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EFCC Set To Charge Suspects In P&ID Contract Scandal

The anti-graft agency, EFCC, will today charge suspects involved in the P&ID contract negotiations to court.

The suspects are to be charged at the Federal High Court in Abuja, an official told PREMIUM TIMES, without naming the suspects.

The two suspects to be charged are P&ID’s parent company in the British Virgin Island ( Process and Industrial Development Ltd) and the P&ID registered in Nigeria.

The EFCC commenced an investigation of the contract following a British court ruling that Nigeria owed the Irish firm about $9 billion for violating terms of the contract.

The contract for gas supply and processing (GSPA) was signed by the administration of late President Umaru Yar’Adua and P&ID.

The company was to build gas processing facilities around Calabar, Cross River State, and the government was to supply wet gas up to 400 million standard cubic feet per day. The agreement defined wet gas as “associated gas removed, during oil production, having a propane content of not less than 3.5 mol per cent and a butane content of not less than 1.8 mol content, compressed and delivered via pipeline to the site.”

In turn, the company “shall operate and maintain the GPFs (gas processing facilities) on a professional basis to ensure a regular supply of Lean Gas (approximately 340 MMSCuFD) for power generation.” Lean gas, defined as “pipeline quality gas having a composition of not less than 95 mol per cent of methane and ethane,” was what the government was to take after supplying wet gas for processing by the company.

PREMIUM TIMES