Tag: Alison-Madueke

  • No plan to increase price of petrol – Alison-Madueke

    No plan to increase price of petrol – Alison-Madueke

    The Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke, in Abuja on Tuesday said that the Federal Government had no plan to increase the pump price of petrol.

    Alison-Madueke said this at the 2014 budget defence of the ministry and its parastatals before the House of Representatives Committees on Petroleum Resources (Upstream and Downstream) and Gas.

    According to her, there is a strange rumour that the Ministry of Petroleum Resources is going to announce an increase in the pump price of petrol.

    “I said categorically that we have no plan to increase the pump price of petrol anytime in the near future,’’ she said.

    She noted that the development had only helped to instigate hoarding and diversion of petroleum products.

    The minister said the ministry would flood the country with petroleum products next week.

    “It was quite obvious that there was a hitch in supplies about a week ago and that had been remedied now,’’ he said.

    She warned that any filling station caught in the diversion of petrol, be it private or government-owned would be sanctioned accordingly.

    The minister, who decried inadequate funding of the ministry, said that it was the intention of the ministry to consolidate on its achievements in spite of the challenges.

    “We will continue to bring quality investments to the petroleum sector,’’ she said.

    Meanwhile, the Chairman, House Committee on Petroleum Resources Upstream, Rep. Muraina Ajibola (PDP-Oyo), has urged the minister to ensure that petrol is available to Nigerians.

    On his part, Dakuku Peterside (APC-Rivers) said that the ministry required enough funding because of its importance to the country’s economy.

    He enjoined the minister to judiciously utilise the little allocated to the ministry.

    The sum of N61.9 billion was proposed by the ministry and its parastatals in the 2014 budget.

     

     

  • Oil sector fraud …Many unanswered questions

    Oil sector fraud …Many unanswered questions

    The Senate Committee on Finance, probing the alleged mismanagement of oil proceeds, will reconvene on Thursday. Eric Ikhilae, in this report, observes that rather than help resolve knotty issues thrown up so far, the legal opinion given the committee by the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mohammed Adoke (SAN), has raised more questions for which the senators now seek answers.

    Suspended Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Lamido Sanusi jolted all when he alerted the nation to the practice by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) of withholding part of its earnings. He said the NNPC has failed to remit an estimated $20billion into the Federation Account.

    The disclosure by Sanusi caused the Senate, through its Committee on Finance, headed by former Kaduna State Governor, Senator Ahmed Makarfi to open investigation into the management of the nation’s oil affairs.

    Since it commenced sitting, the committee has taken submissions from key players in the nation’s oil, revenue management and legal sectors. The first set of invitees included the Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Petroleum Minister, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke and the Group Managing Director of the NNPC, Andrew Yakubu.

    Mrs Alison-Madueke and Yakubu, in the course of their presentations, raised some issues. Yakubu stated that part of the funds Sanusi accused NNPC of withholding had actually been expended on operational expenses, including the payment of some billions of US Dollars to some unnamed oil firms in kerosene subsidy claims.

    He also claimed that NNPC paid $6billion to one of its subsidiaries – the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) – to defray its operational expenses.

    Mrs Alison-Madueke, in attempting to rationalise her ministry’s position on the issue, justified the continued payment of subsidy on kerosene after a presidential directive in 2009 halting such payment.

    She argued that an inter-ministerial committee elected to continue with the kerosene subsidy payment, even without the National Assembly’s approval, because the presidential directive was not gazetted.

    Unsure of the position of the law in relation to issues raised by Alison-Madueke, Yakubu and others, the Makarfi committee sought the opinion of the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mohammed Adoke (SAN).

    During his appearance on February 20, Adoke read a prepared speech, in which he addressed only two out of the three issues he formulated. When Adoke exited the committee’s sitting venue, with a promise to return at a later date, everyone, including the committee’s members were not better educated. In fact, they became more curious.

    This may have resulted from Adoke’s unsatisfactory resolution of the three issues he formulated and those for which the committee had sought his expert opinion, which the committee’s members described as key to their investigation.

    The legitimacy of Adoke’s position, as queried by former Minister of Finance, Senator Nenadi Usman (a member of the committee) and the outright denial by NPDC’s Managing Director, Iyowuna Briggs that his company did not receive $6b from NNPC, contributed to people’s heightened hunger for explanations from those managing the nation’s oil affairs.

    It was part of Adoke’s opinion that NNPC could legitimately transfer its participating interest in OMLs to its wholly owned subsidiary, and in this case, the NPDC.

    He relied on the provisions of Paragraph 14 to 16 of the First Schedule to the Petroleum Act Cap P10 LFN 2004 (NNPC Act) and Regulation 4 of the Oil Drilling and Regulation 1969 (as amended), Section 6(1)(c)of the NNPC Act, Article 19(2) of a Joint Operating Agreement, otherwise known as Shell/NNPC JOA and Article 2 Para 6 (1) of the JOA to support his position.

    The second issue was whether all revenue derived by NNPC from its upstream petroleum operations, including all those under which the OMLs in the Joint Ventures operated by its subsidiaries fall under, are payable to the Federation Account (FA) under Section 162 of the Constitution’.

    Adoke’s view on the issue was that it was only the net revenue that should be paid into the FA. He said what NNPC is required to pay into the FA is the net revenue as opposed to the gross revenue.

    In supporting his position, Adoke relied on the provision of Section 7(4) of the NNPC Act, which he said complements Section 162(10)(C) of the Constitution. He also cited the Supreme Court decision in the case of AG, Ogun State vs AGF 2002 18 NWLR part 798 page 232 at 284.

    Section 162 (10) provides that:

    “ For the purposes of subsection (1) of this section, “revenue” means any income or return accruing to or derived by the Government of the Federation from any source and includes- (a) any receipt, however described, arising from the operation of any law; (b) any return, however described, arising from or in respect of any property held by the Government of the Federation; (c) any return by way of interest on loans and dividends in respect of shares or interest held by the Government of the Federation in any company or statutory body”.

    While Section 7(4)(b) of the NNPC) Act provides that “such monies as may be received by the Corporation in the course of its operations or in relation to the exercise by the Corporation of any of its functions under this Act, and from such fund there shall be defrayed all expenses incurred by the Corporation”.

    Adoke said he could not immediately provide response to the third issue about whether due process was followed by the NPDC in engaging strategic partners for the funding and operations of the oil blocks assigned to it by the NNPC.

    The AGF, who promised to return back to address the issue, explained the relevant agencies delayed in providing him with necessary documents to enable him address the issue.

    When asked by former Special Assistant to the President, Senator Andy Ubah whether Section 7(4) of the Act did not conflict with Section 162 (10)( C ) of the Constitution, the AGF said “it does not conflict with the constitutional provision. In fact, it complements it.”

    Another member, Senator Isah Galaudu (Kebbi) observed that the AGF did not address the issues on which the committee sought his opinion, but rather, raised three issues on his own, from among which he answered two.

    He said the AGF addressed the second issue, relating to what the NNPC is required to pay into the FA, without any foundation. This, Galaudu said, was because the resolution of issue two is dependent on the proper resolution of issue three, which the AGF sought time to address.

    Galaudu said “if we do not resolve the issue of due process in the engagement of strategic partners, the issue of distributing revenue does not arise. I think we need to answer question three before you can know the answer to question two.”

    He said the most important legal opinion the committee needs from the AGF is in respect of an issue raised in page 14 of the committee’s letter to the AGF, where it was indicated that about $7b worth of crude was shipped by NPDC.

    Another member, Ayo Akinyelure (Ondo) sought to know from the AGF, the definition of net revenue. He asked if there was any clear definition of allowable expenses deductible from the gross revenue specified in the NNPC Act.

    He said the definition should be in figures so that the component of the net revenue due to be remitted into the FA out of the N6b is spelt out. He said the committee is only concerned about the true position of things.

    Reacting, the AGF said the issues raised by Galaudu were not contained in the letter sent to him by the committee. Adoke said he distilled the issues he addressed from the information contained in the letter he received.

    Makarfi, who immediately directed that the missing part of the letter be given to him, said the committee was actually interested in hearing from the AGF, what portion of the money NNPC claimed to have paid to NPDC ought to be remitted into the FA.

    He said although issues two and three were related, they are distinct. “One is that, if you have a property worth 1billion, if you sell it for 100m, you cannot begin to talk of how much you lost because you sold it at 100m. You can talk of, maybe how stupid you were, because you were the one that sold it for 100m.

    “But where public property is concerned, the issue of whether due diligence was exercised in assigning or transferring the public property in such a way and manner that the revenue that should accrue to government was just and fair revenue should be ascertained.

    “The summary, the Attorney General, is that the pages we have quoted will be given to you once again. You will combine those pages we have quoted with the outstanding issue, which is central; because the issue of due process is central to this issue. That is where, possible loss of revenue can be established. “ Makarfi said.

    The NPDC MD also provided a puzzling dimension to the investigation, when during his appearance on February 20 he denied receiving $6b from NNPC, but that his company only received money from the NNPC to fund its budget.

    “Giving its funding relationship with its parent company, the NNPC, NPDC will like to confirm that it received funds from NNPC to cover its capital and operating expenditure, as approved by NNPC for the NNPC funded assets during the period under review ( that is, Jan 2012 to July 2013),” Briggs said.

    When asked by Makarfi, how much NPDC received out of the $6b, which NNPC claimed to have paid to it, Briggs said “we did not, in NPDC account, receive $6b. Like I stated in the letter, from the account managed by NNPC, royalty and taxes are paid. We receive funds that are required to fund the budget. A specific amount of that I can provide.” He promised to provide that at a later date.

    At that point, Mrs Usman drew members’ attention to page six of the AGF’s presentation and observed that by the AGF’s opinion, NPDC is required to pay only the net profit, which is the dividend, to the NNPC for onward remittance to the FA. She noted that this opinion by the AGF is at variance with the position of the NPDC boss.

    She observed that the NPDC boss, in his presentation, said his company is not expected to pay anything to the NNPC, and that all the funds given to the NPDC, was to fund its budget, an observation Briggs confirmed, represented his position.

    Mrs Usman then concluded that “it means even this legal opinion (by the AGF) is wrong then.”

    Bothered by Briggs’ denial, another member, Adamu Gomba (Bauchi) asked the NNPC boss – Yakubu, whether he was comfortable that the NPDC MD denied receiving any $6b from NNPC, a query Yakubu promised to address later.

    Yakubu said he will address the issue along with other questions regarding how the NNPC relates with its subsidiaries and manage their funds when next he appears before the committee.

    While everyone expects more revelations as the committee reconvenes on March 6, The Nation sought the views of some lawyers on the legitimacy of the positions of the AGF and the Minister of Petroleum.

    Dr. Abubakar Uthman and Adetokunbo Mumuni faulted the position of the AGF that NNPC was only required to pay into the FA, its net revenue. Also, Johnson Daramola and Anthony Nwanchukwu faulted Alison-Madueke’s position that it was right for her ministry to have overridden the presidential directive on kerosene subsidy.

    Uthman argued that there is nothing in Section 7 (4) of the NNPC Act that confers the power on the NNPC to refuse to pay into the FA, monies realised from the sale of crude, on the excuse that it must first, defray expenses it incurred in the course of running of its affairs.

    He further argued that Section 7 (4) of the NNPC Act cannot override Section 162 (1) of the Constitution, which is the basic law of the country. Uthman argued that by virtue of it being the grundnorm, the Constitution is the highest statute in the hierarchy of legislations in the country, which could give validity and efficacy to the NNPC Act.

    “In other words the NNPC Act is an inferior legislation to the Constitution because it derives its validity from the Constitution. It goes without saying that where the provisions of an inferior legislation, such as the NNPC Act, conflicts with the Constitution, it (the inferior legislation) must yield ground for the superiority of the Constitution.

    “I am, therefore, surprised that the learned AGF would take umbrage under the provisions of Section 7 (4) of the NNPC Act to justify the failure of the NNPC to account for an humongous sum of $ 20 billion.

    “It follows that revenue derives by the NNPC from the sales of crude oil amounts to any income or return accruing to or derived by the Government of the Federation from any source as contemplated by Section 162 (10) (a) (b) & (c) of the Constitution.

    “Where the words used in a statute are clear and unambiguous, they must be given their ordinary and natural meaning otherwise it will lead to absurdity.

    From the provision of the Constitution, revenue from the sale of crude does not fall within the exception provided by Section 162 (1) of the Constitution and so, the NNPC is obligated to remit revenue realised from the sale of crude into the FA,” he said.

    Uthman also faulted Adoke’s reliance on the case of the AG Ogun vs AGF (2002) 18 N. W.L. R (Part 798) 232 @ 284 on the ground that the facts of that case and the case under review are not the same.

    He said in the AG, Ogun case, the plaintiff had sought the payment of proceeds of privatization of public enterprises, capital gains tax and stamp duties into the FA, and an order that the payment of Local Government Allocation directly to the Local Government and charge of Federal Government debt to the FA is unconstitutional.

    The lawyer noted that in the case, the issue is whether the NNPC was right to have refused to remit the $20 billion realised as revenue from the sale of crude oil into the FA. “Thus the case of the AG, Ogun vs AGF cannot be the authority for the failure of the NNPC to remit revenue collected by it from the sale of crude oil as canvassed by the AGF.

    Mumuni argued that the advice by the AGF “is patently inconsistent with the letter and spirit of Section 162 of the Constitution, which is to establish a dedicated account into which all public revenue by the Federal Government shall be paid, as well as to remove any arbitrary and non-transparent and non-accountable spending of public revenue.

    “Assuming, for the sake of argument, that the NNPC is required to pay into the FA only the ‘net revenue’ and not the ‘gross revenue’ as Mr. Adoke has argued, this will still not remove the fact that the NNPC is a trustee of the public revenue collected.

    Therefore, as a trustee, the NNPC has a legal duty to render account to the beneficiaries (Nigerians) of the trust, if and when called upon to do so. We believe that the NNPC has woefully failed to discharge this sacred responsibility.

    “Unfortunately, the impression created by the legal advice by the AGF is that the NNPC is not obligated to render account. This is clearly inconsistent with the attitude of a government that has repeatedly expressed commitment to fight corruption, and in fact signed the Freedom of Information (FoI) Act,” Mumuni said.

    On the whether the Petroleum Minister was right to have ignored a subsisting presidential directive, Daramola argued that it was unlawful for a minister to override presidential directive just because it was not gazetted.

    “A presidential directive remains a directive whether gazetted or not. I think those, who advise these government officials always end up misdirecting them,” Daramola said.

    In similar vein, Nwachukwu faulted the Petroleum Minister’s position and argued that it was wrong under the law, for her to claim that she was a party to the disobedience of a presidential directive on the ground that it was not gazetted.

     

  • Diezani, NNPC set to answer Reps’ queries on kerosene

    Diezani, NNPC set to answer Reps’ queries on kerosene

    Not a few felt they were playing hide and seek. But , barring any last-minute hitch, Minister of Petroleum Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke and managers of the agencies under her will today appear before an investigative public hearing on kerosene subsidy expenditures. The public hearing is sequel to resolution HR84/2013 of the House of Representatives, which directed its Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) to establish the actual amount spent on kerosene subsidy from 2010 to December 2013; establish the source of the money used in financing kerosene subsidy and the relevant budgetary approval; determine the companies benefiting from kerosene subsidy; establish the extent (if at all) to which the subsidised kerosene gets to the consumers at the regulated price; and investigate all incidental issues relating to kerosene supply and distribution.

    The Nation learnt yesterday that Mrs Alison-Madueke, Managing Director o the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and other agencies will appear before the House of Representatives Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) to answer questions on kerosene subsidy. Twice they had stayed away asking the committee for more time to gather necessary documents, among other excuses.

    “They are coming on Tuesday,” a competent source told The Nation. Their appearance is coming shortly after the issue they are coming to discuss cropped up at a hearing of the Senate Committee on Finance investigating the alleged missing funds from the Federation Account. It emerged that

    NNPC’s expenditures on Dual Purpose Kerosene subsidy totalling N543.9bn (about $3.151bn) were extra-budgetary.

    Alison-Madueke said there was a presidential directive that kerosene subsidy should be withdrawn but that the directive was not gazetted, adding that the inter-ministerial committee then comprising of the Minister of Finance and Minister of Petroleum Resources in 2009 directed a stay of execution of the kerosene subsidy withdrawal.

    The minister said should kerosene subsidy be withdrawn, the price of kerosene would triple and cause pains on the masses.

    She called for the legal interpretations of the NNPC Act in respect of the first line charge of the corporation to decide the legality of its status in respect of kerosene subsidy deductions.

    The committee frowned at the expenditures by the NNPC on kerosene subsidy payments, which it said was not appropriated for and called for immediate reversal of the extra- budgetary expenditures to promote accountability and transparency in public finance and restore public confidence in the system.

    Despite the subsidy payment, consumers benefitted less from the scheme known as Kero-Direct initiated by the NNPC in July 2011 to help distribute household kerosene (HHK) to consumers nationwide.

    Peterside, while speaking at a function organised by the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), said the Federal Government spent N634 billion as subsidy on kerosene between 2010 and 2012, describing this as a network of corruption and fraud.

    He said Nigeria, world’s sixth biggest crude exporter, could not move forward with the present arrangement where the NNPC holds the monopoly of kerosene importation.

    Peterside said: “No country that spends most of its funds on consumption will grow. And so that explains why Nigeria is not moving forward. How can we move forward when most of our funds are spent servicing corruption?

    “Kerosene subsidy is a network of corruption; it is a network of fraud. So why are some people blaming the fraud on the monopoly of NNPC? Even when you ask major marketers they will tell you that the monopoly of NNPC is responsible for what we are going through today to access kerosene.

    “The first challenge is that the supply of kerosene is regulated. Everywhere in the world where there is monopoly, people are likely to suffer while monopolist tries to maximise the situation; this is because NNPC has the monopoly of importing kerosene.

    “In the year 2010, we spent N110,068,533,988 to subsidise kerosene; this is not the cost of kerosene but the cost of subsidising the product alone…In 2012, although we are yet to reconcile this, we spent N200 billion subsidising kerosene.”

    With the minister and her men’s expected appearance at the investigative hearing today, it is hoped the committee will be able to establish the actual amount spent on kerosene subsidy from 2010 to December 2013; establish the source of the money used in financing kerosene subsidy and the relevant budgetary approval; determine the companies benefiting from kerosene subsidy; establish the extent (if at all) to which the subsidised kerosene gets to the consumers at the regulated price; and investigate all incidental issues relating to kerosene supply and distribution.

     

  • Kerosene subsidy: Alison-Madueke, NNPC, PPMC shun Reps’ probe

    Kerosene subsidy: Alison-Madueke, NNPC, PPMC shun Reps’ probe

    The House of Representatives proposed investigation into the Kerosene subsidy did not hold on Monday due to the absence of the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison- Madueke, the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Mr. Andrew Yakubu and the Pipeline and Products Marketing Company (PPMC).

    The House had through a resolution mandated the Dakuku Peterside- headed Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) to investigate issues surrounding kerosene supply, distribution and subsidy payments from 2010 to 2013.

    After a long wait for Alison-Madueke, Yakubu and the PPMC representative to arrive, the meeting was eventually postponed to February 18 by the committee chairman.

    It would be the second time the investigation has been pushed forward.

    The committee had in its letters to the three principal actors in the sector requested for the provision of all relevant detailed information as it relates to approvals on kerosene subsidy, source of money for payment of the subsidy, budgetary approvals, kerosine import details, PFI allocation and product distribution chart, PPPRA authorization and validations, auditors approval and reports, relevant shipping documents and all other documents that will assist the committee in discharging its responsibility.

    However, a letter from the Office of the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Petroleum Resources, dated February 7, but received in Peterside’s office a few minutes before the commencement of the probe gave reasons for the minister’s absence and requested for a rescheduling of the hearing.

    It partly reads: “I wish to inform you that the Honourale Minister together with the top management of the ministry and its agencies will be participating in the International Summit on Power Financing starting today, 10th February, 2014.

    “As a result we regret to inform you of our inability to honour your invitation. We area so currently engaged with the Senate Committee on Finance and it is not clear when their hearing will end. ”

     

  • Unanswered questions

    Unanswered questions

    •Oil minister’s news of sale of four refineries reflects a disingenuous government

    It is difficult to understand exactly what the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, wants Nigerians to make of her recent disclosure that the country will commence the privatisation of its four state-owned ailing refineries in the first quarter of next year. Speaking in an interview with Bloomberg TV Africa in London, the minister said, “We would like to see major infrastructural entities such as refineries moving out of government hands into the private sector … Government does not want to be in the business of running major infrastructure entities and we haven’t done a very good job at it over all these years”.

    Now, does Mrs. Alison-Madueke expect Nigerians to pat her on the back and applaud her ministry on this score? If so, she utterly underestimates the disenchantment and disgust of the public at the abysmal level of corruption and sheer criminality that have crippled the oil sector, particularly under her watch. She seems to be oblivious of the fact that, even though this could be a step in the right direction, the privatisation of the refineries is only a minute part of the serious challenge of thoroughly overhauling the oil industry and transforming it into an effective vehicle for achieving national developmental objectives.

    Given the near total dependence of the economy on crude oil exports, the level of laxity and lack of cohesion that characterise the management of Nigeria’s petroleum sector is unbelievable. Despite the eloquent lip service paid to the development of the non-oil sector, government seems pathetically incapable of weaning the country off oil addiction. That Nigeria relies on fuel imports to meet over 70 percent of her domestic needs, even though she is a leading producer of crude oil, illustrates the inexcusable absence of seriousness in the management of such a critical economic sector.

    The announcement by Mrs. Alison-Madueke of the impending privatisation of the refineries raises a number of fundamental and pertinent questions. For instance, why should anyone be enthusiastic about this initiative since this is a path the country had charted before without success? In the twilight of its tenure, the President Olusegun Obasanjo administration actually sold off the refineries to the private sector. However, that transaction was terminated by the Umaru Yar’Adua administration for alleged abuse of due process. What guarantee do Nigerians have that the privatisation process this time around will be above board, since the management of the petroleum sector remains as graft-ridden and lacking in transparency as ever?

    The paralysis of the country from the oil subsidy strikes was reversed on the promise that the proceeds will be used to restore the refineries while work would start on Greenfield Private Refineries. The Federal Government has fulfilled these only in the breach.

    If not, why did the petroleum minister confidently assure the nation last year that the Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) being undertaken in the four refineries, coupled with the proposed three Greenfield Private refineries planned for Lagos, Kogi and Bayelsa states would substantially boost domestic refining capacity and end fuel imports by the end of this year? If the plan all along had been to privatise the refineries since they cannot be effectively run by government, why waste scarce resources on a barren TAM? The impression is that the Jonathan administration conned the nation.

    Even more seriously, the probe of the fuel subsidy management scheme last year revealed collusion by public and private sector operators in the oil industry to capitalise on fuel imports to engage in monumental graft through phantom subsidy payments. The implication is that these criminal elements benefitted over the years from the dysfunctional state of the country’s refineries. Can these same tainted officials be trusted to oversee the much desired transformation of the oil industry?

    In particular, does Mrs Alison-Madueke under whose watch much of the mind-boggling corruption occurred have the moral authority to supervise the sanitisation of the sector, including the privatisation of refineries?

  • What shall we do with this oil ministry?

    Call it the house of sleaze and you will not be mistaken. Call it the Hammer House of Horrific Corruption and it fits even more perfectly. Such is the state of Nigeria’s petroleum industry as represented by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). In the over three decades of its existence, corruption has become so much its second nature that it probably does not know the difference anymore. And being the honey pot of the nation is always in cahoots with any government in power that it has also become the sluiceway of official graft at the highest levels. NNPC plus Federal Government equals an evil template, an ominous Siamese twin that is medically inseparable.

    The Ministry of Petroleum Resources, NNPC and all the other little horrors down the line have become a long chain of legitimised fraud; it is a carefully developed and nurtured subculture of criminality that the nation seems to have come to accept and live with. In all the frequent exposures by the Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) reports, National Assembly reports and international expose, it is never heard that anyone gets sanctioned or prosecuted. Worse still, this thriving cult has extirpated efficiency and vanquished any iota of corporate governance and work ethics.

    The result of this is that NNPC has shrunken from being the biggest national oil corporation in Africa to a worthless, ossified stealing field with no meaningful development going on in its hollow labyrinth in the last two decades. On the other hand, almost all its infrastructure are in their end stage, dysfunctional and derelict. For instance, all its four refineries are near comatose; its pipelines laid many decades ago are in dire need of replacement and repair; its storage facilities are 20 years behind time and the hollow, shambling giant is ravage by insider-induced scavenging and oil theft. It is a dire situation that has reached its nadir in the last two years of the current minister, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke. If there was a modicum of commonsense before her time, what we have now under Alison-Madueke is akin to a free-for-all. She seems so utterly bereft of any ideas and all systems seem to have gone loose: if it is not unmanageable revenue losses, it is turnaround maintenance scam at the refineries; if it is not blatant oil theft, it is subsidy fraud, oil bloc gerrymandering, shady oil-for-loan deals, on and on.

    Hardball has been triggered into this long sad treatise by the untrammeled mess that what used to be Nigeria’s oil glory has become. The local media have shouted themselves hoarse but it has been like water thrown on pumpkins. The story today is another sad report from abroad; a Swiss-based non-governmental advocacy group, Berne Declaration, in its current report, accused the NNPC of conniving with some foreign oil trading companies based in Europe to defraud Nigeria of subsidy payments amounting to about $6.8 billion. The bottom-line of the report is that the “The all-powerful national oil firm, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, categorised as the most opaque national oil company on the planet, itself, is evidence of Nigeria’s ‘resource curse’ at work.”

    The report states that two Swiss ‘letter-box’ companies by the names, Vitol and Trafigura had exclusive and un-transparent partnerships with the NNPC, which had given them over 26 per cent of the market share. “Vitol and Trafigura alone took respectively 13.44 per cent and 13.49 per cent of Nigeria’s crude oil exports in 2011 for a cumulative value of $6.8 billion.” It further states that more than 56 per cent of the oil output up for sale by the NNPC in 2011 valued at $14 billion was sold to Swiss companies or Nigerian companies with ‘letterbox’ subsidiaries in Switzerland. It notes that Nigeria is the only major oil producing company that sells 100 per cent of its crude to private traders rather than market it itself in the open market and benefit from the resulting market value.

    Who will save Nigeria from this mess?

  • N500b SURE-P funds missing – Senate

    N500b SURE-P funds missing – Senate

    The Senate on Tuesday said that it is investigating the whereabouts of N500 billion Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) funds.

    The upper chamber said the funds ought to have been released to SURE-P for the implementation of its projects.

    A member of the Senate Committee on SURE-P, Senator Kabiru Marafa, disclosed this at a scheduled meeting with Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Allison-Madueke and Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.

    Marafa noted that the committee wrote the Ministry of Petroleum Resources requesting the quantity of fuel it supplied for consumption since the inception of SURE-P in 2012 which was 21 months (January 2012 to September 30, 2013.)

    He noted that the Ministry of Petroleum Resources responded that 25 billion litres of PMS (fuel) was supplied within the period under review.

    He said that since N32 was SURE-P component of oil subsidy, the committee multiplied 25 billion litres of PMS the Ministry supplied by N32 which gave about N800 billion.

    The lawmaker added that the leadership of SURE-P had at a meeting with the Senate Committee put the total money released for SURE-P activities at N300 billion.

    He said that SURE-P also told the committee that it receives N15 billion monthly for its activities.

    According to him, “since SURE-P claimed that it received a total of N300 billion, it means that N500 billion that should have accrued to SURE-P is missing.

    “We are curious to know what happened to the N500 billion. We also want to know why CBN has been remitting N15 billion to SURE-P monthly. This is because the releases to SURE-P should have varied according to PMS consumption but we hear that N15 billion is remitted to SURE-P monthly.”

     

  • Crude oil shortfall: Reps to probe Alison-Madueke, NNPC

    Crude oil shortfall: Reps to probe Alison-Madueke, NNPC

    The House of Representatives is to investigate claims by the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Allison-Madueke that $20.9 billion was realized from the sales of crude oil between January and September this year.

    The lawmakers said documents available did not support the minister’s claims.

    Besides, the lawmakers emphasized the need to unravel the non-disclosure of production and proceeds from gas by the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)

    The Chairman, House Committee on Finance, Abdulmumin Jibrin, said the claim of $20.9 billion realized from crude sale by Alison-Madueke was as a ruse, calculated to mislead Nigerians.

    According to him, Nigerians would rather prefer the minister to explain how the nation fell short of N321b in its revenue from oil in the same period.

    He said the reason for the investigation was aimed at encouraging transparency and accountability in the oil and gas sector, adding that Nigerians are only interested in how much was actually going to the coffers of federal government from the said $20.9 billion.

    According to him, contrary to what Nigerians were meant to believe, official documents and figures showed that revenue targets were only barely met in the months of April when N212.029 billion was remitted with N210.202 billion in May.

     

  • CLO to minister: Explain your role in private jet scandal

    CLO to minister: Explain your role in private jet scandal

    The Civil Liberties Organization (CLO), Bayelsa State, on Thursday asked the Minister of Petroleum, Mrs. Diezani Allison-Madueke to explain her involvement on the N2 billion allegedly squandered on hired private jet.

    Describing the allegation leveled against the minister as weighty, the CLO insisted that she owed Nigerians an explanation.

    The Chairman of the organisation, Chief Nengi James, who spoke in Yenagoa noted that keeping sealed lips on the matter would amount to “disgraceful admittance of guilt.”

    He said though the petition containing the allegation was before the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, the minister in the interest of public trust should within one week speak to Nigerians on the matter.

    “The CLO is concerned and demand an explanation within one week as silence may mean disgraceful admittance of guilt by a minister from the Niger Delta region,” he said.

    He said the group was concerned that her silence on the matter could destroy her advocacy for the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) and the region’s chances in the bid to retain the presidency in 2015.

    He said: “We expected her to use her good office to ensure the passage of the PIB and not frivolous spendings.

    “We know that the move to ensure the passage of the PIB will attract attacks on her person but we were not expecting such level of fraudulent allegation.

    “To save the PIB bill, the CLO would insist that she explain her involvement within a week.

    “The minister should use her explanation to assure the people of the Niger Delta and the civil society groups of her innocence and confidence as the Petroleum Minister.

    “If she fails to open up and clear the air on the allegation, we are ready to mobilize the civil society groups in the region against her and call for her removal to save the home state of the President from disgrace.”

     

  • FG, stakeholders move to check oil theft

    FG, stakeholders move to check oil theft

    In order to stop crude oil theft in Nigeria, President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday night met relevant stakeholders in the oil sector to map out strategies to check the menace.

    Speaking with State House correspondents shortly after the meeting, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison Madueke, said the president summoned relevant stakeholders in the oil industry to discuss the critical issue of crude oil theft.

    To get lasting solutions to the menace, which she claimed has been adversely affecting revenue accruing to the Federation Account, she said that the new move will involve in-depth and aggressive brainstorming for the next 10 days.

    She said, “We are continuing with what has been done but we are becoming much more aggressive. We met with a number of the multinationals, we have come up with various pointers which must be addressed in an in-depth manner over the next 10 days.

    “A technical team is going to meet across all the stakeholders, they will break into various committees, like I said it is a many prong issue and must be addressed by a multi-prong pushback. So over the next 10 days we will form the relative committees, they will meet and then we will move to implement very aggressively.”