The National Economic Council (NEC) has revealed that the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) spent N3.8 trillion in three years
without approval.
The latest indictment of NNPC, confirmed the forensic audit report by
PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and the 2012 report of the Presidential
Committee on the Verification of Fuel Subsidies, which both revealed
that the corporation deducts as much as 46 per cent of oil receipts to
meet its expenditure before remitting the balance to the Consolidated
Revenue Fund (CFR).
The revelation was made when the Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole in
the company of his Kaduna and Zamfara counterparts, Nasir el-Rufai and
Abdulazeez Yari, briefed State House correspondents after the
inauguration of the National Economic Council (NEC) at the Presidential
Villa, Abuja, monday.
Oshiomhole said at the NEC meeting, which was the first by this administration, President Muhammadu Buhari instructed that the NNPC and the office of the Accountant General of the Federation were compelled to provide information in black and white on issues as they relate to the sale of the nation’s crude oil from 2012 to May 2015.
Oshiomhole said at the NEC meeting, which was the first by this administration, President Muhammadu Buhari instructed that the NNPC and the office of the Accountant General of the Federation were compelled to provide information in black and white on issues as they relate to the sale of the nation’s crude oil from 2012 to May 2015.
Oshiomhole said: “We are talking about transparency, we are talking
about change. And what we saw from those numbers, I believe that
Nigerians are entitled to know, is that whereas the NNPC claimed to have
earned N8.1 trillion, what NNPC paid into the Federation Account from
2012 to May 2015 was N4.3 trillion.
“What it means is that NNPC withheld and spent N3.8 trillion. The major
revelation here is that the entire federation, that is, the federal
government, the states and all the 774 local governments, the amount the
NNPC paid into the Federation Account for distribution to this three
tiers of government came to N4.3 trillion and NNPC alone took and spent
N3.8 trillion.
“Which means that the cost of running NNPC was much more than the cost
of running the federation; that tells you how much is missing, what is
mismanaged, what is stolen and these are huge figures.
“We need to earn and spend, it is basic law in accounting that even if
you run a cigarette shop where you sell Three-Rings (a cigarette brand),
you don't sell and spend. You sell, take to your bank account, and you
budget for your procurement including cost of running your business.
“There is no enterprise manager who goes to the market and sells and just begin to spend, otherwise nobody needs to budget.
“And because you are running a democracy and you are running three
tiers of government, and the resources involved belong to the three
tiers of government, the only lawful way decreed by the constitution,
this is not an administrative regulation, it is not a policy derivable
from a circular, this is from the express letter and spirit of the
Nigerian Constitution, as amended.
“So if NNPC, for example, needs to spend money, it is obliged to
prepare its budget like every other business enterprise. That budget
will be scrutinised by the executive and forwarded to the National
Assembly and the National Assembly will accordingly appropriate it.
“If the federal government cannot spend without appropriation, why
should any agency spend without appropriation? NIMASA (Nigerian Maritime
Administration and Safety Agency), for example, whatever they earn,
they are supposed to pay into Federation Account and also present their
budget on their requirements. This is what the constitution provided
for.
“And this is what President Buhari has promised to do that henceforth
all monies must go to the Federation Account. What you need, you budget
for. Nigeria cannot continue with NNPC earning the money and spending
it.
“Where is transparency? Where is the role of the National Assembly? If
they were doing their job, you won't have a situation where the NNPC
alone will spend N3.8 trillion and remit to the federal, states and
local governments N4.3 trillion which means NNPC is taking about 47 per
cent and that explains all the leakages we are talking about.”
Continuing, the Edo State governor said: “Nobody is saying that
parastatals should not spend money but they must return to budgeting.
There is no major player, there is no major registered private company
that will spend money without a budget.
“Even in a private company, you will have your board of directors
looking at your revenue, total sales, your turnover, your personnel
cost, running cost, visibles and invisibles and you have the budget for
the year; that is how every sensible business runs.
“That is the way it was when President Buhari was Minister of
Retroleum. So we are not reinventing the wheel, because that is the way
it used to be and that is the way the constitution says it should be.”
Oshiomhole explained that council also reviewed the status of the
Excess Crude Account (ECA), stating that the last time the former
Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, had reported to the council in November 2014, the account
had $4.1 billion “but today the Accountant General Office reported we
have $2.0 billion. Which means the Honourable Minister spent $2.1
billion without authority of the NEC”.
He alleged that the money from the ECA was not distributed to the
states and local governments, adding: “This is why the NEC has set up a
panel to look at what accrued, what it was spent for, when and by whom,
so that Nigerians will have the full picture of all the transactions as
regards the much talked-about Excess Crude Account.”
In his briefing, el-Rufai said the ECA was started by former President
Olusegun Obasanjo around 2004 or 2005, confirming that he was in the
administration and was part of the team that established the account.
“I was part of the decision that led to the creation of the Excess
Crude Account. It was an administrative arrangement to save for a rainy
day. And it was meant to have very clear accountability such that every
state and local government, in a particular, knew their balances in the
Excess Crude Account. Though you could not spend it, but you knew how
much of it was yours.
“That was the arrangement, and in those days, before we spent any money
from the Excess Crude Account, the federal and state governments will
meet and agree. That is how we agreed to build the seven power stations,
which are the NIPPs today, it was from Excess Crude Account.
“And we also met and agreed to build the Lagos-Kano standard gauge rail
line from the Excess Crude Account. But what we have seen in the last
few months or years is that the Excess Crude Account was operated
unilaterally by the federal government, drawings were made unilaterally
without consulting those that actually own the money because the Excess
Crude Account is 52 per cent owned by the federal government and 48 per
cent by the states and LGAs.
“So the decision of the NEC is to set up this committee of four to look
at the operations of the Excess Crude Account and make recommendations
to council on its future.
“The other thing the committee will do is to look at the operations of
the Federation Account, particularly the shortfall, and again come back
to council with very clear recommendations as to what to do.
“We have not been given a timeframe but as you can imagine, state
governments are under pressure; many of our state governments are unable
to pay salaries on time without recourse to borrowing, so this is very
important to us.
“This is an all governors’ committee, we wear the shoe and we know
where it pinches. So we are going to do this as quickly as possible.
“The next meeting of the council is on July 23 and we hope to complete
our work and be in the position to report to council on that day. So
within the next one month, we will be done by God's grace,” the Kaduna
State governor said.
Providing further insight, Yari said the NEC meeting was briefed by the Accountant General of the Federation and the state of the economy was discussed thoroughly by the members of the council.
Providing further insight, Yari said the NEC meeting was briefed by the Accountant General of the Federation and the state of the economy was discussed thoroughly by the members of the council.
“We received the report on the Excess Crude Account, what is there and
what is not there. And also the council got the briefing on the
unremitted funds by NNPC.
“In this regard, a four-man committee comprising the Edo, Gombe, Kaduna
and Akwa Ibom governors was constituted to go through the books of NNPC
and Excess Crude Account as well as the Federation Account.
"The four-man committee will check the books of NNPC, most specially
the issue of the excess crude and what was not remitted into the
Federation Account.
“The FG, in conjunction with the CBN, will also look inwards to see how
to support and how much they will give to states, especially to cater
for the issue of outstanding salaries owed by the states and even the
federal government,” Yari said.
In a related development, Nigeria’s ruling party, the All Progressives
Congress (APC), has advised the federal government to discard the
long-delayed Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), review fuel subsidies, sell
off some units of the state petroleum company and wants the senior
management of the NNPC to declare their assets.
“The Petroleum Industry Bill should be scrapped and replaced by a new
reform bill that’s based on discussions with international oil companies
(IOCs) to ensure all perspectives are adequately considered,” the APC
said in a report obtained by Bloomberg yesterday.
Kayode Fayemi, the APC’s policy director, confirmed the authenticity of the document.
Kayode Fayemi, the APC’s policy director, confirmed the authenticity of the document.
The bill has been delayed in parliament for six years due to political
wrangling and opposition by international energy companies against
proposed tax and royalty terms, deterring investment in Africa’s top oil
producer.
The APC handed the report, which was based on closed-door meetings on
May 20 and 21 in Abuja to President Buhari, who took office on May 29
but is yet to appoint a cabinet. The report “is not the final position
of government,” Fayemi said by e-mail.
Buhari defeated Goodluck Jonathan in March 28 election on pledges to
clamp down on graft, including the oil industry, which is the source of
about two-thirds of the government’s revenue and 90 per cent of export
earnings.
The report also made recommendations for a review of audits and
corruption allegations against the state-owned NNPC in the government’s
first 100 days in office.
After 18 months, the government should seek to commercialise the NNPC,
possibly partially listing the entity and selling off its fuel-retailing
and refining business, the APC said.
Buhari disbanded the NNPC board last week in an attempt to fight graft
in the industry. Two calls to the mobile phone of Ohi Alegbe, the NNPC
spokesman, didn’t connect yesterday and he didn’t immediately reply to
an e-mail seeking comment.
The APC report recommends that all top oil executives, senior NNPC
staff and government officials must declare their assets. It also called
for the state oil company’s board to meet more regularly and the
legislation governing the NNPC to be amended to ensure that the
petroleum minister is no longer chairman of the company.
The government should review fuel subsidies to reduce costs of about
N600 billion ($3 billion) spent annually on the payments, according to
the report.
Buhari said last week that his government was facing severe financial
strain from a treasury that’s “virtually empty” and billions of dollars
in debt.
A lack of oil refining capacity means Africa’s largest economy
subsidises gasoline imports and suffers frequent fuel shortages even
though it produces about 1.9 million barrels of crude oil a day.
Nigeria’s crude production is hindered by the NNPC’s inability to pay
its share in joint ventures with companies including Exxon Mobil Corp.,
Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Total SA, according to the report.
NNPC’s debts to its eight joint ventures, in which it owns majority
stakes, have “ballooned over the years,” the APC said. In 2012, the
state company paid $6.9 billion out of the $10.4 billion it owed. The
difference of $3.5 billion was covered by loans from international oil
companies, according to the report.
“These debts are costly and opaque, and they erode the NNPC’s
bargaining power with” the oil companies, APC said in the report.
“Nigeria’s inability to fund its joint-venture budgets is delaying
projects, reducing production, and lowering revenue collection for the
nation.”
The NNPC had the worst disclosure record of 44 international and
national energy companies analysed in a 2011 report by Transparency
International (TI) and the Revenue Watch Institute (RWI).
The APC’s report also advised the government to cancel in its first 100
days in office “two ill-suited and costly offshore processing
agreements” that were signed in the fourth quarter with Aiteo Eastern
E&P Co. Limited and Sahara Group of 90,000 barrels per day each.
The government should sign simpler swap agreements with “highly competent” trading companies through a tender process, according to the report.
The government should sign simpler swap agreements with “highly competent” trading companies through a tender process, according to the report.
Sahara said it wasn’t aware of the APC’s recommendation, and Aiteo
didn’t immediately respond to an e-mailed request for comment.
“The parties involved remain committed to the terms of the contract, which is being carried out in line with best practices and good governance,” Sahara said in a statement.
“The parties involved remain committed to the terms of the contract, which is being carried out in line with best practices and good governance,” Sahara said in a statement.
Culled:ThisDay

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