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Sixty six years after oil discovery, Nigeria’s oil and gas museum set for commissioning

Timipre Sylva, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, will Tuesday perform the ground-breaking of the Oloibiri Museum and Research Centre (OMRC), in Ogbia Local Government of Bayelsa State. The Minister would also perform the ground-breaking of the NCDMB Conference Hotel Project (CHP), a three-star hotel being developed by the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) at Swali, adjacent to the 17-storey Nigerian Content Tower.

The Oloibiri Museum and Research Centre will be situated at the location where oil in commercial quantity was first discovered in 1957 by Royal Dutch Shell. This event is coming 66 years after the historic discovery of hydrocarbon resources, which became a turning point for the Nigerian economy.

Oloibiri Museum and Research Centre prototype. Courtesy NCDMB

The Museum and Research Centre is being developed as a collaboration between the Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF), Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) and the Bayelsa State Government (BYSG). The Federal Executive Council (FEC) had on February 8 awarded the contract for the Phase-1 Engineering, Procurement & Construction of the OMRC to Julius Berger.

Speaking ahead of the ground-breaking event, Engr. Simbi Kesiye Wabote, Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board NCDMB), who serves as the chairman of the project’s steering committee, explained that the Museum and Research Centre would correct a historical oversight that lasted for several decades during which time the people of Bayelsa State complained that they had nothing to show for being the birthplace of oil and gas production in Nigeria. He added that the project would place Nigeria among other oil-producing nations that established oil and gas museums to recognise and preserve the heritage and origin of their oil and gas production.

He listed the benefits of the facility to include the provision of a suitable location where historic developments, data, equipment and tools used in the Nigerian oil and gas industry will be stored for posterity and provision of a research centre where research prototypes from the industry can be tested against the requirements of the industry. The museum will equally drive tourism and integration of oil and gas host communities into the development of the sector.

On the Conference Hotel Project, the NCDMB boss explained that it is designed to provide suitable accommodation for stakeholders and other people who visit Yenagoa for business or to participate in the several oil and gas events organised periodically at the Board’s 1,000-seater ultra-modern Conference Centre.

He added that the hotel will equally provide accommodation for researchers and other persons that would visit the Oloibiri Museum as well as boost the attraction of Yenagoa as a tourist destination.

The event is expected to be attended by the chief executive of the sponsoring organisations, leaders from the oil and gas industry and stakeholders of the Niger Delta region.

 

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