current gas production capacity is over<br />

600MMscf/d, making IPPG the best place to<br />

further grow reserves onshore and in shallow<br />

water.<br />

Nigerian LNG is very important in gas for<br />

domestic power as it develops the gas and<br />

monetizes it for foreign earnings. Mr. Brown<br />

reiterated that Nigeria as a nation cannot continue<br />

to flare gas or reinject gas without providing<br />

enough for the local market. ''We must be able to<br />

build domestic gas infrastructure and stop<br />

importing generators (over 50million currently in<br />

the country) and diesel, at the most expensive<br />

prices in the world.'’<br />

Host communities are dependent and therefore<br />

are shared stakeholders, hence, they must be<br />

provided with employment, education,<br />

healthcare, local capacity building and a future to<br />

look forward to, in the midst of their fast-growing<br />

population.<br />

Mr. Brown added that: Nigeria must also refine her<br />

products in-country to add value, and this is<br />

evident by efforts from IPPG members, such as<br />

Dangote Refinery who are building refineries incountry.<br />

Seplat's Assets Acquisition<br />

In the oil business, Seplat has a rich portfolio of<br />

producing oil and gas assets; it currently has 7<br />

onshore oil blocks in the Niger Delta, with its first<br />

acquisitions located in the western part (OML 4,<br />

38 and 41), bought in 2010. OML 56 was acquired<br />

in 2013 after it was pilfered from the first<br />

acquisitions, OML 53 and 55 bought from<br />

Chevron in 2014, but not paid for till 2016 after a<br />

long legal battle. In 2019, Seplat acquired Eland<br />

Oil and Gas off the London Stock Exchange (LSE)<br />

and brought it back to Nigeria. Seplat's ownership<br />

give birth to the OML 40 asset and a total of over<br />

217 million barrels of oil.<br />

For the gas business, at Oben which Seplat has<br />

been developing heavily, it has over 465MMscf/d<br />

of gas processing; upgrading Sapele gas plant to<br />

produce over 85 MMscf/d and the Anoh gas plant<br />

will start a potential 300 MMscf/d production by<br />

mid-2023.<br />

Seplat Has Built a Strong Profile<br />

Seplat raised $535million in equity at its IPO<br />

(Initial Public Offer) in 2014 and encourages the<br />

industry group to come to the Nigerian Stock<br />

Exchange at least and the international exchange<br />

in the future. Seplat has given back nearly all<br />

Seplat Has Built a Robust and Resilient<br />

Business<br />

Seplat values oil, gas and condensate, or a 'mix'<br />

of them all, which is very important as the<br />

company has established a growing gas<br />

business. This is different from what obtained in<br />

2010 when the company purchased gas assets<br />

and had challenges due to the price of gas. Seplat<br />

has become a local champion with a solid<br />

operating track record, and positive cash flow.<br />

The company runs a resilient business model<br />

driven by low production costs. Seplat has shown<br />

financial discipline through its financial policy<br />

designed to mitigate industry cyclicality.<br />

Seplat's Contribution to Government and<br />

Communities<br />

Seplat in Nigeria focuses strongly on<br />

indigenization. It ensures that local contractors<br />

are from the catchment states, spending almost<br />

$1billion in wages and benefits.<br />

Seplat's Social Impact<br />

In the area of eye care, education and<br />

empowerment, these critical sectors are very<br />

close to the company's heart, having carried out<br />

over 80,000 eye disease treatments, provided<br />

over 4,000 scholarships and empowering over<br />

2,000 beneficiaries.<br />

Acquisition Best Practices<br />

Seplat believes in six best practices that have<br />

worked for the company, they include:<br />

i. In-depth due diligence through<br />

technical, commercial and regulatory<br />

processes.<br />

ii. Utilizing a robust financing model by<br />

being realistic with regards to the rigs to<br />

bring on-board, CAPEX to expand or<br />

fund projects and knowing how to avoid<br />

paying too much for an asset and being<br />

left with no funds to develop it.<br />

iii. Maximizing the values of partnerships<br />

iv.<br />

and risk sharing.<br />

Capitalizing on the strength of an<br />

experienced team of over 500 personnel<br />

(98% of whom are Nigerians), provides<br />

an experienced pool from where strong<br />

teams can be recruited when necessary.<br />

v. Seplat has a middle management with a<br />

voice, which is listened to, as any<br />

company looking to survive on the long-<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 39


term must learn to listen to the little<br />

voices from the middle management.<br />

vi. Focusing on opportunities with attractive<br />

upside potentials. There is room for<br />

mistakes here because everyone is<br />

allowed to make mistakes in our<br />

business.<br />

vii. Carrying out peer reviews with<br />

c o m p e t e n t t h i r d - p a r t i e s o n<br />

opportunities, listening to contrasting<br />

reviews, as well as listening to the voices<br />

from the middle management. It is very<br />

important to carry out peer review.<br />

Lessons Learnt<br />

What the company has learnt in the past years:<br />

i. Having and working with a realistic work<br />

program, carrying JV partners along,<br />

etc.<br />

ii. Keeping a simple and fit for purpose<br />

capital structure.<br />

iii. Focusing on liquid export routes to be<br />

clear on the difference between well<br />

head barrels and terminal barrels. This<br />

is very important because the company<br />

has to concentrate on the quantity of<br />

product at the terminal and not on the<br />

producing capacity of the well head,<br />

since the well head of an asset might<br />

have 50,000 bbl/d capacity, but only<br />

5,000bbl/d will arrive at the terminal.<br />

iv.<br />

With regards to an asset's future,<br />

decarbonization should be addressed<br />

for the company not to struggle on the<br />

long-run. However, Seplat hasn't been<br />

d o i n g i t s b e s t w i t h r e s p e c t t o<br />

decarbonization, as the company has<br />

m a i n l y b e e n f o c u s i n g o n E S G<br />

( E n v i r o n m e n t a l , S o c i a l a n d<br />

Governance). Gas as the energy<br />

transition strategy in the company's<br />

portfolio means funding is more likely to<br />

be obtained than focusing fully on oil.<br />

v. Being realistic with time frames to strike<br />

deals completion with government<br />

agencies.<br />

vi.<br />

Possessing a day-1 to day-100 plan and<br />

clear KPIs (Key Performance Indicators)<br />

for staff by having measured targets.<br />

What Do We Need for Success?<br />

i. Crude oil theft and downtime has made<br />

the oil industry unworkable; we cannot<br />

continue with theft on the pipelines that<br />

forces companies like Seplat to shut<br />

down or reduce production, etc.<br />

ii. Cash call payments to be made in<br />

advance of spending.<br />

iii. Gas market to fully move to market<br />

iv.<br />

driven 'willing buyer and willing seller'.<br />

Clear position of government on<br />

divestment processes - follow laws and<br />

embrace the PIA. We ask for clarity,<br />

transparency and the clear position of<br />

the government, as Seplat is ready to<br />

follow the rules.<br />

v. Having currency stability with robust<br />

microeconomic policies, as flexibility and<br />

liquidity of the currency will pave a way<br />

for a lot of money to come into Nigeria.<br />

vi.<br />

Having more financing institutions<br />

willing to lend to Nigerian businesses;<br />

the equities in Nigeria are very<br />

affordable, the African Development<br />

Bank and Government banks should be<br />

encouraged to lend money to long term<br />

investors.<br />

vii. Understanding the transition story which<br />

deals with decarbonization alongside<br />

social development. We cannot have the<br />

t r a n s i t i o n f r o m h y d r o c a r b o n t o<br />

renewable energy without passing<br />

through social development.<br />

The Future<br />

Speaking on the future of International Oil<br />

Companies (IOCs), Mr. Brown asked this begging<br />

question, 'why is it not a time of celebration of<br />

recycle of investment especially after spending 60<br />

years in Nigeria and the Indigenous companies<br />

are now working with the government?'.<br />

The indigenous companies are natural partners<br />

with the government and will see to the growth of<br />

the country as they understand the sector, hence<br />

they should be jumping at this and continually<br />

drive investment. The indigenous companies will<br />

not be leaving anytime soon because of their longterm<br />

horizon, they will be here forever with their<br />

practical approach and a measured reaction to the<br />

micro-economic events.<br />

Facing the reality, Nigeria contributes only 1% to<br />

the world's daily oil production, but the potential is<br />

vast. Hence, the sector players need to work<br />

together for Nigeria to be bigger and to be more<br />

relevant. So, why are we arguing about anything<br />

when there are so many assets? Why can't we<br />

work together and develop the resources and put<br />

more hydrocarbon/gas in the world, monetize it<br />

and reinvest? This is what the IPPG needs to do<br />

as a group.<br />

The capital will come to Nigeria and will stay in<br />

Nigeria - this is when the investment landscape is<br />

stable. We need transparency and we need to<br />

follow the rules. One of the things investors find<br />

difficult is that they struggle to see the future<br />

because there is always some event. So, we<br />

usually spend most of the time explaining to them<br />

what that event is and explaining why we can go<br />

through it. We would love not to always explain<br />

these things to the investors if we can.<br />

Since 2016, foreign direct investment (FDI) has<br />

flooded Egypt, triggering significant growth, while<br />

FDI to Nigeria plummeted.<br />

Going Forward<br />

The greatest business opportunity ahead is to<br />

supply the right mix of energy to support Nigeria's<br />

growth. In doing so, all Energy companies must<br />

make a positive social impact and contribute to<br />

Nigeria's achievement of the United Nation's<br />

sustainable development goals (SDGs).<br />

Seplat believes that oil remains crucial for<br />

Nigeria's development and that gas will drive<br />

energy transition and development. Seplat will<br />

continue to invest in heavy carbon and try to<br />

decarbonize it, making it cheaper.<br />

Seplat and Nigeria's Energy Transition<br />

Seplat's key priorities in addressing energy<br />

transition is via its 3 business arms: Upstream,<br />

Midstream Gas and New Energy.<br />

U p s t r e a m : E f f i c i e n t l y c o s t c o n t r o l<br />

decarbonization, conversion of dollar into more<br />

dollar and then reinvestment. This is the cash-cow<br />

with which Seplat hopes to fund its business going<br />

forward, without depending on raising debt to fund<br />

our business.<br />

Midstream Gas: To broaden our reach within<br />

midstream gas by accelerating the replacement of<br />

diesel and biomass, as well as supporting reliable<br />

low-cost energy. Key initiatives for this involve<br />

LPG (Liquefied Petroleum Gas), CNG<br />

(Compressed Natural Gas) for automobiles, etc.<br />

New Energy: This involves moving into electricity.<br />

This will be selective with less marketing. It will be<br />

a slow upgrade from gas to power to solar. Key<br />

initiatives include: combining solar with gas,<br />

exploring carbon offset markets, etc.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 40


SPOTLIGHT ON KEY INDUSTRY TRENDS<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 41


DIVESTMENT<br />

WORKSHOP<br />

PHOTO GALLERY<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 42


NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 43


Dr. Ebi Omatsola FNAPE surprise 80th birthday celebration at the Divestment workshop<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 44


Evolution Of Independents Into<br />

International Oil Companies<br />

COURTESY MAJOR WAVES ENERGY REPORT<br />

Meanwhile, four independent oil and gas producing<br />

companies in January submitted non-binding bids for<br />

Shell Plc onshore assets. The companies are Seplat<br />

Energy Plc, Sahara Group Ltd., Heirs Oil and Gas Ltd.,<br />

and ND Western Ltd.<br />

According to Bloomberg, based on the early March<br />

2021 crude oil price of plus $90, Shell could realise as<br />

much as $4 billion from its 30 percent operating interest<br />

from the onshore assets. Other companies who are<br />

part of the joint venture include Nigerian National<br />

Petroleum Co., TotalEnergies SE and Eni SpA, with 55<br />

percent, 10 percent, and 5 percent stakes, respectively.<br />

Nigeria is the largest crude oil producer in Africa with<br />

over 37 billion proven oil reserves and over 206 Trillion<br />

Cubic Feet (TCF) of proven gas reserves. The<br />

discovery of oil in Nigeria dates back to 1956 when<br />

Shell-BP discovered oil at Oloibiri in the present day<br />

Bayelsa State.<br />

The country became a key oil producer in 1958 when its<br />

first oil field came on stream producing 5,100 bpd. After<br />

1960, exploration rights in onshore and offshore areas<br />

adjoining the Niger Delta were extended to other<br />

foreign companies. In 1965 the EA field was discovered<br />

by Shell in shallow water southeast of Warri, Delta<br />

State.<br />

Although Nigeria has been in the business of crude oil<br />

exploration and production for more than half a century,<br />

the country did not mainstream indigenous capacity<br />

until 2010 when it enacted the Nigerian Oil and Gas<br />

Industry Content Development (NOGICD) Act. Before<br />

then, International Oil Companies (IOCs) like Shell<br />

Nigeria, Nigeria Agip Oil Company (NAOC),<br />

ExxonMobil, Chevron, TotalEnergies, among others,<br />

were mainly the players in the Nigerian oil and gas<br />

industry.<br />

The enactment of NOGICD Act gave birth to indigenous<br />

oil and gas companies like Seplat Energy, ND Western,<br />

Eroton E&P, Aiteo E&P, among others. These<br />

companies have shown their capacity and continue to<br />

prove that Nigerian companies have what it takes to run<br />

the country's oil and gas industry. And with the IOCs<br />

exiting from onshore and shallow-water exploration<br />

and production, divesting, and open to selling more of<br />

their assets, these indigenous companies are stepping<br />

in to take over these assets.<br />

The process of oil and gas exploration and production<br />

in less than 150 meters (500 feet) of water, is known as<br />

Shallow water drilling. According to Drillers.com, “Not<br />

too long ago, shallow water would be described as up to<br />

300-400 feet (91-121 meters) deep, but nowadays<br />

anything under 1000 feet (305 meters) could be<br />

described as shallow water.”<br />

IOCs' Exit<br />

In May 2021, the CEO of Shell Plc, Ben van Beurden, at<br />

the company's annual general meeting, hinted the<br />

company's plan to exit from its onshore oil and gas<br />

operations in Nigeria.<br />

Although Nigeria has been in the business of crude<br />

oil exploration and production for more than half a<br />

century, the country did not mainstream<br />

indigenous capacity until 2010 when it enacted the<br />

N i g e r i a n O i l a n d G a s I n d u s t r y C o n t e n t<br />

Development (NOGICD) Act.<br />

“When law and order breaks down, when sabotage and<br />

theft is rife where you try to operate, no amount of effort<br />

that we put in can actually try to compensate for that,”<br />

Argusmedia quoted him as saying.<br />

Ben van Beurden<br />

“At some point in time, we also have to conclude that<br />

this is an exposure that does not fit with our risk appetite<br />

anymore. We have drawn that conclusion, and we are<br />

now talking to the Nigerian government on the way<br />

forward”.<br />

Even though the Nigerian Government wants Shell to<br />

continue to operate its onshore assets, it seems the<br />

company has made up its mind to focus on offshore<br />

exploration and production. The Minister of State for<br />

Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, confirmed<br />

in May 2021 that the country is in talks with Shell over<br />

the planned divestment of its onshore assets.<br />

“Nigeria is in its talks with Shell include handing over<br />

Shell's stakes in the assets to the Nigerian Petroleum<br />

Development Co. (Company), the upstream arm of<br />

state oil firm Nigerian National Petroleum Co., or NNPC,<br />

inviting bids from Nigerian indigenous producers, or<br />

having a mixture of local firms and foreign independent<br />

producers to bid for the assets,” Sylva had told<br />

journalists in Abuja.<br />

In the last 11 years, Shell has sold its stake in most of its<br />

onshore assets. Having been in the business of oil and<br />

gas exploration and production in Nigeria for the past<br />

50 years, Shell has faced several legal battles from<br />

various host communities, acusing the company of<br />

negligence and environmental pollution. This is making<br />

the business environment challenging, which has<br />

necessitated the exit.<br />

Also in late February, Seplat Energy announced that it<br />

has entered into a Sale and Purchase Agreement to<br />

acquire the entire share capital of Mobil Producing<br />

Nigeria Unlimited (MPNU) for a purchase price of<br />

$1,283 million-plus up to $300 million contingent<br />

consideration, subject to lockbox, working capital and<br />

other adjustments at closing relative to the effective<br />

date<br />

.<br />

In a statement, Seplat said that the transaction cut<br />

across the acquisition of the entire offshore shallow<br />

water business of ExxonMobil in Nigeria, which is an<br />

established, high-quality operation with a highly skilled<br />

local operating team and a track record of safe<br />

operations, producing 95 kboepd (W.I.) in 2020 (92%<br />

liquids).<br />

Chief Timipre Sylva<br />

The MPNU portfolio primarily consists of a 40 percent<br />

operating ownership of four oil mining leases (OMLs 67,<br />

68, 70, 104) and associated infrastructure (NNPC is the<br />

60% partner); the Qua Iboe Terminal; one of Nigeria's<br />

largest export facilities; and 51 percent interest in<br />

Bonny River Terminal and Natural Gas Liquids<br />

Recovery Plants at EAP and Oso.<br />

The transaction does not include ExxonMobil's<br />

deepwater assets in Nigeria. Seplat noted the MPNU<br />

will operate as a stand-alone subsidiary of Seplat<br />

Energy and upon closing and following receipt of<br />

requisite regulatory approvals, it will align MPNU with its<br />

overall strategic goals and ESG objectives.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 45


“This is a transformational acquisition for Seplat Energy<br />

that strengthens our partnership with the national oil<br />

company, the NNPC, and consummates the spirit of the<br />

newly enacted PIA.<br />

“As a significantly larger business, with a stronger<br />

resource base and greatly enhanced capabilities, we<br />

will be better positioned to provide sustainable energy<br />

solutions that drive growth and profitability for the<br />

benefit of all our stakeholders, particularly our host<br />

communities and the wider Nigerian economy.<br />

“We fully support the aims of the Federal Government's<br />

“Decade of Gas”, and this acquisition will accelerate our<br />

development of Nigeria's gas resources to help achieve<br />

a just transition for our rapidly growing country,” said<br />

the former Chairman of Seplat Energy, Dr. ABC Orjiako<br />

on the plan acquisition.<br />

On his part, CEO of Seplat Energy, Roger Brown said:<br />

“This transaction underpins Seplat Energy's drive to be<br />

a leader in the growth of the indigenous independent<br />

energy sector in Nigeria.<br />

“The acquisition is a perfect fit with our strategy to build<br />

a sustainable business and deliver energy transition in<br />

Nigeria. Our financial strength has enabled us to attract<br />

high-quality local and international capital providers to<br />

fund this transaction without diluting our existing<br />

shareholders and reflects our deliberate approach to<br />

capital allocation.<br />

“We are determined to drive our growth through the<br />

extensive low-cost and low-risk production<br />

opportunities it delivers in the near term, whilst also<br />

developing longer-term opportunities to monetise our<br />

significant gas resources through domestic and export<br />

opportunities.<br />

“This is a win-win for both companies. Together, we will<br />

strengthen our focus on profitability and cash<br />

generation to reinvest in Nigeria's energy development.<br />

“MPNU's employees and contractors have a strong<br />

reputation for safety and operational excellence, and I<br />

look forward to welcoming them to the Seplat Energy<br />

family.”<br />

Insecurity around land, swamp, and shallow water<br />

assets has been a major concern for IOCs, which is why<br />

they are exiting the terrain to focus on deepwater<br />

exploration and production.<br />

Although shallow-water rigs have legs that reach the<br />

bottom of the seafloor and have blowout preventers<br />

(BOPs) above the surface of the water that are<br />

accessible for inspection, maintenance and repair, and<br />

can be controlled either remotely or manually in case of<br />

an emergency, IOCs are exiting mainly because of<br />

community hostilities against their operations and<br />

security concerns.<br />

This is a transformational acquisition for Seplat<br />

Energy that strengthens our partnership with the<br />

national oil company, the NNPC, and consummates<br />

the spirit of the newly enacted PIA.<br />

Basil Omiyi<br />

Toeing the line, TotalEnergies SE in May, formally<br />

launched the sale of its 10 percent stake in its Nigerian<br />

joint venture with NNPC Limited, Shell Petroleum<br />

Development Company (SDPC) and Eni.<br />

Reuters reports that a sale document tendering for<br />

interest showed that the oil firm appointed Canada's<br />

Scotiabank as the financial adviser for the transaction.<br />

According to Reuters, the company will be selling its<br />

interest in 13 onshore fields and 3 in shallow water, with<br />

combined production of over 20,000 barrels of oil<br />

equivalent per day. The French oil giant will, however,<br />

keep OMLs 23 and 28 and its interest in the associated<br />

gas pipeline network that feeds Nigeria LNG.<br />

Brief Background of Bidders for Shell's Assets<br />

When some IOCs divested some of their assets to<br />

indigenous oil and gas companies, there was palpable<br />

fear among stakeholders that it was going to be mission<br />

impossible. The notion then was that these companies<br />

did not have the technical know-how, the expertise, and<br />

the financial resources to man the divested assets. All<br />

that has been demystified by Seplat, ND Western,<br />

Eroton, Aiteo, among others who today have become<br />

key players in the industry.<br />

Our financial strength has enabled us to attract highquality<br />

local and international capital providers to fund<br />

this transaction without diluting our existing<br />

shareholders and reflects our deliberate approach to<br />

capital allocation.<br />

For instance, at the time of acquisition, Seplat's gross<br />

operated liquids production at Oil Mining Leases<br />

(OMLs) 4, 38 and 41 were 14,000 bopd. But the<br />

company, through the implementation of a focused redevelopment<br />

work programme and drilling campaign<br />

grew this to a peak rate of over 84,000 bopd,<br />

representing a six-fold increase and significantly ahead<br />

of the peak rate achieved by the previous operator of<br />

approximately 56,000 bopd in 1996.<br />

The company, which is listed on both the Nigerian Stock<br />

Exchange (NSE) and the London Stock Exchange<br />

(LSE), also accounts for about 30 percent of gas used<br />

by power-generating companies in Nigeria.<br />

Similarly, ND Western Limited, which is one of the<br />

fastest-growing exploration and production indigenous<br />

companies in Nigeria, is an independent Nigerian oil<br />

and gas exploration and production company<br />

incorporated on April 20, 2011 as a Special Purpose<br />

Vehicle to acquire the jointly held 45 percent<br />

participating interest of The Shell Petroleum<br />

Development Company of Nigeria, Total E&P Nigeria<br />

Limited and Nigerian Agip Oil Company Limited in Oil<br />

Mining Lease (OML) 34. ND Western is now the holder<br />

of a 45 percent Participating Interest in OML 34, in an<br />

un-incorporated JV with Nigerian Petroleum<br />

Development Company Limited (NPDC) that holds the<br />

remaining 55 percent interest previously held by its<br />

parent entity, the Nigerian National Petroleum<br />

Corporation. NPDC is the Operator of the Asset.<br />

According to the company, its primary objective for the<br />

acquisition of the asset is to maximise the commercial<br />

and economic value of the full spectrum of the<br />

resources in OML 34 to include growth in oil, gas,<br />

condensate, and NGLs production.<br />

Just like Seplat and ND Western, Heirs Oil & Gas is<br />

Africa's largest, Nigerian oil and gas company, led by a<br />

board and management team with significant regional<br />

and global experience in production, exploration, and<br />

value creation in the resources sector.<br />

In February 2021, Heirs Oil and Gas expanded its<br />

portfolios by making an investment of over $1billion in<br />

the acquisition of the strategic OML 17 from Shell, ENI,<br />

and Total. The investment has been described by<br />

various analysts as a very positive affirmation of<br />

confidence it has in the robustness of the Nigerian<br />

economy. Heirs Oil and Gas is the sole operator of OML<br />

17.<br />

For Sahara, it is a leading energy company in Africa. Its<br />

upstream division is one of Africa's leading<br />

independent E&P players with a diverse portfolio of 8 oil<br />

& gas assets in prolific basins across Africa and a<br />

production capacity of at least 10,000 bopd with plans<br />

to boost production to at least 100,000 bopd over the<br />

next 5 years. Its assets in Nigeria include OML 18, OML<br />

40, OML 148, OML 228, OML 284, OPL 286.<br />

Gas Development<br />

Nigerian independents are playing key roles in the gas<br />

space. Gas is seen as the energy of the future and<br />

Nigerian government is doing everything to make gas a<br />

dominant energy source in the country. In 2020, the<br />

Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Chief<br />

Timipre Sylva, declared the year as the Year of Gas.<br />

This was followed by the Decade of Gas (2021-2030),<br />

which President Muhammadu Buhari declared in 2021.<br />

The initiative is aimed at making Nigeria a gas powered<br />

economy by 2030.<br />

Indigenous E&P companies like Seplat, ND Western,<br />

Niger Delta Exploration and Production (NDEP),<br />

Eroton E&P, Platform Petroleum, Aiteo, First E&P,<br />

Waltersmith Petroman, among others, account for a<br />

significant percentage of the gas produced in the<br />

country.<br />

“For Platform, we're acting quite responsibly. We're one<br />

of the smallest assets in the marginal field's basket in<br />

2003/2004. But we've been able to grow with no more<br />

than 2,000 barrels in oil production. It's only now that<br />

we're doing 3,000 – 2,500. We've been able to do quite<br />

a whole lot. We're also fortunate that we're able to<br />

commercialise our entire gas. Two – three years ago,<br />

we were paying penalities for flaring gas. But we can tell<br />

you that in the next two months, we'll have zero flare. So<br />

we've been able to commercialise our entire gas —<br />

everything,” said the Chairman, Platform Petroleum<br />

Limited, Mr. Dumo Lulu-Briggs on the margins of the<br />

<strong>2022</strong> Offshore Technology Conference (OTC) in<br />

Houston, Texas, United States.<br />

Mr. Dumo Lulu-Briggs<br />

“We've tried as a small indigenous company and we<br />

also expect support for running our affairs quite<br />

prudently, for having a robust arrangement with our<br />

host community. We've never had any issue with our<br />

host community from the first day we began our<br />

activities till date. There has not been any<br />

But the company, through the implementation of a<br />

focused re-development work programme and<br />

drilling campaign grew this to a peak rate of over<br />

84,000 bopd, representing a six-fold increase and<br />

significantly ahead of the peak rate achieved by the<br />

previous operator of approximately 56,000 bopd in<br />

1996.<br />

downtime as a result of differences we've had. There<br />

has not been any such thing. So these are some of the<br />

things we expect that sometimes the government can<br />

look into and decide that look, 'we need to pat these<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 46


companies on the back by giving them more<br />

opportunities'. So Platform truly qualifies for these<br />

opportunities from that very small asset.<br />

“We didn't even think that we'll be able to do about 7<br />

million barrels of crude till date, but in the last 15 years,<br />

we've done about 11 million barrels. And right now<br />

we're producing 30,000MMscfd and all of that is being<br />

pushed into the local market.”<br />

Since its acquisition of OML 17, Heirs Oil & Gas has<br />

more than doubled the gas production capacity of OML-<br />

17 from 50 to 120 mmscfd within the short period the<br />

company has operated this asset. According to the<br />

company, all this gas goes into the eastern Nigeria<br />

domestic gas market to enhance power generation and<br />

create the much-needed feedstock for gas-based<br />

industries, sustaining & creating jobs and improving<br />

lives.<br />

“Decades of underinvestment in the asset cannot be<br />

corrected in a few months, since taking over the asset,<br />

we have been working arduously on this objective with<br />

the execution of flare reduction projects such as<br />

follows: AGG (Associated Gas Gathering) compressor<br />

uptime improvement, Facility upgrades, provision of<br />

gas gathering solutions and Facility off-gas utilisation<br />

initiatives,” stated the Chief Executive Officer of Heirs<br />

Oil & Gas, Osa Igiehon, recently.<br />

Osa Igiehon<br />

As of January <strong>2022</strong>, Nigeria's gas reserves stood at<br />

approximately 209 Trillion cubic feet (Tcf), according to<br />

the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory<br />

Commission (NUPRC). The growth of gas reserves is a<br />

critical factor to achieving the Federal Government's<br />

Decade of Gas initiative. The current global push<br />

towards low carbon energy presents the country with<br />

an opportunity to harness its huge gas reserves,<br />

industry experts say. They note that gas will become<br />

the dominant fuel for generating power, especially in<br />

Africa and Asia, and the country needs to position itself<br />

to take advantage of this opportunity.<br />

“The AKK (Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano) gas project, when<br />

completed, will boost the agricultural and<br />

manufacturing sectors, carbon footprint as part of<br />

measures to reduce global warming and provide gas for<br />

power generation and gas-based industries,” said the<br />

Chairman and Group Chief Executive Officer, Oilserv<br />

Group, Engr Emeka Okwuosa, on margins of the <strong>2022</strong><br />

OTC.<br />

“The project is important for Nigeria because the gas is<br />

what will help Nigeria to develop. Development cannot<br />

happen without energy and our largest form of energy<br />

in terms of availability is gas.”<br />

As a result of the enormous opportunities that exist in<br />

the exploration and production space, more Nigerians<br />

want to play in this aspect of the oil and gas industry. On<br />

June 1, 2020, the defunct Department of Petroleum<br />

Resources (DPR) flagged off another bid round after<br />

about 17 years from the last bid round, offering a total of<br />

57 fields located on land, swamp and shallow offshore<br />

terrains.<br />

Engr Emeka Okwuosa<br />

A total of 591 firms submitted expression of interest<br />

forms, out of which 540 were pre-qualified, while 482<br />

were bids submitted by 405 applicants. In mid 2021,<br />

DPR announced 161 companies as successful<br />

bidders. Some of the successful companies awarded<br />

letters, included: Matrix Energy, AA Rano, Andova Plc,<br />

Duport Midstream, Genesis Technical, Twin Summit,<br />

Bono Energy, Deep Offshore Integrated, Oodua Oil,<br />

MRS and Petrogas.<br />

ND Western is now the holder of a 45 percent<br />

Participating Interest in OML 34, in an unincorporated<br />

JV with Nigerian Petroleum<br />

Development Company Limited (NPDC) that holds<br />

the remaining 55 percent interest previously held<br />

by its parent entity, the Nigerian National<br />

Petroleum Corporation.<br />

Others are: North Oils and Gas, Pierport, Metropole,<br />

Pioneer Global, Shepherd Hill, Akata, NIPCO, Aida, YY<br />

Connect, Accord Oil, Pathway Oil, Tempo Oil and<br />

Virgin Forest, among others.<br />

NUPRC Awards Licences<br />

In June, NUPRC, the country's upstream regulator,<br />

awarded Petroleum Prospecting Licences (PPLs) to<br />

the 161 successful 2020 marginal fields awardees.<br />

Some of the companies issued with licences include<br />

Ardova Plc, Matrix Energy Ltd., Sun Trust Oil Company<br />

Limited, Deep Offshore Integrated Service Ltd., Island<br />

Energy Ltd. and Sigmund Oil Field Ltd.<br />

Other successful companies are Shafa Exploration and<br />

Production Company Ltd., Emadeb Energy Ltd., Zigma<br />

Ltd., Inland Basin Ltd. and Petraco Oil Ltd., among<br />

others.<br />

Out of the 57 fields, 41 were fully paid for, while 37 fields<br />

were issued with the PPL having satisfied all conditions<br />

for award.<br />

“The implementation of the PIA 2021 is in top gear.<br />

Consequently, the new awardees should note that their<br />

assets will be fully governed by the provisions of the PIA<br />

2021,” said Minister of State for Petroleum Resources,<br />

Sylva.<br />

“As you develop your assets with the special purpose<br />

vehicles (SPVs), ensure that good oilfield practice is<br />

employed, environmental considerations and<br />

community stakeholders' management are not<br />

neglected.<br />

“It is my strong belief that the awardees would take<br />

advantage of the current attractive oil prices to bring<br />

these fields into full production within a short period to<br />

increase production, grow reserves and reduce cost of<br />

production.<br />

“The onboarding of new oil and gas players in the<br />

petroleum sector is part of this government's policy to<br />

encourage more indigenous participation in our<br />

petroleum operations.”<br />

The Federal Government made about N200 billion from<br />

the 57 oilfields, plus an additional $7 million in signature<br />

bonuses and others.<br />

The NUPRC Chief Executive, Engr. Gbenga Komolafe,<br />

said that the marginal fields award initiative, which<br />

began in 1999, was borne “out of the need to entrench<br />

the indigenisation policy of Government in the<br />

Upstream sector of the oil and gas industry and build<br />

local content capacity.”<br />

Engr Gbenga Komolafe<br />

According to him,“Since its inception, a total of thirty<br />

(30) fields have been awarded, with seventeen (17)<br />

currently producing. A breakdown of the allocation of<br />

the fields to indigenous operators is as follows: two (2)<br />

fields awarded in 1999, twenty-four (24) in 2003/2004,<br />

one (1) each in 2006 and 2007, and two (2) in 2010. Ten<br />

(10) years later, in 2020, fifty-seven (57) fields were put<br />

up for bidding.”<br />

With the recent issuance of licence to successful<br />

companies in the 2020 marginal field bid round by the<br />

Commission, industry experts say that the focus should<br />

be on increasing the country's crude crude oil<br />

production as well as gas. But the operators need to be<br />

incentivized by the Federal Government. Some of the<br />

things that will encourage optimal production include<br />

addressing the issues of insecurity, unavailability of the<br />

infrastructure required to control gas flaring; creating<br />

market for domestic gas products; and making gas<br />

price attractive for investors.<br />

Challenges<br />

Most of the assets up for divestment by both Shell and<br />

ExxonMobil may take time to bring them to their full<br />

production capacity. Also, insecurity has been a major<br />

concern for indigenous exploration and production<br />

companies in Nigeria.<br />

Vandalisation of flow lines and the export line occur<br />

mainly because they are easy to access by vandals,<br />

with the operators at a point, experiencing losses in<br />

excess of 30 percent. As of 2019, indigenous producers<br />

accounted for about 21/22 percent of daily crude oil<br />

production in Nigeria. The aspiration at a time by the<br />

NNPC was for indigenous producers to contribute 30<br />

percent of the total daily production.<br />

Two – three years ago, we were paying penalities<br />

for flaring gas. But we can tell you that in the next<br />

two months, we'll have zero flare.<br />

“Security is a great challenge for all the indigenous<br />

operators. Anybody within the swamp or land region is<br />

susceptible to security challenges. You have<br />

vandalization of flow lines and the export line because it<br />

is easily accessible. At a time, we experienced losses in<br />

excess of 30 percent, but now ranges between 20 and<br />

30 percent of our daily production. In value terms, we<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 47


were losing about 20,000 barrels of crude a day. Some<br />

operators produce as much as 20,000 barrels per day<br />

and that is a viable business for them. If you are losing<br />

20,000 barrels of crude per day, it severely impacts<br />

your cash flow and the return on your investment. So, if<br />

the Government is able to fix the security along the<br />

export lines, we will be able to realize our full production<br />

potential and that will bring significant returns to the<br />

b u s i n e s s a n d N a t i o n , ” s a i d t h e M a n a g i n g<br />

Director/Chief Executive Officer of Eroton Exploration<br />

and Production Company, Ebiaho Emafo on the<br />

margins of the 2019 Nigeria Oil and Gas Conference<br />

and Exhibition in Abuja.<br />

Ebiaho Emafo<br />

He added, “In the area of gas, the government<br />

needs to create infrastructure to transport the gas<br />

that we produce to the areas of utilization so we can<br />

have bankable opportunities where we are able to<br />

sell our gas and make returns on our gas<br />

investment. At the moment, we are restricted in<br />

terms of ability to sell our gas in terms of limited<br />

infrastructure and that is across board.<br />

“Again, security poses another challenge, as there<br />

are frequent shutdowns of the export line which<br />

occurs because of the oil spills that come as a result<br />

of the intrusions on the line by vandals.<br />

Sometimes, when the line is down, we are not able<br />

to produce neither oil nor associated gas. This year<br />

we have lost about 24/25 days of production<br />

because of sabotage on the export line. In addition,<br />

we have the attendant environmental challenges<br />

that come as a result of the pollution caused by the<br />

acts of sabotage and vandalization on the pipelines.<br />

Statistics show that most of the leakages and spills<br />

are as a result of vandalism and or illegal bunkering.<br />

This could naturally invoke a sense of aggrievement<br />

amongst the host communities who are<br />

unfortunately saddled with the negative effects of<br />

the pollution caused by vandals which could create<br />

a difficult environment for us as business to operate<br />

in. We have however worked closely with our<br />

Communities to ensure that issues like this remain<br />

contained as we continue to enjoy a good working<br />

relationship with them.”<br />

Apart from the issues around vandalism and oil<br />

theft, there is also the challenge of access to credit.<br />

Investment in the exploration and production of oil<br />

and gas is capital intensive, and there are not many<br />

financial options for indigenous firms locally. On the<br />

international scale, it is a bit difficult to secure a<br />

credit facility without a big guarantor, like the<br />

Federal Government, who will stand by the<br />

company seeking facility. The current global push<br />

towards reduction of demand for oil and gas and the<br />

massive shrinkage of funding could portend high<br />

risks for Nigerian exploration and production players<br />

like Seplat Energy, ND Western, Sahara Group,<br />

H e i r s O i l a n d G a s , a m o n g o t h e r s .<br />

However, speaking with Majorwaves on the margins<br />

of 2019 Nigerian Oil and Gas Conference and<br />

Exhibition, on the challenges of indigenous E&P<br />

companies in this regard, the Head, Energy<br />

Covering Downstream and International Oil Trading<br />

within Corporate Banking Directorate, First Bank of<br />

Nigeria, Oluwatoyin Aina, admonished local E&P<br />

companies in the country to look outside of Nigeria<br />

while seeking credit facility to fund their projects, like<br />

targeting African Finance Corporation (AFC) and<br />

International Finance Corporation (IFC) for fund.<br />

But with the trend in favour of greener energy,<br />

access to credit from big lenders will be a big<br />

challenge.<br />

She said,” Hedging is a major requirement for most<br />

Reserve Based Lending financing as it provides a<br />

buffer to falling prices. Commercial banks generally<br />

are not positioned to take exploration risk due to the<br />

nature of our foreign currency capital which isn't<br />

long term. Our long term financing are usually in<br />

local currency. For foreign currencies, banks borrow<br />

the funds at an expensive cost and the tenure is<br />

usually short.”<br />

Many big lenders in Europe and the United States<br />

are taking steps to stop funding investment in fossil<br />

fuel, while others have announced plans to reduce<br />

the environmental impact of their financing activities<br />

by engaging with clients in fossil fuel-intensive<br />

sectors to lower their carbon footprints or stop the<br />

financing of certain sectors entirely.<br />

Another big challenge is community hostilities<br />

towards oil companies. However, the granting of 3<br />

percent allocation from the actual annual operating<br />

expenditure of oil companies as contained in the<br />

Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) may be a panacea.<br />

Analysts believe that the provision for host<br />

communities' development trusts in the PIA will<br />

foster sustainable prosperity, enhance peace, and<br />

cordial relationship between licensees and lessees,<br />

and the communities.<br />

Oluwatoyin Aina<br />

Decades of underinvestment in the asset cannot<br />

be corrected in a few months<br />

Pushing Forward<br />

With the current happenings, it appears most of the<br />

IOCs may leave the country. But what is more<br />

interesting is how Nigerian independents are<br />

positioning themselves to take over from them when<br />

they exit.<br />

Nigerian independents, despite all the challenges<br />

they are faced with, have been very resilient, and<br />

keep trudging forward. They are not just succeeding<br />

in Nigeria, they are also expanding to other oil-rich<br />

African countries.<br />

Asharami Energy Limited, the upstream subsidiary<br />

of Sahara Group, has made huge investments in<br />

three prolific onshore assets in Nigeria. The<br />

company has a diversified portfolio of onshore<br />

assets across the exploration, development and<br />

production stages with a large acreage located<br />

within a prolific and proven oil basin. It has assets in<br />

Nigeria, Ghana and Ivory coast.<br />

In 2019, First E &P was awarded Block 2, one of the<br />

three blocks available for bid in Ghana's keenly<br />

contested first licencing round, making the company<br />

the fifth Nigerian oil and gas exploration and<br />

production companies operating in Ghana.<br />

Other four are Amni, Oranto, Brittania-U and<br />

Sahara. With the inclusion of Madu field in OML 85<br />

in its development, First E&P expects to achieve a<br />

60,000 bopd production height in its operation this<br />

year.<br />

Innoson Oil & Gas Limited, announced in May that it<br />

has discovered gross prospective recoverable<br />

resources of 8.2 Tcf and 234 MMbbl of gas and<br />

condensate respectively, in its asset, offshore<br />

Sierra Leone.<br />

The company was awarded nine graticular<br />

provisional blocks in May 2020. The following year,<br />

the parliament of Sierra Leone ratified a petroleum<br />

exploration and production license in favor of IOG as<br />

confirmed in a letter of conveyance to IOG in April<br />

2021.<br />

“The development opportunity is currently being<br />

appraised. Asset evaluation, a field development<br />

plan, and the setup of a data room are vigorously<br />

pursued with the immediate objective to engage a<br />

farm-in partner; ideally, with the financial strength,<br />

technological and management competencies to<br />

accomplish joint discovery, development, and<br />

production.<br />

“IOG has a 100 percent working interest on the<br />

prospect with a 10% carried, plus an optional 5%<br />

paid interest(s) for the state of Sierra Leone.<br />

Attractive fiscal and tax regimes by the state of<br />

Sierra Leone offer a flexible so robust environment<br />

for a big take,” the company said in a statement.<br />

Nigerian independents are not only playing actively<br />

in Nigerian exploration and production space, they<br />

are also playing in other countries in Africa. With this<br />

drive, these companies are gradually shaping up as<br />

IOCs.<br />

As Shell evaluates the non-binding bids to see<br />

which parties to take to the next round, stakeholders<br />

are expectant that the deal will be beneficial to both<br />

Shell and the interested bidders. According to<br />

Bloomberg's sources, although deliberations are<br />

ongoing, no final agreements have been reached<br />

and Shell may decide not to sell the assets.<br />

The growth of gas reserves is a critical factor to<br />

achieving the Federal Government's Decade of<br />

Gas initiative.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 48


NAPE ACTIVITIES<br />

Conference Schedule<br />

NAPE Outings<br />

Media Reporting<br />

Elections<br />

Chapter Reports<br />

UAP Report<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 49


NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 50


PHOTO REPORTS<br />

NAPE MEMBERS AT THE SOCIETY OF PETROLEUM ENGINEERS <strong>2022</strong> CONFERENCE IN LAGOS<br />

NAPE PRESIDENT AT THE ASSOCIATION OF ENERGY CORRESPONDENTS OF NIGERIA<br />

CONFERENCE IN LAGOS<br />

Dr. James Edet FNAPE, speaking at the <strong>2022</strong> conference of the Association of Energy Correspondents of<br />

Nigeria (NAEC) in Lagos. Delivering his submission at the first panel session on Energy Transition: Shaping the<br />

future of Nigeria's energy industry, An appraisal of PIA, Evolving Benefits and Challenges<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 51


NAPE IN THE NEWS<br />

Oil Theft not Responsible for Nigeria Low Oil<br />

Production<br />

Mr. Austin Avuru, founder, Chairman and Chief Executive<br />

Officer (CEO) of AA Holdings Limited, explained that the<br />

history of Nigeria oil production started from 1970 with<br />

traditional oil terrain in shallow offshore but the key thing is<br />

that over the long period of time, the country managed to<br />

maintain just about 2 million barrels of oil per day.<br />

https://www.energyfocusreport.com/oil-theft-notresponsible-for-nigeria-low-oil-production-avuru/<br />

Divestment is Crucial in Nigeria’s Oil<br />

and Gas Industry-Sylva<br />

…Anticipated economic growth and<br />

rising global population in Asia and Africa,<br />

will significantly push energy demand<br />

upwards that renewable energy sources<br />

alone cannot meet demand by 2050.<br />

https://www.energyfocusreport.com/di<br />

vestment-is-crucial-in-nigerias-oil-andgas-industry-sylva/<br />

FG Challenges Indigenous Oil Firms to<br />

Fill Void Created by Divesting IOCs<br />

Sylva urged the IPPG members to strive to<br />

move their present contribution in<br />

production and reserves to at least 50 per<br />

cent, from about 30 per cent for crude oil<br />

and 20 per cent for gas production, as well<br />

as 40 per cent andcen per cent for oil and<br />

gas reserves, respectively.<br />

https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2<br />

022/07/22/fg-challenges-indigenous-oilfirms-to-fill-void-created-by-divestingiocs/<br />

Divestment Opportunities: Indigenous<br />

Energy Companies are Natural<br />

Partners to Government – Seplat CEO<br />

In this era of divestments by the<br />

International Oil companies (IOCs) from<br />

Nigeria, indigenous energy companies with<br />

the right competences and wherewithal<br />

are natural partners to government in the<br />

quest to harness oil and gas assets, the<br />

Chief Executive Officer, Seplat Energy Plc,<br />

Mr. Roger Brown, has said.<br />

https://www.energyfocusreport.com/dive<br />

stment-opportunities-indigenous-energycompanies-are-natural-partners-togovernment-seplat-ceo/<br />

Divestment is Crucial in Nigeria’s Oil and<br />

Gas Industry<br />

…PIA addresses critical foundation for<br />

industrialization and economic development of<br />

Nigeria.<br />

https://www.energyfocusreport.com/divestm<br />

ent-is-crucial-in-nigerias-oil-and-gas-industrysylva/<br />

Seplat CEO Throws Challenge To<br />

Indigenous Firms Over Divested Assets<br />

By IOCs<br />

The Seplat Energy chief explained that capital<br />

will only travel to and stay in Nigeria when the<br />

investment landscape is transparent and<br />

stable. “Given the uncertainties, investors<br />

struggle to value the future –there is always<br />

some event that impacts value”<br />

https://businessstandardsng.com/seplat-ceothrows-challenge-to-indigenous-firms-overdivested-assets-by-iocs/<br />

Divestment Opportunities: Indigenous<br />

Energy Companies are Natural Partners to<br />

Government – Seplat CEO<br />

Mr. Brown explained: “Capital will only travel to<br />

and stay in Nigeria when the investment<br />

landscape is transparent and stable. Given the<br />

uncertainties, investors struggle to value the<br />

future –there is always some event that impacts<br />

value.<br />

http://bit.ly/3J1YJ6M<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 52


NAPE ELECTIONS<br />

The NAPE electoral process began on the first of March <strong>2022</strong>, with a call for qualified and<br />

interested candidates to apply. The committee had to extend call for application, in an<br />

effort to get members to take up active volunteering/executive positions within the<br />

association.<br />

These nominated candidates were then carefully passed through the election candidacy<br />

guidelines after which their candidacy were then approved.<br />

Following the election calendar, voting commences on <strong>September</strong> 1st <strong>2022</strong> and is still<br />

ongoing. (See Election Calendar for closing date. Kindly support this electorate process<br />

by participating by casting your vote)<br />

Winners will be announced at the <strong>2022</strong> Annual General Meeting which will be held on<br />

14th November at the Annual International Conference and Exhibition. Check your<br />

Membership portal for more details.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 53


LEGEND:<br />

Completed<br />

On-going<br />

<strong>2022</strong> NAPE<br />

Election Calendar<br />

Yet to commence<br />

March<br />

1<br />

March<br />

29<br />

March<br />

31<br />

May-June<br />

15 - 22<br />

Electoral Committee<br />

shall be appointed by the<br />

Executive Committee<br />

Electoral Committee<br />

develops Election<br />

timeline and seeks<br />

EXCO endorsement<br />

Announcement of <strong>2022</strong><br />

NAPE election and<br />

distribution of Nomination<br />

Forms to members (using<br />

email and NAPE); Forms<br />

will be downloadable<br />

online<br />

Return of completed<br />

nomination forms of<br />

candidates to NAPE<br />

Secretariat (by<br />

email/online only).<br />

EXCO<br />

ELECTORAL COMMITTEE<br />

NAPE SECRETARIAT/ELECTORAL<br />

COMMITTEE<br />

ACTIVE MEMBERS<br />

June<br />

23-30<br />

July-Aug<br />

1 - 5<br />

August<br />

5<br />

August<br />

8<br />

Compilation of list of<br />

nominated candidates.<br />

Screening of nominated<br />

candidates by Electoral<br />

Committee and presentation<br />

of the Candidates to the AC<br />

further screening in line<br />

with the NAPE<br />

Constitution and the<br />

election guidelines.<br />

Endorsement of nominated<br />

candidates by NAPE<br />

Executive Committee.<br />

Candidates notied of their<br />

nomination & request<br />

submission of 1 passportsize<br />

picture, prole and 300-<br />

word manifesto for online<br />

publication and email<br />

blasts to members; deadline<br />

for submission is August 11.<br />

NAPE SECRETARIAT/ELECTORAL<br />

COMMITTEE<br />

ELECTORAL COMMITTEE<br />

EXCO<br />

NAPE SECRETARIAT/ELECTORAL<br />

COMMITTEE<br />

August<br />

17<br />

August<br />

17<br />

August<br />

18-31<br />

Sept-Oct<br />

1 - 15<br />

Names of nominees<br />

published in NAPE NEWS<br />

Email blasts and NAPE<br />

website.<br />

Start of campaign<br />

Physical presentation of<br />

candidates (if possible) or their<br />

proles at August <strong>2022</strong> NAPE<br />

Monthly Technical Meeting at all<br />

locations: Lagos, Port Harcourt,<br />

Benin, Warri, Uyo/Calabar,<br />

Abuja, Akwa/Owerri and<br />

UK/Europe Chapter<br />

E-voting commences<br />

Ballot paper e-mailed to<br />

members on request<br />

Ballot paper will contain<br />

names of candidates in<br />

alphabetic order per<br />

elective ofce<br />

NAPE SECRETARIAT/ELECTORAL<br />

COMMITTEE<br />

NAPE SECRETARIAT<br />

CANDIDATES, and ELECTORAL<br />

COMMITEE<br />

NAPE SECRETARIAT<br />

October<br />

15<br />

October<br />

16-18<br />

October<br />

19-22<br />

November<br />

15<br />

End of Voting Exercise<br />

Collation of submitted<br />

ballot<br />

Ratication of results by<br />

Electoral committee and<br />

presentation to Executive<br />

Announcement of<br />

<strong>2022</strong> NAPE Executives<br />

result at the AGM.<br />

ACTIVE MEMBERS<br />

NAPE SECRETARIAT/ELECTORAL<br />

COMMITTEE<br />

ELECTORAL COMMITTEE<br />

ELECTORAL COMMITTEE<br />

CHAIRMAN


NAPE PRE-CONFERENCE ACTIVITIES<br />

Visit www.conference.nape.org.ng to register for these events<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 55


LAGOS BUSINESS MEETING<br />

Deepwater assets offshore of the Niger Delta have produced tremendous volumes of hydrocarbons. Quantitative<br />

development costs and resource estimations are driven by 3D and 4D earth and simulation models that require<br />

continuous tuning and modification as dynamic reservoir, and facility conditions change with time as a function of<br />

production. As initial conditions change and new data is collected, so does the need to adjust and improve<br />

subsurface models. There are many techniques for accomplishing this, each with varying levels of complexity.<br />

Stratigraphic relationships routinely serve as a large uncertainty in complex deepwater systems. Adding to this<br />

complexity is the dynamic behavior of the reservoir as continued production and secondary recovery techniques are<br />

employed.<br />

To better understand the relationship between historic production performance and the predictive accuracy of<br />

forward models in deepwater assets, a 3D/4D seismic analysis was performed to help characterize subsurface<br />

relationships to explain unpredicted injector-producer waterfront behavior. The importance of accurately<br />

characterizing reservoir architecture is paramount and driven by turbidite flow phase (waxing-waning flow cycles),<br />

aggradation rate, compensational stacking, bathymetric morphology, and grain-size. Seismic geomorphology,<br />

together with log-based stratigraphic approaches were applied to a mature deepwater asset to improve the<br />

characterization, explain unpredicted production dynamics, and assess future development opportunities.<br />

Results demonstrate that the reservoir is represented by thick- compensationally stacked early-stage channel<br />

complexes ranging from erosively confined disorganized sand-rich flow deposits in the fairway axis, to thinner laterstage<br />

organized levee-confined deposits along the flanks. Synchronized system tracts analysis (structural and<br />

Wheeler domain) togetherwith seismic attribute analyses (spectral decomposition and instantaneous attributes) reveal distinct discontinuities between adjacent channel<br />

complexes that tend to amalgamate and disappear updip. The down-dip separation of the erosionally confined channel complexessuggests that they are laterally<br />

disconnected and form preferential flow-units along the depositional axis. Consequently, the occurrence of separate down-dip flow-units directly influence the dynamics and<br />

direction of water movement from the aquifer and water injection wells. The integration of seismic stratigraphy and well section analysis helped define the depositional<br />

architecture of thereservoir which was used to identify the major stratigraphic depositional trends that constrain communication in the reservoir.<br />

The result of this study was used to optimize the future development strategy for this reservoir to maximize the expected ultimate recovery (EUR). These new seismic<br />

stratigraphic workflows provide a clear basis for future application and utility in exploration and production.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 56


CHAPTER TECHNICAL SESSIONS<br />

Abuja Chapter Technical Meeting Held Wednesday, 10th August <strong>2022</strong><br />

The Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationist (NAPE) Abuja Chapter held her Q3<br />

Technical meeting at the PTDF office complex in Abuja.<br />

The technical presentation on Diagnostic Environmental Impact Footprints in a Multiplex<br />

Transition Era was delivered by Prof. Ogbonnaya Igwe, Dean of Faculty of Physical<br />

Sciences, University of Nigeria, Nsukka.<br />

Among the participants of the technical meeting, there were representatives from the House<br />

of Representatives, NUPRC, NMDPRA, NOSDRA, and NGSA.<br />

It can be said that Data Science and Machine Learning have not only come to stay but<br />

will continue to evolve. Whereas the other domains and industries were quick to react<br />

and harness it, growing from mere blue chips to net worth of multi-billions, the oil and<br />

gas industry was rather slow to react. However, seeing the potential and value of<br />

these evolving technologies, the E&P industry has joined the bandwagon with as<br />

much vigor as others. This presentation explores the derivatives the E&P industry<br />

stands to gain from the evolution of Data Science and Machine Learning.<br />

Is it possible to see how machine learning can be specifically tailored to oil and gas<br />

use cases, learn when to use machine learning, how it is already being used, and how<br />

to manage the data stream going forward, etc? With the different use cases and<br />

examples, this presentation explains aspects of Data Science/Machine Learning in<br />

different oil and gas projects by showcasing several real-life case studies. It is<br />

expected that the audience will learn to replicate or explore new projects for their<br />

organizations from the presentation and equally lead their teams through the journey of Data Science project(s) in the oil and gas<br />

industry circumventing the pitfalls and harnessing the business values.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 57


CHAPTER TECHNICAL SESSIONS<br />

AKWA/OWERRI<br />

CHAPTER<br />

The magnitude, severity and scale of environmental<br />

impacts correspond to the type and nature of<br />

stressor components. Changes in energy policies,<br />

demands and exploration are accompanied by<br />

significant environmental impacts that appear to<br />

alter the life cycle of people resident at or near<br />

specified ground zeros.<br />

Oil spill, for instance, has profoundly decimated<br />

lands, water and resources, destroyed lives and<br />

dreams, and derided creation and creativity. Unaware of well-defined<br />

environmental signatures that mirror corresponding energy attitudes, stakeholders<br />

and scientists have over the years lumped semi-classified impacts into a redundant<br />

domain in the cause and effect hypothesis.<br />

This lecture unbundles thelump, identifies clear-cut indicative footprints and aligns<br />

them with varying energy regimes within a bounded territory. It is theorized that the<br />

recognition of the signatures associated with contrasting energy schemes will aid<br />

the cleaner prediction and mitigation of potential future impacts.<br />

This novel model, in addition to securing lives and resources, will alsopropel the<br />

development of our world in a smart and sustainable pattern.<br />

On account of the relative ease of access to geological<br />

exposures on the Earth surface, the critical elements<br />

of a hydrocarbon system such as trap, source,<br />

reservoir and seal rocks, commonly complete in the<br />

subsurface, can be simulated on outcrop, even if as<br />

discrete components. Sedimentological field studies<br />

yield sets of data onstratigraphic sections and bed<br />

geometries, macroscopic textures, fabrics, mineral<br />

constituents, sedimentary structures, and tectonic<br />

configurations from which features the depositional<br />

environments can be diagnosed and the paleogeographic models formulated. In<br />

particular, reservoir attributes documented in the field and supplemented with<br />

laboratory analytical data, enable conceptualisation of the fluid dynamics within this<br />

highly compartmentalized containment component of the trapping configuration.<br />

The recognition of the equivalencies between the outcropping elements and their<br />

subsurface counterparts facilitate insight into the upstream (exploration and<br />

production) aspects of the petroleum industry through field and laboratory studies<br />

carried out at a minimum cost in a non-industrial setting, but of great help in<br />

assessing the technical risks and improving the accuracy of subsurface<br />

interpretations. This approach is recommended for exploring the Nigerian inland<br />

basins where outcropping lithologies and tectonic structures should constitute<br />

pointers to prospective hydrocarbon plays in the presently inaccessible subsurface.<br />

Upcoming Session<br />

but limited resources.<br />

BENIN CHAPTER<br />

Every discipline has been impacted over the years by<br />

technological advancements and geoscience is not an<br />

exception. New blue-chip startups emerge almost daily –<br />

disrupting existing norms and initialing others. Business<br />

owners have to adapt to new visions or align with<br />

technology trends to remain afloat. The difference between<br />

success and failure now has more to do with the extent to<br />

which business executives exhibit technological insight and<br />

foresight. E&P organizations therefore continue to hustle<br />

and juggle in the highly dynamic market space not just to<br />

avoid going sublime but to maximize revenue and optimize<br />

their use of limited resources to efficiently exploit available<br />

All these therefore come with new demands on the workforce. In this side of the world, a good<br />

grade out of high school is no longer enough. Employers demand resources who can add value<br />

from day one. There is the “added advantage syndrome”in the labour market and those who are<br />

able to prove that they have been in vectorial concordance with digital transformational trends<br />

tend to be the ones that ride these waves successfully and many grow to be captains of<br />

organizations and industries.<br />

As E&P organizations are looking for how to get affordable, reliable, sustainable energy; and<br />

how to do so efficiently; as considerations for carbon capture and green energy are on the rise,<br />

the focus turns to the geoscientist to provide for these global needs.<br />

The geoscientist must therefore be prepared to face the challenges ahead. This presentation<br />

exudes the salient demands and knowledge domains digital transformation has introduced and<br />

profferssolutions on how the geoscientist may be better prepared to meet the current demands<br />

and the challenges ahead. Participants will learn from assorted examples on the application of<br />

trending technologies: artificial intelligence, machine learning, and data analytics in the<br />

geoscience domain. They will be informed on basic skills required to move with technological<br />

trends and be the geoscientist who are sought after in this digital age.<br />

Approximately 31% non-productive time while drilling for oil<br />

and gas in non-salt well have been attributed to geomechanics<br />

(Dodson et al. 2009).Drilling campaign in Niger Delta has been<br />

characterized by instability challenges such as differential<br />

sticking/stuck pipe, hole-collapse/pack-off, lost circulation,<br />

well ballooning, kicks, etc.<br />

According to James Dodson survey in 2007, the oil and gas<br />

industry loses approximately 8 billion US dollar on yearly to<br />

problems associated with wellbore instability. Drilling process<br />

involves the removal of rock materials that once supported the<br />

insitu stress along the borehole trajectory, leaving the rock surrounding the hole to take the load<br />

previously taken by the removed rock. This causes concentration of stresses around the<br />

wellbore and often exceed the rock strength, therefore requires enough drilling fluid support to<br />

avoid wellbore stability issues. Understanding of the magnitude of hoop stress along the<br />

wellbore is critical for selecting the optimum mud weight requires to drill successfully without<br />

instability.<br />

Addressing this instability challenge requires detailed wellbore stability analysis of various<br />

analogue wells, identifying why the well failed and incorporating learnings from them into<br />

actionable plans for new drilling campaigns.<br />

Since the discovery of oil by Shell BP at Oloibiri Nigeria in<br />

1956, after half a century of exploration activities, there has<br />

been recorded increase in oil and gas infrastructure attacks<br />

and oil-related criminal violence. All these are classified as<br />

outdoor crimes with its attendant exposures and have<br />

increased the flow of illegal crude, as such affected the<br />

flagging oil production in the country. The perceived rise in the<br />

dynamics of organized crime and environmental damage in<br />

the context of Nigeria's oil industry vis-a-vis the noticed<br />

persistent lack of security of oil and gas assets triggered this<br />

research. The exercise involves timely and adequately<br />

securing the oil and gas-related crime scene, collection of general data (date, time and place),<br />

geographic data (longitude, latitude, elevation, solar orientation) as well as collection of relevant<br />

prints and spills cum pedological and ancillary data. These datasets serve as input parameters<br />

into the proposed 'ibeneguzo' software package. The result would, among other things, present<br />

an approximate guide to identifying the person(s) around the crime scene as at crime time and<br />

by extension the perpetrators of such act. This software will serve as an extension and plug-in<br />

cum add-on to the SCADA system in use which would help in providing information for<br />

presentation of expert witness during trials. This will go a long way in vindicating the innocent<br />

and assisting the jury in delivering effective justice.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 58


CHAPTER TECHNICAL SESSIONS<br />

PORT HARCOURT CHAPTER<br />

Exploration activities in SPDC's Shallow Water<br />

Offshore (SWO) acreage have focused on exploring for<br />

gas bearing reservoirs in deep high-pressured<br />

prospects to support NLNG T7 backfill. With increasing<br />

depth and resultant deteriorating reservoir quality, it<br />

becomes important to properly delineate the reservoirs<br />

to enable the robust volumetric estimation. In trying to<br />

solve this, we became increasingly aware of how much<br />

risks and uncertainty exists. The de-risking work<br />

required the need to properly integrate data and<br />

technology to answer the key question: If the reservoirs are present and how good are<br />

they in terms of reservoir quality?<br />

With the recently acquired OBN Seismic Data providing a substantive framework, we set<br />

out to understand the reservoir presence and its quality by integrating geological and<br />

geophysical methods with the available legacy data. This resulted in appropriate<br />

reservoir-seal pair definition, thickness ranges, NTG for prospective intervals, reservoir<br />

chance factor and ultimately an improved definition of the subsurface. We look forward to<br />

a successful drilling campaign which will also validate the learnings from this work in<br />

uncalibrated Deep Plays, helping to open a new frontier for exploration and calibrate<br />

parameters for subsequent exploration and development drilling.<br />

Exploration and Production (E&P)organizations deal<br />

with various data(geoscientific, engineering, structured<br />

and unstructured data, etc.) of different sizes/types from<br />

mixed sources.Each year, more data are acquired<br />

and/or generated, recycled, retrieved, managed and<br />

stored in silos or data lakes. As a result of corporate<br />

data growth, the demand for more storage capacities<br />

have been of tremendous increase. In parallel, sundry<br />

challenges are being introduced and carried along<br />

too.The include issues of streaming the data in a<br />

centralized storage, issues of data security, data<br />

quality/integrity, standardization, data exchange among different vendor applications,<br />

and so on.It is interesting to note that different approaches have been offered in the past<br />

by various organizations, however, the current dynamics in oil and gas data<br />

management, occasioned with the Covid-19 pandemic impact requires a thorough and indepth<br />

approach to managing these data. With the pandemic, organizations across the<br />

industry have sought solutions to relieve the pressure. The importance of good Data<br />

Management in the oil and gas industry cannot be over emphasized. Within the last few<br />

decades, organizations unwilling to adopt the best practices are lagging.<br />

This presentation, therefore, showcases varying solutions to the challenges above and<br />

much more. It is expected that the audience will find value in the solutions discussed to the<br />

extentof becoming obvious data management resource in their different organizations.<br />

UK/EUROPE<br />

CHAPTER<br />

Petroleum geochemistry improves exploration<br />

efficiency and production development<br />

strategies. Petroleum geochemistry provides<br />

insights in many of the variables that control the<br />

volumes of crude oil and natural gas available for<br />

entrapment, including source-rock distribution,<br />

richness and quality, thermal maturity, the timing<br />

of generation-migration-accumulation relative to<br />

trap formation and prediction of type of<br />

hydrocarbons. Petroleum Geochemistry is most powerful when used with other<br />

disciplines, such as seismic sequence stratigraphy, structural geology, and<br />

reservoir characterisation.<br />

Petroleum geochemistry offers rapid, low-cost evaluation tools to aid in<br />

understanding development and production problems. Petroleum reservoir<br />

geochemistry provide (1) assessment and prediction of hydrocarbons quality<br />

(2) evaluation of the processes that control hydrocarbon alteration in reservoirs<br />

(2), (3) assessment of vertical and lateral fluid continuity in a reservoir, (4)<br />

determination of proportions of commingled production from multiple zones<br />

and leaky casing, and (4) prediction of gas/oil and oil/water contact locations.<br />

A case study on the oil-oil and oil-source rock correlations is included in this<br />

presentation.<br />

Machine Learning (ML) is a growing technology<br />

that has proven to be effective and efficient. This<br />

research was aimed to devise ML models to<br />

predict the lithology of North Sea wells from well<br />

logs employing three (3) ML classifiers based on<br />

an ensemble of decision trees (Random Forest,<br />

Catboost and Xgboost). The dataset includes<br />

well logs from 118 wells in the Northern North<br />

Sea provided by the 2020 FORCE ML<br />

competition. XGBoost outperformed other ML methods as it accurately<br />

predicted more lithologies than other classifiers, with to total accuracy of 75%<br />

predicting 89% & 66% of shale & sandstone correctly . The dataset's quality is<br />

pivotal to the model's performance as poor data quality would output less<br />

accurate models and vice versa.<br />

Field XY is a mature oil field in the Niger Delta which has been on production since 1966. One of the major sustenance drivers for mature fields lies in<br />

finding ways to improve oil production at minimal cost.<br />

Bypassed oil was identified on producing reservoirs of Field XY using time-lapse cased-hole saturation logs. This was integrated with pressure and<br />

production data to analyze the behavior of the reservoirs, identify bypassed oil, and select suitable candidates for intervention, workover & infill drilling.<br />

Cased-hole Saturation Logging which utilizes pulsed neutron technology was key in investigating the presence of bypassed oil in the field. The tool was<br />

logged in several Wells behind Casing and Completion tubulars. Two main acquisition modes were used: Carbon-Oxygen (C/O) and Sigma. The C/O<br />

mode is hinged on the inelastic scattering of high energy neutrons by atomic nuclei resulting in the detection of atoms in the Formation. The ratio of<br />

Carbon to Oxygen atoms provides information about Oil saturation. The Sigma log focuses on the capture of neutrons by atomic nuclei. The hydrogen<br />

atom plays a significant role in this capture process and is thus linked to porosity and the current water saturation of the reservoir. The Sigma method is<br />

sensitive to the salinity of the Formation and works better at higher salinities. The C/O method works independent of salinity.<br />

The logging context was an environment of low Water salinity. The Sigma log gave good indication of Water saturation in Gas-bearing intervals but was not robust enough to discriminate<br />

between Oil and Water due to low salinities. The C/O log was effective in computing Oil saturations.<br />

Rigless interventions were successfully carried out in identified bypassed areas and infill drilling has been proposed based on the result of the cased-hole saturation logging and reservoir<br />

synthesis.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 59


CHAPTER TECHNICAL SESSIONS<br />

This work attempts to define the continent –ocean<br />

crustal boundary (COB) offshore the Niger delta<br />

(southeast sector) using aeromagnetic data.The<br />

o<br />

study area is located within longitude 6-8 E, and<br />

o 2<br />

latitude 3-5 N and is about 50, 625 km .The delta<br />

formed following the Mesozoic rifting of the Atlantic<br />

and has a total stratal thickness of about 12 km<br />

overlying the basement.These consist of<br />

continental, parrallic and marine Formations. The<br />

total intensity magnetic data over the study area<br />

th<br />

were subjected to reduction to pole and 4 degree polynomial filtering. These<br />

generated magnetic stripes (seafloor spreading anomalies)and deep seated<br />

basement magnetic signatures respectively.<br />

An isometric projection of the total intensity magnetic anomaly map of the area was<br />

also produced. Based on distinct magnetic signatures from the three data sets, over<br />

onshore and offshore zones, the continental crust (granitic), transitional zone and<br />

oceanic crust (basaltic) in the study area are mapped. COB delimitation is of<br />

profound importance in determining limits of hydrocarbon generation zones in<br />

offshore basins.<br />

The more the granitic crust advances seaward the higher the hydrocarbon<br />

generation potential of the basin. From this work the COB is delimited to be circa 70<br />

km in the west, and 100 km in the east from the coast line of the data.<br />

WARRI CHAPTER<br />

acceptable would be ideal.<br />

UYO/CALABAR<br />

CHAPTER<br />

The importance of rock property prediction using<br />

seismic data can never be over emphasis. With<br />

the advent of Deep Learning approaches, the task<br />

of finding patterns over seismic data becomes<br />

feasible, enabling geoscientists to execute their<br />

prediction with very confident results. A deep<br />

learning approach capable of training well data<br />

and applying on the entire seismic volume, looking<br />

at patterns on the dataset, instead of modelling a<br />

seismic trace is the next step on any rock property<br />

is the core of this approach.<br />

Carbon dioxide (CO 2) in the atmosphere has<br />

increased dramatically and faster than any time<br />

reported in history. The storage of large volumes of<br />

CO 2 in deep geological formations is one of the most<br />

promising climate mitigation options. The long-term<br />

retention time and environmental safety of the CO 2<br />

storage are defined by the interaction of the injected<br />

CO 2 with the reservoir fluids and rocks. Finding a<br />

s t o r a g e r e s e r v o i r t h a t i s l o n g l a s t i n g ,<br />

thermodynamically stable and environmentally<br />

Storage of CO 2 as solid carbonates in basaltic rocks may provide such a long-term<br />

and thermodynamically stable solution. Mineral carbonation in basaltic rock offers a<br />

permanent storage solution to mitigate anthropogenic CO 2 emissions in the<br />

atmosphere. Basaltic rocks, consisting of magnesium and calcium silicate minerals,<br />

provide alkaline earth metals necessary to form solid carbonates.<br />

The CarbFix CO 2 pilot project in Iceland and Wallula project, USA have shown great<br />

potential for CO 2 storage. However, accessing the integrity of any basaltic reservoir<br />

for permanent storage is of great importance in every CO 2 storage site.<br />

Flow assurance in oil and gas production<br />

encompasses the thermal-hydraulic design<br />

a n d a s s e s s m e n t o f m u l t i p h a s e<br />

production/transport systems as well as<br />

prediction, prevention, and remediation of flow<br />

constraints due to pressure drop, hydrates<br />

formation, wax precipitation, and asphaltenes<br />

sedimentation. Given the boundary conditions<br />

at the wellhead, severaldeliverables such as<br />

pipeline sizing,heat transfer, multiphase flow regimes, erosion, and<br />

corrosion predictions are deployed to ensure that the fluid produced from<br />

the reservoir is delivered successfully at the point of sales.<br />

However, the flow assurance gains are often reversed in the intermediary<br />

host facilities such as crude oil storage tanks where pressure declines,<br />

temperature fluctuates; asphaltenic and paraffinic components of the<br />

crude oil, water-in-oil, and oil-in-water emulsions create suitable<br />

conditions for sludge deposition.<br />

This presentation provides an integrated approach to multiphase flow<br />

problems, including storage facilities using an experimental method and<br />

computational fluid dynamics to investigate the impact of hydrodynamics<br />

in the storage facilities in preventing sludge deposition; a promising<br />

approach that is proven to significantly improve profit margins in oil<br />

production.<br />

Exploration and Production (E&P) data<br />

management approach has been dynamic,<br />

evolving from a side-lined process for<br />

interpreters, drilling and reservoir engineers to a<br />

business focal point in the asset-based,<br />

multidisciplinary team approach to reservoir<br />

development. Some challenges associated with<br />

proper date management in our industry may<br />

include data fidelity/ preservation / access/<br />

integration/ analytics/ etc. And the salient<br />

questions to these challenges may include but not limited to, what solutions<br />

exist to address the issues? What frameworks and practices are emerging?<br />

what can be done to optimize existing workflows and get fit for the future? Etc.<br />

These and many other answers will be provided in this presentation for a better<br />

understanding of data management solutions in the industry. Furthermore, the<br />

presentation will discuss the trending data management activities in the oil and<br />

gas industry. The enhancers and inhibitors, the gains and pains, the ways and<br />

means of getting aligned with the trend, and so on. Cloud solutions and<br />

emerging platforms, standards, and regulations with regards to E&P data are<br />

also highlighted.<br />

Like every other practice and discipline, data management in the E&P industry<br />

has gone beyond the norms of yester years. If an E&P organization must<br />

succeed, it has to look closely at its past and existing methodologies of data<br />

management to ensure it aligns with current trends and future requirements. A<br />

lot of organizations are now looking at, not just how their data gets managed but<br />

who (with what skill sets) is managing it. The reasons are not farfetched,<br />

organizations want to derive insight from their historical and acquired data as<br />

fast as possible. Managing data in this era of Big Data requires new computing<br />

methodologies, new hosting solutions, new plugins for enhancement and<br />

state-of-the-art disaster recovery solutions. E&P organizations desire to be as<br />

agile as the blue chips. A downtime of just a minute could lead to unimaginable<br />

values of NPT for larger organizations and this could directly or indirectly affect<br />

bottom line and profitability of the organization.<br />

Access all past recordings of NAPE Technical/<br />

Business meetings via the NAPE YouTube page.<br />

Click Here<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 60


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NAPE-YP ACTIVITY REPORT<br />

Geostatistical methods. Participants also shared<br />

their expectation from the course. The interactive<br />

session was filled with several contributions,<br />

questions and comments from the participants.<br />

The session ended at about 4:00pm.<br />

NAPE-YP has identified the need to equip her<br />

members with trainings for Explorationistsin the<br />

Oil & Gas industry hence, the Technical Capacity<br />

Building Training <strong>2022</strong>.<br />

The first Technical Capacity Building Training<br />

was on "Volumetric Evaluation: Essentials for<br />

Young Professionals".Thistraining was<br />

handled by Mr. Johnbosco Uche, the Manager,<br />

Energy Transition Business Opportunity – Shell<br />

Nigeria and lasted for two days (30 and 31 July,<br />

<strong>2022</strong>).<br />

th<br />

The first session, which held on Saturday, 30<br />

July <strong>2022</strong>,commenced at 1:00pm with an<br />

introduction from the organizers and then the<br />

speaker. The session covered the overview of<br />

Petroleum Elements and Volumetric Estimation.<br />

It was a practical class as there were hands-on<br />

exercises. The session ended at about 4:00pm.<br />

Image 1& 2: Mr. Uche during his presentation<br />

The second session, which held on Sunday, 31st<br />

July <strong>2022</strong>, started at 1:00pm with a re-cap of the<br />

previous day. The concepts of Uncertainties &<br />

Risking and a synopsis of Economics were<br />

covered. At the end of the lecture, the YP lead<br />

(Ifeanyi Ikueze) and the Deputy-YP Lead (Flora<br />

Anusiobi) gave the vote of thanks.<br />

The two-day training was knowledge-filled as<br />

participants were better equipped on the concept<br />

of Volumetric Estimation and Petroleum<br />

Economics.<br />

Image 3 & 4: Snapshots of comments<br />

About 50 participants registered for this course;<br />

they were added to a WhatsApp group where<br />

interaction with the instructor and fellow<br />

participants continued. Certificates were<br />

awarded to participants.<br />

Constructing a 3D geological model is a widely<br />

used modern tool to understand hydrocarbon<br />

reservoirs at static conditions using their lithology<br />

and fluid properties. The reservoir model is<br />

significant to foretell the behavior of reservoirs<br />

because it integrates much information within the<br />

structural framework and stratigraphic layers. It<br />

also displays the distributions of inter-well<br />

properties like porosity, permeability and water<br />

saturation.<br />

This two-day NAPE-YP Technical Capacity<br />

Building Training was on "Basic Principles of<br />

3D Geological Modeling and Inter-Well<br />

Property Prediction" and was delivered by<br />

Ebere Benard (PhD), Lead Geoscientist, Seplat<br />

Energy.<br />

r d<br />

The first day (Saturday, 3 <strong>September</strong><br />

<strong>2022</strong>)commenced at 1:00pm with a welcome<br />

address from the organizers and then the<br />

speaker. The instructor shared the outline of the<br />

training which covered Introduction to 3D<br />

Geological modeling, sedimentary environments<br />

& Processes, Concept of facies and then<br />

Image 1& 2: Images from Dr. Benard’s presenta on<br />

Day 2 of the training held on Sunday, 4th<br />

<strong>September</strong> <strong>2022</strong> and started at 1:00pm with a recap<br />

of the previous day. Seismic attributes and<br />

3D geological modeling were covered with case<br />

studies. Questions were asked during the<br />

session which helped participants have better<br />

understanding of the subject matter.<br />

This two-day course had participants affirm to the<br />

fact that their expectations were met and were<br />

willing to practice knowledge gained in their<br />

respective jobs/careers.<br />

Image 3 & 4: Snapshots from the course<br />

About 35 participants registered for this course.<br />

Certificates were awarded to participants.<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 62


INAUGURATION OF THE NAPE STUDENT MEMBER<br />

CHAPTER ON THE 29TH of JULY, <strong>2022</strong><br />

AT MOUNTAIN TOP UNIVERSITY,<br />

PRAYER CITY, OGUN STATE<br />

The Nigerian Association of Petroleum<br />

Explorationists (NAPE) inaugurated<br />

Mountain Top University Students' Chapter<br />

on the 29th of July, <strong>2022</strong>. The Head of<br />

D e p a r t m e n t o f G e o s c i e n c e s , D r .<br />

Oluwatimilehin Benjamin Balogun and other<br />

staff members received the NAPE<br />

representatives on arrival. The NAPE team,<br />

ably represented by Mr. Phillip Ajaebili,<br />

NAPE UAP Chairman; Mrs Nonye Niyi-<br />

Afolabi, NAPE Assistant General Secretary;<br />

Mr. Lawrence Osuagwu, Acting Head NAPE<br />

Secretariat; and Ms Abieyuwa Ogbebor,<br />

Technical/Membership Officer, paid a<br />

courtesy visit to the Vice Chancellor,<br />

Professor Elijah Ayolabi and other<br />

management staff of Mountain Top<br />

University. The Vice Chancellor, Professor<br />

Elijah Ayolabi, introduced himself and the<br />

management staff and thanked NAPE<br />

representatives for the visit. “Though the<br />

geoscience department was established<br />

recently, it has been able to achieve great<br />

feats as evidenced by 2nd position in Africa<br />

for the IBA 2020 competition”, he said. In<br />

response, Mr. Phillip Ajaebili, NAPE UAP<br />

Chairman, introduced the NAPE team and<br />

further expatiated on the role of NAPE as a<br />

link between the academia and the<br />

petroleum industry. Before Mr. Phillip<br />

Ajaebili presented a gift of NAPE chestpinbadge<br />

to all the management staff present,<br />

he thanked MTU management for the warm<br />

reception stating that the Vice Chancellor,<br />

Professor Ayolabi, has contributed<br />

immensely to NAPE.<br />

The NAPE team then proceeded to the<br />

College of Basic and Applied Sciences<br />

(CBAS), first to the Head of Department of<br />

Geosciences' office and thereafter to the<br />

venue of the inauguration. The programme<br />

started with opening prayers said by Dr.<br />

Michael Olajide Okunubi, a geophysicist,<br />

followed by opening remarks by Dr. Atunima<br />

Jonathan, MTU NAPE Advisor. In his<br />

remarks, Dr. Jonathan highlighted the role<br />

of NAPE in geoscience education in Nigeria<br />

and the benefits of having a NAPE Chapter.<br />

Mr. Phillip Ajaebili added and elaborated on<br />

it. Mr. Phillip encouraged the students, using<br />

several practical examples, to have<br />

personal vision and the discipline to achieve<br />

s u c h d r e a m s . H e r e i t e r a t e d t h a t<br />

opportunities abound for the hard-working<br />

geoscientists.<br />

In addition, Ms Abieyuwa Ogbebor,<br />

Technical/Membership Officer, prompted<br />

the students and staff members to stay<br />

close to NAPE. She emphasized on the<br />

need to attend NAPE conferences and<br />

workshops and be up to date with the annual<br />

membership dues. Mrs Nonye Niyi-Afolabi,<br />

PHOTOGRAPHS<br />

NAPE Assistant General Secretary<br />

reassured the students that there is room for<br />

everyone, both young and old are free to<br />

participate in NAPE. Mr. Lawrence assured<br />

the audience that NAPE staff are available<br />

and willing to help should a need arise.<br />

Finally, Mr. Phillip and the entire NAPE team<br />

formally inaugurated NAPE MTU Student<br />

Chapter and presented NAPE MTU Student<br />

Chapter plaque to the NAPE Advisor, Dr.<br />

Atunima Jonathan. Mr. Phillip further<br />

presented NAPE student certificates to the<br />

registered students. NAPE never failed to<br />

demonstrate her kindness as the NAPE<br />

team presented a donation of geoscience<br />

literature including books and journals<br />

(attached) to the geoscience department.<br />

In his closing remarks, the Head of<br />

Geosciences Department, Dr. Balogun,<br />

expressed his gratitude to NAPE and the<br />

representatives for continued collaboration<br />

with the department. He also expressed his<br />

expectations and better involvement of<br />

NAPE in the geoscience education of the<br />

students. He then wished the NAPE officials<br />

and other members a safe return journey.<br />

The closing prayer was said by Mr. A.O.<br />

Alao.<br />

Prof. Elijah Ayolabi, VC, MTU, welcoming the NAPE team<br />

nd<br />

Mr. Phillip Ajaebili (2 R), NAPE UAP Chair, responding to<br />

the VC’s welcome message<br />

Prof. Elijah Ayolabi, VC, being decorated by Ms Abieyuwa Ogbebor<br />

and Mr. Phillip Ajaebili<br />

A cross-section of MTU Geoscience Students with the NAPE team<br />

Dr. Atunima Jonathan (L) receiving NAPE Student Chapter<br />

certificate from Mr. Phillip Ajaebili<br />

MTU Management Staff and the NAPE Representatives<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 63


Dr. Oluwatimlehin B. Balogun, HOD Geosciences Ms Abieyuwa Ogbebor, NAPE Technical/Membership Officer Mr. Phillip Ajaebili presenting NAPE Certificate of membership to Mr. Lawrence Osuagwu giving his speech and seated is<br />

Miss Praise Ogunleye-Segun<br />

Mrs. Nonye Niyi-Afolabi<br />

List of Books, Journals and Bulletins Donated by NAPE during the Chapter Inauguration<br />

Books<br />

S/N Title Authors Publisher Series Publictn<br />

Yr<br />

1 Upper Cretaceous<br />

Sequences in the Southern<br />

Bida Basin, Nigeria<br />

Akande, S. O.;<br />

Ojo, O. J. and<br />

Ladipo, K. O.<br />

Mosuro<br />

Publishers,<br />

Ibadan<br />

NAPE<br />

Geological Field<br />

Guide 01<br />

2005<br />

2 A guide to preparing<br />

Geosciences Research<br />

Proposals<br />

Journals<br />

A. Idowu<br />

Olayinka<br />

Mosuro<br />

Publishers,<br />

Ibadan<br />

NAPE Research<br />

Publication<br />

S/N Title Publisher Year Volume Issue Copies<br />

1 Nigerian Petroleum Nigerian Association of 2020 3 2 2<br />

Business Bulletin Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE)<br />

2 NAPE Bulletin Nigerian Association of 2019 28 1 2<br />

Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE)<br />

3 NAPE Bulletin Nigerian Association of 2019 28 2 2<br />

Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE)<br />

4 NAPE Bulletin Nigerian Association of<br />

Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE)<br />

2021 30 2 2<br />

5 NAPE News<br />

(<strong>Magazine</strong>)<br />

6 NAPE News<br />

(<strong>Magazine</strong>)<br />

7 NAPE News<br />

(<strong>Magazine</strong>)<br />

8 NAPE News<br />

(<strong>Magazine</strong>)<br />

9 NAPE News<br />

(<strong>Magazine</strong>)<br />

Fliers<br />

Nigerian Association of<br />

Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE)<br />

Nigerian Association of<br />

Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE)<br />

Nigerian Association of<br />

Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE)<br />

Nigerian Association of<br />

Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE)<br />

Nigerian Association of<br />

Petroleum Explorationists<br />

(NAPE)<br />

2006<br />

Sept., 2019 2<br />

2019<br />

2<br />

Conference<br />

<strong>Edition</strong><br />

April, 2020 2<br />

Aug., 2020 2<br />

2021<br />

Conference<br />

<strong>Edition</strong><br />

1. Fliers for the 40th Annual International Conference and Exhibition/call for abstracts (55 copies)<br />

2. 10 copies of NAPE AICE <strong>2022</strong> Registration (as part of 40th Annual International Conference and<br />

Exhibition events). 10 copies<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 64<br />

2


Practical Skillset for Young Professionals to<br />

Advance their Career in an Energy Transiting<br />

21st Century<br />

“Times have changed”, we commonly say; with this requiring equivalent changes to the way a number of things are done in those times.<br />

Over the years, accompanying each passing century are new and/or improved ways of carrying out various activities, to thrive in that space of time. Hence,<br />

it's imperative for young professionals to stay abreast of these new/improved approaches to stay afloat in a very competitive and fast-moving world.<br />

The transition of dominant energy sources from one or more sources to another or others is not immune to this evolution through centuries, although this<br />

happened slowly over time (Figure 1). From Figure 1 below, traditional biomass (i.e. the burning of solid fuels such as crop waste, charcoal or wood) was<br />

the dominant source of energy worldwide until the mid-19th century, which saw the rise of coal as a result of the industrial revolution. This was then followed<br />

by oil, gas and hydropower in the 20th century. The inclusion of nuclear energy in the energy mix happened in the 1960s, while the likes of solar and wind<br />

energy were added in the 1980s.<br />

The 21st century has witnessed a great deal of push to switch the world's energy source from fossil fuels to an energy mix dominated by low-carbon<br />

sources of energy (i.e. renewable technologies and nuclear power). This is driven by environmental concerns (the quest to have cleaner/green energy),<br />

technological advancement, changes in economic and political landscape, and demand for greater convenience.<br />

For Young Professionals to thrive in a uniquely<br />

challenging massive energy transiting world,<br />

which is yet full of opportunities, reskilling will be<br />

required in a number of computer and<br />

mathematical skills, as well as other areas such<br />

as construction, installation, maintenance and<br />

transportation, and to perform site selections and<br />

assessments (Harper & Merten, 2021). In<br />

comparison to training, reskilling requires some<br />

degree of behavioural change.<br />

According to the 2020 EY Report on O&G Digital<br />

Transformation and the Workforce, the oil and<br />

gas sector has a gap between skill importance<br />

and current maturity for some computer/digital<br />

skills that is startling:<br />

Ÿ Digital engineering – 68% importance vs<br />

31% maturity.<br />

Ÿ Data science – 85% importance vs 23%<br />

Ÿ<br />

maturity.<br />

Artificial intelligence – 68% importance<br />

vs 9% maturity.<br />

Ÿ Data analytics – 91% importance vs 32%<br />

maturity (Harper & Merten, 2021).<br />

In as much as the current energy transition is a<br />

and will be an ongoing effort, it's already ramping<br />

Figure 1: Global primary energy consumption by source (Ritchie, Roser, Rosado, 2020); After Smil<br />

(2016) and BP (2021).<br />

up in major ways. According to the International<br />

Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), employment in the renewable sector hit 11 million jobs in 2018, compared to the 10.3 million jobs in 2017; with solar<br />

photovoltaic employing the most, followed by liquid biofuel, hydropower, and wind energy.<br />

Transiting to renewable energy sources doesn't imply beginning from scratch as overlap lies in a number of areas. An example lies between offshore oil<br />

and wind: the existing experience and operations of building offshore oil platforms can be leveraged for offshore wind services, such as, construction and<br />

maintenance, having significant synergies with the offshore oil and gas sector. Also, important scientific data (such as geoscience and environmental data)<br />

will be required to select sites for offshore wind projects and to determine feasibility.<br />

The world is indeed evolving, same as the opportunities that lie therein, hence, it's imperative for young professionals to acquire the skills required in a fastchanging<br />

and competitive world to advance their career.<br />

Works Cited<br />

BP. (2021). Statistical Review of World Energy . London: Whitehouse Associates.<br />

EY. (2020, July 05). Oil and Gas Digital Skills Survey . Retrieved April 04, <strong>2022</strong>, from EYh:t tps://ey.com/oilandgas/digitalskills<br />

Harper, J., & Merten, S. (2021, June 16) . Engineers and geoscientists need new skills for a r enewable future, Retrived April 04, <strong>2022</strong>, from<br />

https://www.elsevier.com/connect/engineers-need-new-digital-skills-for-a-future-in-renewable-energy.<br />

Ritchie, H., Roser, M., & Rosado, P. (2020 ) . Our World in Data. Retrieved April 04, <strong>2022</strong>f,rom https://ourworldindata.org/energy<br />

Smil, V. (2016, December 14). Vaclav Smil. Retrived April 04, <strong>2022</strong>, from https://vaclavsmil.com/2016/12/14/energy-transitions-global-and-nationalperspectives-second-expanded-and-updated-edtion/<br />

NAPENEWS AUG/SEPT <strong>2022</strong> 65


PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOP COMMITTEE MEMBERS<br />

Mr. Uche JohnBosco - Committee Lead<br />

Mrs. Olajumoke Ajayi<br />

Mr. Obinna Okoli<br />

Mr. Emmanuel Egbele<br />

Mr. Chukwuemeka Odebeatu<br />

Mr. Osim Ogboke<br />

Ms. Cynthia Ike

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