There have been ongoing community protests at Oil Mining Lease (OML) 30, Nigeria’s second largest onshore oil and gas asset, located in the Niger Delta about 35km east of Warri.
Central to the unrest is the success story of a young technical services operator, Salvic Petroleum Resources Limited.
OML 30
Investigations reveal that SALVIC, a relatively young Nigerian company, had been acting as 3rd party operator of OML30 in the last one year on behalf the name-plate operator, a company called Heritage Energy Operational Services Ltd (HEOSL), and that SALVIC achieved obvious successes in the one year it took charge of the mining lease to the benefit of all stakeholders, that the communities are unhappy with the sudden move to replace SALVIC with foreign operators who do not understand the local environment nor the requisite stakeholder management.
Covering 1,095 sq km, comprising 11 fields, 9 flow stations, the Ughelli tank farm (UPS), the Trans Forcados Pipeline (TFP), and with reserves estimated at about 1 billion barrels of oil, OML30 is a critical source of oil revenues for the Federal Government, the Delta State, 110 host communities and other asset owners around the region.
The communities point to SALVIC’s commendable performance in OML30, taking production from zero to 75,000 barrels per day (bpd), bringing back the Forcados Pipeline which had been down for 15 months prior, in record time and sustaining an uptime of over 86 percent during the 12 months of operations between March 2017 and April 2018. Furthermore, SALVIC restored good relationships with the communities and recorded no major security or environmental issue during the same period.
The Communities and their leadership therefore see no justification to terminate SALVIC.
SALVIC is a new Exploration & Production (E&P) company in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry. Company information indicates that SALVIC has strategically differentiated itself as an E&P company with a service orientation, focused on providing the full range of value chain E&P services as a non-equity holder 3rd party operator. Salvic’s strengths lie in execution excellence, cost control, operational efficiencies and optimising existing infrastructure to extract value, even from challenging and mature assets, and deliver premium value to stakeholders.
In 2017, OML30 was an ideal for SALVIC to prove its new approach and capabilities. Between March 2017 and April 2018, under a Technical Services Agreement (TSA) with the name-plate Operator of OML30, Heritage Energy Operational Services Limited (HEOSL), SALVIC embarked on handling all aspects of operations and crude oil production in OML30, including technical support services, security, operation & management (O&M), community relations & other stakeholder management, CSR and management of the 87km Trans Forcados Pipeline (TFP).
Salvic was given steep production targets with a penalty of $25million if the targets were missed, the asset had been on Zero production for 15 months prior and Forcados Pipeline had been down throughout the 15 months. It was thus a daunting challenge for any operator, let alone a young new company in a complex business arrangement.
Salvic logo
Not scared of the challenge, SALVIC took on the task of turning around the fortunes of OML30 and by mid December 2017 had ramped up oil production from Zero to 75,000 bpd, a feat that drew commendations from industry experts and the Communities, as well as the Federal Government and the Delta State government.
According to company sources, Salvic achieved the feat without drilling any new wells, but put in place a robust work programme of creative and innovative solutions that optimised production and unlocked value from legacy infrastructure and old equipment.
Production ramp up was made possible by another gargantuan feat that Salvic achieved. The innovative company restored the erstwhile debilitated Forcados Pipeline in record time of 3 months and maintained uptime throughout of over 85%.
These feats were instrumental in improving revenue generation for the Federal Government, the Delta State, all injectors into the Forcados Pipeline and other asset owners in the western Niger Delta. The sustained uptime on the trunk line also enhanced gas production into the domestic market for power generation by the continuous support of OML34 condensate evacuation.
The other verifiable successes that Salvic achieved in OML30 on behalf of HEOSL and the JV Partners include peaceful community relations and stakeholder management. One of the main community issues was Unemployment and the casualisation of labour. Salvic changed the practice of treating community workers as cash-based casual labour by converting them to full time permanent employees with full benefits. The operator also recorded no major health, safety, security & environment (HSSE) incident. Specifically, in February 2018, the company achieved a total of over 1.1 million loss time injury-free man-hours, which is a rare feat in view of the size of the OML30 asset and the operations.
“The SALVIC and OML30 success story is one of defying all the odds”, said one industry observer. “By their achievements in OML30, the SALVIC Team has gained a name as Turn-Around experts in handling and extracting value from challenging and complex assets.
“They met and exceeded targets that were near impossible and demonstrated that excellence does not come from the age of a company but from the resilience of innovative, intelligent people who are empowered and focused on results”, he concluded.
The Salvic/OML30 project was led by, but not exclusively: Ikemefuna Okafor - CEO, Salvic; Ebenezer Ajayi - ED, Operations; Theophilus Ekiyor-Katimi - OML30 Asset Manager; Gabriel Oramasionwu CEO, Abbeycourt; Celine Loader - Director, Corporate Affairs (incl. Government & Community Relations); Fufeyin Funkakpo, Manager, Government & Community Relations; Uchechi Nwankwo - GM, HSSE; Okey Ekeocha, Manager, Security; and Maxwell Okoh, MD, Eraskorp.