The advent of Covid-19 pandemic has imposed excruciating new socio-economic outcomes on oil and gas companies and Nigeria as a whole.
Before January 2020, oil and gas workplaces generally had closely knitted traditional, social and physical environment whereby workers worked in close proximities but presently these interactive interdependencies and the traditional world of work have drastically changed, releasing unpleasant harsh realities of which include oil glut, crash in crude oil price, lockdown of cities and cross border closures with their attendant far reaching consequences.
In the face of these hitches, the government urgently changed some of its policies to reflect the current economic realities, in order to meet up with its obligation. Amongst the altered policies are the management of Forex, removal of subsidy on petroleum products, physical and social distancing, protocols, change in the model of running the refineries among others.
However, with diminishing sales and plummeting crude oil prices, oil and gas companies are incurring extra budgetary expenditures, designing and reordering work programmes; adhering to the COVID 19 protocols by providing sanitizers, specialized face masks, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). To maintain physical and social distancing, they have tweaked work spaces, operations, procedures, work cycles, health and safety programmes. All these pose huge challenges to workers, suppliers, family life, resetting of body clock for global companies, who must attend online conferences with their colleagues in the US and other parts of Europe with different time zones. To survive the extra budgetary traps, some companies may need to cut costs, restructure and impose a work from home approach, which in turn impose new work attitude. These initiatives have led to the deployment of only few employees into production areas with majority staying at home. These government policies and company initiatives, have far reaching consequences on the practice of industrial relations in the oil and gas sector. Presently, PENGASSAN and NUPENG are not pleased with companies contemplating pay or job cuts in a secretive manner, which to them, could seriously undermine the collaborative and cooperative measures needed to remain strong as companies begin phased reopening for business.
It was consequent upon the above that the African Initiative for Transparency and Responsible Leadership (AfriTAL), a non-governmental organization, organized a Webinar series where it discussed “Post COVID-19: Oil and Gas Industry Challenges and Prospects” under our Save Nigeria Oil and Gas Industry initiative programme.
During the session, two topics were discussed: Managing industrial relations in challenging times by Dr. Steve Ojeh, an oil and gas industrial relations’ expert; and Repositioning the oil and gas industry for post COVID-19 recovery by Israel Aye, a Lawyer, energy advisor and an entrepreneur of repute.
The objectives are to: ensure that oil and gas social dialogue partners, were apprised of the current oil and gas challenges, forge a collaborative and cooperative synergy, which would ensure smooth return to post COVID 19 work, and proffer solutions to identified challenges, which would reposition the industry for strong post COVID 19 oil and gas industry recovery.
Fifty-four participants took part in the Webinar. They included participants from PENGASSAN, NUPENG, Ministry of Labor and Employment, NECA, industrial relations managers, Human Resources managers, Academia, Media, civil society organizations, petroleum industry, past and present leaders of oil and gas unions, Institute of Chartered Mediators and Conciliators of Nigeria, Multi Door Courthouses among others.
Deep dives into the subject matter were thoroughly done by the speakers. At the end of the presentations, the President of PENGASSAN, Comrade Nduka Ohaeri and the President of NUPENG who served as panelists, responded to the presentations and also provided their own insights into the discourse. Thereafter, there were questions and comments from participants after a two-hour robust discussion, the followings were sieved as urgent advocacy issues to be taken up with various oil and gas social dialogue partners; government and the National Assembly.
The discourse resolved that with climate change, the world is gradually reducing the use of fossil fuels. This has implications for the industry. COVID 19 has now come with its own deep dive complications and complexities. It has brought new challenges to the world of work; family lives and the ways industrial relations are managed. Therefore, workers must move with the changing times by thinking outside the box if they must move out of the deep.
Companies and employees, who would survive the post COVID 19, require great deal of new social skills in negotiation and technology. The degree to which companies would survive, shall be dependent on employees’ competence and managers’ empowering people to take decisions either from home or at work. No matter how much companies’ say they care, there are COVID 19 imposed financial and social dilemmas, which would bring about conflicts between unions and management. To successfully manage the conflicts, it will require that unions and management should collaborate, cooperate and hang together.
Stakeholders should emplace a think-tank, which must include unions, management and employers. Owners of enterprises, must be ready to have slim dividends while unions and company executives would also need to make sacrifices.
PENGASSAN, NUPENG, OPTS and other critical Stakeholders in the oil and gas industry, should be engaged by the government and the National Assembly, in birthing a new Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB). The new Bill, should promote good governance, allow for indigenous participation, revitalize the midstream and downstream operations, protect the environment, emplace fiscal regimes that will at the end attract investors and address community concerns. A situation where nobody knows where the PIB document is presently, is worrisome.
Management should not arbitrarily exercise its power of hire and fire at this time because oil and gas workers, are also in the front line of COVID 19, working to sustain the nation’s economy. Anything done otherwise, would be counterproductive. PENGASSAN and NUPENG members have displayed empathy and maturity, in providing continuous support in the frontline of COVID 19, for the industry and by extension Nigeria. During the Pandemic, employers should ensure that PENGASSAN and NUPENG leaders are consulted, in all matters relating to employment contract relationships as contained in subsisting collective bargaining agreements (CBAs). This is key to the synergy needed for a strong oil and gas industry in the immediate post COVID 19 era.
The NLNG model has proven that the refineries, can immensely benefit from this approach. Therefore, stakeholders are expected to support and collaborate with the Group Managing Director (GMD) of the NNPC, Mr. Mele Kyari on fixing the refineries using the NLNG model. This seems the only plausible way of urgently turning around the refineries for profitability and sustainability, which at the end, would make Nigeria exit importation of petroleum products.
The unions are not averse to the deregulation of the downstream sector. However, the deregulation should not be based on dollar and import driven process.
It was agreed that subsidy regimes in the petroleum sector have been abused and has become a major source of corruption, economic sabotage and the hemorrhaging effect is disastrous to the country. Therefore, there would be no need to move from the regime of subsidy into another modulation mode. Price modulation and control would still breed corruption. To give the pronouncement on subsidy the teeth of law, Government needs to move from mere pronouncement to the realm of law, by amending section 6(1) of the Petroleum Act, which vests the power of intervening in petroleum product pricing on the Minister of Petroleum Resources.
Notwithstanding, government should incentivize companies by providing tax holidays and overladen incentives to investors, which would enable them invest in the refineries.
Both union and management need collaboration and cooperation to survive challenging COVID 19 times. Government should urgently create more opportunities for the country through a viable and efficient mid-stream processing, which would help to birth new local industries and also improve local refining capacity.
There is the need to create a very strong regulatory agency outside the control of the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, which shall be well funded, well-staffed and autonomous.
Emplace efficient, open, accountable and transparent licensing, leasing and acreage management systems, such that it will be impossible for companies to hold on to assets without developing them for a long period. This is important because, if Nigeria was not replacing reserves and growing oil and gas assets, there is no way the country would generate employment for her teeming unemployed youths.
Fiscal regime should be properly crafted in line with best practices as a way instilling confidence in investors. Commit to a framework to deal strongly with environmental and community issues. The need to urgently pass the Host Community Bill cannot be over emphasized. Diversify the economy, as a way of mitigating the price fluctuation of hydrocarbons in the global market; and Civil Society organizations should advocate for a constitutional review, which should encourage the culture of savings as done in other nations. This is principle behind the Sovereign Wealth Fund management system, which if well managed, would shield agreements as a basis for collaboration.
Nigeria from the challenges of world oil politics and fluctuations in the prices of crude oil.
President, Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), Comrade Nduka Ohaeri in accepting to cooperate and collaborate with critical stakeholders, called on them to stand up to their responsibilities as he said “Though the unions have the responsibilities of wearing both the national caps and looking at the business, we shall however, not be cowed or cajoled into taking actions or speaking for government or speaking for our employers, because they all have their responsibilities. But be rest assured that our responsibilities are not lost on us as a union. When necessary, we will wear the national cap. At other times, we shall wear the cap of labour unions in matters relating to the welfare of our members.”
On his part, President, National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), said, “Though everybody is saying that the unions should cooperate with the companies to survive, that survival should not be translated into redundancies all the time on the part of the Unions. Our members have been asked to stay at home. Companies are using the COVID 19 situation to close out contracts without recourse to the subsisting collective bargaining agreements. Worse still, the unions are not being consulted under the guise that they cannot be reached. This is unacceptable. On removal of subsidy and the PIB, we believe government still has so much to do. As a union, we can only cooperate on matters that we are engaged in and that which respects the sanctity of our collective agreements as a basis for collaboration”
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