Oil firms launch new funding for Niger Delta

Oil firms launch new funding for Niger Delta

A new development
initiative between national and international donor agencies and
development groups in the Niger Delta region was launched at the
weekend.

Foundation for
Partnership Initiatives in the Niger Delta (PIND) was launched in Abuja
to provide the platform for the advancement of the new development
strategy by Chevron Nigeria Limited (CNL) to help redress some of the
challenges oil and gas companies operating in the region have been
facing.

Chevron
Corporation, which recently established the Niger Delta Partnership
Initiative (NDPI) Foundation, a new five year $50 million programme to
help explore fresh socio-economic opportunities in the region, said the
initiative will work with other donor agencies in public and private
sectors to administer economic development activities for commercial
agriculture and small and medium-scale enterprises (SMEs) development.

Other activities,
according to its Project Director, Dennis Flemming, include capacity
building to strengthen local government agencies and civil society
organizations; peace building activities to foster stability and
reconciliation in the region; analysis and advocacy programmes to
identify socio-economic needs of the people of the region.

Mr Flemming said
the organisation will implement its programmes throughout the nine oil
producing states of the region through a careful analysis and
negotiation process to identify viable projects and the most suitable
locations for them.

A new benchmark

Managing Director
of Chevron, Andrew Fawthrop, described the initiative as, “a new
benchmark in Chevron’s approach to help deliver better social and
economic outcomes in the places where we operate”, adding that the
approach to work with other development partners will offer an
opportunity to “develop dynamic new solutions for the development
challenges faced by the Niger Delta region.

Though it is
expected to operate from two main locations – Abuja and Warri – the
initial development partners will include Ministry of Niger Delta
Affairs, German technical Corporation (GTZ), United States Agency for
International Development (USAID), United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP), World Bank, United Nation’s Global Fund and the Delta State
government.

Minister of Niger
Delta Affairs, Goodsday Orubebe, said the initiative, which is designed
to help transform the socio-economic fortunes and welfare of the people
of the Niger Delta region, was in line with what the government is
putting together in collaboration with some international development
agencies to establish the Niger Delta Trust Fund (NDTF) to help tackle
the development challenges of the region.

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One comment

  1. sundiata keita says:

    Please go to Singapore and learn from about:
    The Singapore/German institute
    The Singapore/Japan institute
    The Singapore/Phillips institute
    The Singapore/French institute
    Chevron/Shell/Total/Agip all the four major oil companies should establish training schools like what exxonmobil has done in Eket.
    Total established a new training school in Oman and they are currently recruiting for instructors..They should establish same in Nigeria.

    Use the above as your foundation for a new Niger Delta human capacity development programme.

    Kind Rgds
    Sundiata Keita

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