Obasanjo said he gave out licences to companies
in a bid to achieve this, adding that by now, 50 per cent of the vehicles in
the country should have been running on gas.
The former President stated these during a courtesy visit by the management of
Nipco Plc to him at his Presidential Hilltop residence in Abeokuta, Ogun State.
In 2006, the Obasanjo administration gave out
licences to three companies, Nipco Plc, Contact Global and Global Steel, for
the development of Compressed Natural Gas for vehicles.
But it was gathered that only Nipco, which later
went into a partnership with the Nigeria Gas Company to form Green Gas Limited,
had invested significantly in the project since then.
While reacting to comments by the Managing
Director, Nipco, Mr. Venkataraman Venkatapathy, Obasanjo said, “When I gave the
licence in my time, the idea was to use what we had and by now, we could have
put half of all the vehicles on gas.”
Venkatapathy had earlier said the replacement of
petrol by the CNG would save Nigeria the much-needed foreign exchange on
importation of petrol.
He said, “The CNG is a superior auto fuel
alternative to liquid fuels mainly petrol and diesel, specifically for
countries like Nigeria, which is blessed with abundant (over 186 trillion cubic
feet) availability of natural gas that remains untapped.
According to him, in Benin City, Edo State, over
4,000 vehicles run on the CNG which resulted in replacing 20 million litres of
petrol from 2012 to 2015 and forex savings of over $9m.
He said Green Gas had developed nine
operational CNG stations, with three stations under completion and five under
construction.
A former Special Assistant on Petroleum Resources
to President Obasanjo, Dr. Muhammed Ibrahim, who was on the Nipco team, said,
“I was one of the team members when President Obasanjo was in office in 2006
that initiated the full concept of development of gas for vehicles and other
applications in the country. It was during his regime that President Obasanjo
awarded three licences to three companies to invest in the promotion and diffusion
of Compressed Natural Gas for vehicular application in the country.
“But because of the capital-intensive and
high-tech nature of the project, only one company today after 10 years has
invested millions of dollars in the project such that the entire Benin City
is encircled with a network of gas pipelines with
about seven CNG gas stations providing the CNG to more than 4,000 vehicles.
He said the company had constructed the largest
CNG station on the African continent in Ibafo, Ogun State.
Source: Punch News
Source: Punch News

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