The stakeholders who gathered at the third edition of the African Local Content Roundtable held in Abuja between October 25 and 26 2023 with the theme “Fostering Local Content In Africa for Africans,” agreed that the concept of local content is not merely a policy, but a catalyst for transformation.
According to a statement released on Saturday, the Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, Simbi Wabote, noted that one of the greatest challenges bedevilling the African Oil and Gas industry is local manufacturing of components.
“90 per cent, if not more, of the equipment that we use are imported because we’ve not focused on how to manufacture some of the components in-country,” he said.
While noting that “the importance of developing homegrown cost-effective affordable and scalable solutions to address local challenges cannot be overemphasised,” the NCDMB boss identified prioritisation of research and development as well as funding as key to delivering local content goals on the continent.
He therefore called for robust engagements on quality service and equipment manufacturing, cross-border partnerships, intensive out-of-the-box thinking and improvement of funding sources or leveraging additional funding sources to overcome the funding challenges of oil and gas producing countries.
“The time for change is now and it is our collective responsibility to usher in a new era of local content development and implementation in Africa’s oil and gas industry,” said Wabote, adding that “The NCDMB stands as a key advocate In local content development not just in Nigeria but Africa as a whole.”
Similarly, the Secretary General of the African Petroleum Producers;’ Organization, Omar Farouk, lamented that Africa has continued to be dependent on foreign oil and gas technologies despite being in the oil prodcuing business for years and making billions from oil and gas projects.
“We have sadly been conditioned to believe that such dependency is normal. More alarming is the fact that the African continent has the highest proportion of its population living in energy poverty with over 600 million Africans living without access to electricity and millions of others living without any access to modern energy. 70% of the oil we produce is exported. 70% of the gas is also exported,” said Farouk.
“Africa must be allowed to use its affordable and readily available source of energy mainly oil and gas. Today’s developed countries used it to get to where they are today, we must be allowed to also use it to lift the living conditions of our people and get them out of poverty.”
On his part, Nigeria’s Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Heineken Lokpobiri, said the theme of this year’s Roundtable – ‘Fostering Local Content In Africa for Africans’, was appropriate “for Africa to evolve from not just supplying raw materials, but developing capacity and capability to explore, produce and process its hydrocarbons resources into petroleum derivatives for its own use.”