Tag: Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)

  • Senate to NNPC, CBN: Provide documents for $3.12bn withdrawn from NLNG accounts

    The Senate committee on Gas, Thursday directed the management of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to submit to it documents authorising the withdrawal of $3.12 billion from the Nigeria Liquified Natural Gas (NLNG) account within the last three years. The funds were allegedly withdrawn with 22 separate vouchers.

    But the management of the NNPC represented by its Chief Financial Officer, Isiaka Abdulrasak called for the widening of scope of the committee’s investigation to cover the entire 45 withdrawals made from the said account from 1999 till date.

    Abdulrasaq who willing to throw more light on the total amount withdrawn from the said account, but he was cut short by the Committee Chairman, Senator Bassey Akpan ( PDP Akwa Ibom North East). Akpan accused the NNPC official of going outside his brief.

    Senator Osinachukwu Ideozu, a member of the committee also faulted Abdulrazaq’s actions, questioning his competence as the Chief Finance Officer of the NNPC.

    Ideozu chided the NNPC official for being confrontational in his response to questions put to him by the committee.

    The committee said there were missing links in the brief submitted to it by the management of the NNPC, stressing that this has made the committee job difficult.

    Akpan consequently directed the NNPC to furnish the Committee with records of all dividends accruing from the NLNG and all withdrawals from the account since 2015.

    The committee gave the NNPC up till November 30 to supply its secretariat with a comprehensive list of the 22 withdrawals made from the NLNG Dividend Account with the CBN since 2015.

    The Committee also directed the Acting Director of Banking Services of the CBN, Mr Christopher Olumukore, who stood in for CBN Governor Godwin Emefele, to submit within one week all authorizations for withdrawals, including originating mandates and approvals.

    Akpan added that the CBN should also submit to the Committee by November 30 statement of account of the NLNG Dividend Account domiciled with the the apex bank.

    Olumukore had earlier told the committee that the Dividend Account domiciled with the apex bank was being operated by both NNPC and Ministry of Finance.

    He said that mandates for withdrawals from the account were usually from the NNPC and on occasions from the Finance Minister.

    The Senate had in October, mandated its Committee on Gas to investigate the alleged illegal withdrawal of $1.05 billion by NNPC from the NLNG dividend account with CBN.

    The Committee was also directed to look into other withdrawals that had been made by the NNPC from the said account since 2015.

    The committee will commence scrutiny of the various documents on December 1.

  • NNPC records crude oil, gas export of $470m in August

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has said that crude oil and gas export sale by the corporation in August 2018 was $470 million, indicating an upsurge of about $78million in relation to July oil and gas export figures of $391.91 million.

    NNPC Monthly Financial and Operations report for August 2018 released today in Abuja by the corporation’s Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu, indicated that crude oil export sales contributed $337.62 million which represents 71.83 per cent of the dollar transactions compared with $283.43million contribution in the previous month.

    The release said export gas sales during the period amounted to $132.38million, adding that the August 2017 to August 2018 crude oil and gas transactions involved crude oil and gas export worth $5.26billion.

    It further explained that based on the above sales figures, a total export receipt of $450.24 million was recorded in August 2018 as receipt against $382.65million in July 2018.

    Contribution from crude oil during the period, it stated, amounted to $336.43 million, while gas and miscellaneous receipt stood at $101.33 million and $12.48 million respectively.

    A further breakdown of the figures showed that out of the export receipts, $142.31 million was remitted to the Federation Account, while $307.93 million was remitted to fund the JV cost recovery for the month of August, 2018 to guarantee current and future production.

    Read Also: NNPC pumps up petrol price from Fuel Fund

    Total export crude oil & gas receipt for the period August 2017 to August 2018 stood at $5.23billion out of which $3.74 billion was transferred to JV Cash Call as first line charge and the balance of $1.49 billion paid into the Federation Account.

    On Naira payments to the Federation Account, the report informed that NNPC transferred N128.40billion into Account for the month under review. It was also explained that from August 2017 to August 2018, the Federation and JV received N879.02 billion and N651.4billion respectively.

    Providing insight into the corporation’s remittances to the national treasury, the NNPC explained that the Federation Crude Oil & Gas Revenue, Federation Crude Oil and Gas lifting, are broadly classified into Equity Export and Domestic crude which are lifted and marketed by corporation and the proceeds remitted into the Federation Account.

    It informed that Equity Export receipts, after adjusting for Joint Venture (JV) Cash Calls, are paid directly into the Federation Account domiciled in Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    The corporation explained that domestic crude oil of 445,000bopd was allocated for refining to meet domestic products supply, and payments were effected to the Federation Account by NNPC after adjusting crude & product losses and pipeline repairs & management costs incurred during the period.

    The August 2018 NNPC Financial and Operations Report is the 37th in the series.

  • NNPC, BP signs agreement on PMS

    As part of measures to sustain the robust supply of petroleum products across the country and especially going into the Yuletide period and beyond, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has signed a six-month Direct Sale-Direct Purchase (DSDP) agreement with the British Petroleum’s (BP) trading arm, BP Oil International Ltd, for the supply of Premium Motor Spirit, also known as petrol.

    This latest agreement will represent 20% of NNPC’s total PMS supply under the DSDP arrangement, which basically allows the corporation to exchange crude oil with international oil traders for imported petroleum products over a period of time.

    Speaking shortly after a brief signing ceremony at the NNPC Towers on Thursday, the Group Managing Director of the corporation, Dr. Maikanti Baru, said as the nation’s products supplier of last resort, NNPC was committed to products availability by inviting new and old players to play in the Nigerian oil sector.

    He said over the years, BP had demonstrated the capacity and robustness to augment the forecasted shortfall by NNPC, especially as the winter period approaches and as the nation’s elections get underway early into the New Year.

    “As a reliable supplier, we think BP is a brand that we can always partner with. We trust the company and we have a good relationship with it. We also believe in the company’s commitment towards the development of local content,” Baru stated.

    Read Also: Baru hails oil workers for stopping planned strike

    The NNPC helmsman also commended BP for choosing to partner with AYM Shafa, a local oil company, which he said had been expanding its downstream footprints across the nook and cranny of the country.

    “BP’s partnership with AYM Shafa towards delivering on its DSDP obligations makes it a perfect fit for our plans to ensure that there is adequate supply of products throughout the coming Yuletide and even beyond the election period. In AYM Shafa, you are talking of a local company with over 150 retail outlets, depots as well as a good network of trucks nationwide,” Baru added.

    Responding, Mr. John Goodridge, the Head of Marketing & Origination of BP’s oil trading business, said it was a great honour for his company to be trusted by the NNPC as one of its strategic suppliers.

    “We are delighted to have the opportunity to work more closely with the NNPC. Going forward, we hope to grow this mutual relationship to greater things,” Goodridge added.

    He further assured that his company boasts of a global network of refineries capable of generating the products to meet the specifications required by the NNPC.

    He said the ultimate was to ensure that over the next six months, Nigeria does not witness any products shortages.

    Introduced in 2016, the DSDP arrangement is a model carried out through direct sales of crude oil to refiners or consultants, who in turn supply NNPC with equivalent worth of products.

    Since its inception, the DSDP model has not only saved NNPC millions of dollars that would have been paid through demurrage, it has also proven to be a major component of the corporation’s petroleum products supply portfolio which ensures stability in products supply nationwide.

  • NNPC to Consumers: Don’t mishandle petroleum products

    As the dry season draws near in the country, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has warned petroleum products consumers across the nation against mishandling of white products.

    NNPC Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu, in a release on Wednesday in Abuja, stated that experience had shown that commuters stock petroleum products at home or move about with them in their vehicle boot at this period of the year, exposing themselves and others to serious danger.

    Ughamadu said the incident involving a car laden with fuel which burst into flames while in motion last week at Umuode community, Osisioma Ngwa Local Government Area of Abia State, exemplified the danger of transporting imflamable petroleum products in vehicle not made for that purpose.

    The corporation’s spokesman admonished communities hosting NNPC facilities to refrain from taping products from NNPC pipelines or engaging in activities that my lead to spill of petroleum products, saying individuals involved in such an act may suffer untold casualties.

    Read Also: NNPC urges communities to calm vandals

    He encouraged communities in NNPC’s areas of operations to report suspicious movements around the corporation’s facilities to the law enforcement agencies, adding that observing basic safety rule of keeping away from areas where imflamable petroleum products spills had occurred could save lives and properties.

    Recently, fatalities were recorded while property worth millions of Naira were lost when some members of Umuaduru and Umuimo communities in Osisioma Ngwa Local Government Area of Abia State were caught in a fire while they were reportedly scooping petrol around NNPC’s pipeline in their community.

    Meanwhile, the NNPC Group Managing Director, Maikanti Baru, has assured motorists and other consumers of petroleum products of availability of white products for their comfort as the year end festivities draw near.

    Baru explained that NNPC has 37 days fuel sufficiency, according to the release by the NNPC spokesperson, stressing the GMD said that strategies had been put in place to ensure that Nigerians experience a hitch-free festive period.

  • NNPC embarks on healthcare venture to reduce medical tourism

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has teed-off a major national healthcare intervention project designed to halt medical tourism to foreign destinations through the provision of state-of-the-art hospitals and diagnostic centres across the country.

    Details of the medical venture plans published in the Q3 2018 Edition of the NNPC Magazine indicated that the corporation has set a five-year gestation period for the project to achieve substantial impact in Nigeria’s healthcare delivery system.

    The NNPC quarterly publication reported that the healthcare project is in three parts. The first is Occupational Health designed to specifically service NNPC staff, their dependents and retirees. All current NNPC clinics fall under this scheme and are presently being upgraded to reflect the new realities.

    The second scheme involves some key NNPC hospitals like the erstwhile Abuja International Diagnostic Centre (AIDC) and the Benoni Hospital in Benin City which are being equipped to service both NNPC staff and outsiders because of their projected excess capacity.

    The third leg of the medical project which has been designated as ‘new business’ involves locations where state-of-the-art hospitals and diagnostic centers will be constructed on NNPC unutilized lands in Kaduna, Mosimi and Port Harcourt for commercial purposes.

    NNPC Group Managing Director, Dr. Maikanti Baru, said he was delighted by the development being spearheaded by the NNPC Medicals, saying the project would impact on the bottom line of the corporation in the long run.

    According to NNPC’s statement that made this disclosure on Thursday, Baru affirmed that apart from the financial benefits the project promises, it also underlined the progress being made in the transformation efforts to reposition NNPC as a fully integrated company of the future.

    Read Also: Strike: NNPC begs oil workers to exercise restrain

    The NNPC Magazine’s report further informed that the icing on the cake is the erstwhile Abuja International Diagnostic Centre which is being reconfigured to assume the status of a national flagship medical mall.

    Upon completion, the centre will warehouse top class health care providers in cardiovascular, oncology, renal dialysis, radiology and lab services.

    The dream, it was gathered, is essentially to make AIDC a hub for other clinics through telemedicine.

    This process allows the remote delivery of healthcare services, such as health assessments or consultations with the support of telecommunications and information technology infrastructure. It will enable the healthcare providers to evaluate, diagnose and treat patients without the need for an in-person visit.

    Babatunde Adeniran, Chief Operating Officer, NNPC Ventures, said the new-found medical vision was modeled as well as inspired in part by successes recorded in other jurisdictions like Saudi Arabia, where the state oil company, Saudi Aramco, partners John Hopkins to provide best medical care for its staff and residents of other Middle East countries.

    “NNPC has 52 clinics/hospitals, the largest network of healthcare facilities in Nigeria which is enough capacity for us to build on, upgrade the facilities and achieve our commercialization dream. The aim is to reduce to zero, medical tourism and the accompanied capital flight with a view to retaining the money in Nigeria while also improving NNPC’s revenue,’’ he said.

    Musa Shaibu, veteran Occupational Health Physician and Managing Director of NNPC Medical Services Limited (NMSL), told the NNPC Magazine that the corporation was harnessing its strong brand name and market place identity to achieve remarkable results in the pursuit of medical excellence.

    “The NNPC name is huge, it is a golden name and as we are going into healthcare delivery in the name of NNPC, it is going to be a huge advantage. Don’t forget that, over the years, because we have been in the practice, we have interfaced with the best in healthcare delivery across the world. We know what to do and how to achieve result,’’ he said.

  • Strike: NNPC begs oil workers to exercise restrain

    The Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Maikanti Baru, has urged oil workers under the auspices of the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), to halt their planned industrial action over a labour dispute involving the Management of Chevron Nigeria Limited (CNL), a Multi-national Oil Company operating in Nigeria, and its staff.

    NNPC Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu, in a release on Sunday in Abuja, said the corporation’s GMD had directed its Management to work with other stakeholders to resolve the issue raised by the leadership of the Oil Industry unions.  

    The unions had recently called on the National Assembly, the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the NNPC, the Department of State Services (DSS), to intercede in a brewing impasse between CNL and its staff in Nigeria over the company’s disclosure that the contracts with all its manpower services providers would expire by the end of October 2018.

    The Industry unions last Wednesday put its members on red alert fearing the new manpower services contracts may not serve the interests its members.

    Read Also: NNPC records N17.16b trading surplus

    While thanking the oil workers for their exemplary conduct and show of support through the years, the GMD appealed to the Unions not to do anything that would disrupt the industrial harmony that has pervaded the sector, saying the gains of recent past, if care is not taken, can be frittered away inadvertently.

    Baru expressed optimism that the current dispute would soon be amicably settled.  

    Meanwhile, the NNPC has allayed the concerns of motorists and other consumers of petroleum products over possible hiccups in supply in parts of the country due to the oil workers’ ultimatum, assuring that NNPC holds adequate storage of petroleum products across the country to take care of the national demand.

     

  • Forex scarcity: Marketers bicker over kerosene import

    Fuel marketers are finding it difficult to import Dual Purpose Kerosene (DPK), two years after the Federal Government removed subsidy on the product.

    The marketers, which include members of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association (DAPPMAN), said they stayed away from the importation because of the outstanding subsidy arrears being owed by the government.

    The marketers said the issue was borne out of scarcity of foreign exchange (forex), adding that access to forex has been difficult.

    They said it was becoming impossible to meet the demands of the consumers who use the product for cooking.

    IPMAN’s National Operations Controller, Mr. Mike Osatuyi, said members of the association were not importing DPK, but insisted that the DPK market should be fully deregulated.

    According to him, any IPMAN member could bring in DPK after getting the approvals from the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA).

    Osatuyi said: “We will start importing DPK when the coast is clear. By this, I mean when we are through with our internal reorganisation. But I must say the demand for the product is dropping as people are switching over to Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG).”Because we believe the market is fully deregulated, I don’t think we will have any issue with foreign exchange when it is time to import.”

    Read Also: Kerosene explosion kills siblings, injures two others

    According to him, the landing cost of fuel imported into the country has increased relative to rise in the price of crude oil in the international market, adding that many marketers could not get enough to buy the product from the refiners abroad.

    Also, DAPPMAN’s Executive Secretary, Mr. Femi Adewole, said operators in the downstream sub-sector were worst hit, as they grapple with funds shortage.

    He said marketers were unable to get enough foreign exchange for importation of fuel, especially kerosene.

    He said failure of the marketers to access funds from banks coupled  and the government’s inability to pay their subsidies made it difficult for them to import kerosene.

    It would be recalled that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), the only approved firm to import fuel, sells DPK to marketers at an ex-depot price of N190 per litre. This implies that marketers would pay more because of landing cost, if they are to import.

    By this,  a near monopoly of the product has been created by the national oil company, a development, which has further compounded the problems of many Nigerians that use kerosene, which is the most commonly used fuel in the country.

    The issue has left many household users to pay as much as N350 per litre to get the product for use.

     

  • Baru not funding alleged impeachment plot against Saraki – NNPC 

    The Management of  Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), on Sunday said its Group Managing Director, Dr Maikanti Baru, was not funding any plot to impeach the President of the Senate, Dr Bukola Saraki.

    Mr Ndu Ughamadu, NNPC Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, said in a statement in Abuja that the Corporation was not party to the ongoing political struggle in the National Assembly.

    Ughamadu said the trending reports in some section of the media insinuating that Baru had doled out funds to effect the impeachment of Saraki were false.

    He described the report as ”the handiwork of mischief makers seeking to drag NNPC and Baru into a purely political affair totally different from its mandate as the national oil company with fiduciary responsibilities to the government and people’’ of Nigeria.

    ”The report is not only false but also an affront on the verifiable reforms in the operations of the corporation under the remit of Dr Baru.’’

    He said the reforms had “witnessed irreversible strides in the area of transparency leading to the sustained publication of NNPC monthly operations and financial records.

    ”The allegations are mere fiction and outright tales by moonlight for anybody to insinuate that Dr Baru or anybody else could just take a dip into the Corporation’s till and dole out the volume of funds being portrayed in that phantom report for political purpose.’’

    Ughamadu  called on all well-meaning members of the public and oil and gas industry stakeholders to discountenance the story.

    He said that the Management of NNPC remained  committed to its statutory role and responsibility to the entire federation.

    Saraki, on July 31 decamped from the ruling All Progressives Congress to the Peoples Democratic Party and the Senate promptly adjourned plenary until Sept. 25.

    Allegations that Baru was involved and funding an alleged impeachment plot against Saraki have been rife.

  • NNPC engages Cross River community on 14mw project 

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has commenced comprehensive community integration and stakeholders’ engagement to sensitize dwellers of Iwure, Ojor and Osomba/Akin communities of Cross River State ahead of 14mega watts (mw) planned oil palm-based biodiesel project in that part of the state.

    A release by Corporation’s Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Ndu Ughamadu, said the 26, 000 hectares facility was designed to accommodate an oil palm plantation co-located with bio-diesel, crude palm oil co-generation plants and other facilities.

    Read Also:Hoodlums allegedly kill NNPC’s contractor’s guards

    Already, officials of the corporation’s Renewable Energy Division (RED) have embarked on the sensitization campaign across affected communities, providing information on the rationale and projected benefits of the biofuels projects in the state.

    The NNPC Research and Development Division (R&D) is also being engaged for the conduct of Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) for the projects.

    The release said that the plant was projected to generated about 14 megawatts of electricity from empty fruit bunches and the residue from oil palms.

    Under the arrangement, the oil palm would be processed into fuel grade Biodiesel and industrial crude palm oil as by-products. The Biodiesel will be blended with diesel in a mix of 20 per cent biodiesel and 80 per cent diesel and sold as B20 in the domestic market. Any utilized biodiesel quantity would be exported to the international market.

    The NNPC Cross River bio-fuel project is in tandem with renewed drive by the corporation to develop biofuels in Nigeria through partnership with core investors to create a low carbon economy and link oil and gas sector to the agricultural sector. This is also to mitigate the adverse effect of climate change and the transformation of NNPC into an integrated energy company with diverse portfolio.

    The business model would involve a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) comprising NNPC, State Government and the Core-investor. The state Government is expected to provide land as equity while core investor takes more than 50 per cent equity and operate the venture leaving NNPC and state Government with minority share of less than 50 per cent.

    So far, Kebbi, Ondo, Taraba, Benue, Jigawa, Kogo, Adamawa have shown interest in partnering with NNPC in biofuels projects.

     

  • Salaries may be delayed over FAAC deadlock, Says Adeosun 

    …Says NNPC’s explanation on cost not justified

     

    The Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun on Thursday warned that if the issues that led to the federation accounts and allocation committee (FAAC) meeting with governors that ended in a deadlocked is not resolved; salaries might be affected in the states.

    The committee members of FAAC, she said, felt that some of the costs presented by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) couldn’t be justified hence have decided that rather than approve the accounts, the negotiations continue until the agreements are reached.

    She also explained that President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, have been fully briefed and have supported the Ministry of Finance and the commissioners of finance not to approve those accounts until further explanations on some of the cost being implemented are given.

    The revenue sharing meeting had ended in a deadlock on Wednesday for the third time since January 2018.

    Read Also:FG receives N263.28bn from FAAC allocation in Feb – NBS

    The National Economic Council (NEC) presided over by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, has demanded explanations from the NNPC for unclear costs the corporation made from FAAC.

    State Commissioners of Finance, who had converged on Abuja with the expectation to collect their states’ share of the monthly allocation, reportedly walked out of the FAAC meeting as they protested the deductions.

    Adeosun, who chairs FAAC, said she brought the matter to the NEC chaired by Osinbajo, with State Governors, Central Bank Governor, and others as members.

    Briefing the State House correspondents at the end of the NEC meeting, Adeosun said “Also in my capacity as chairman of FAAC, I briefed governors on the deadlock that we have got currently in the federation account and explained what happened. And there was quiet and extensive debate on what to do.

    “For the purpose of this briefing, we operate NNPC as a business, we have invested public capital in that business and we have expectations of return and when that return fails lower than our expectations then the owners of this business which in this case is the federal government and states need to act. So, that was what caused the deadlocked yesterday (Wednesday) and we really felt the figures the NNPC was proposing for FAAC were unacceptable. We felt that some of the costs couldn’t be justified and so we have decided that rather than approve the accounts, we will go back and do further work.

    “So further negotiations and interactions is going on with NNPC as we speak. However, we did briefed both Mr. President and Mr. Vice President on the deadlock and asked for their support and their forbearance in this because the consequence of this is that, salaries might well be delayed in many states as a result of this. But we feel that in order to get to the accurate figures that we need, we have asked for forbearance and the governors and the federal government are all in agreement that we need to get to the bottom of those figures.

    “In particular, now that the oil price is now $76 per barrel in the spot market which means that bonny light is about $78, we want to be aggressively putting money away into the excess crude account. So we are very conscious that this period, this window of relatively high oil price might not last and we will like to be able to save. If we cannot get into the federation account the sort of revenues we are expecting then we will not be able to save. So it was a very important point really underscored by all the governors and they really want action taken and they are fully in support of the positions of the Federal Ministry of Finance and the commissioners of finance not to approve those accounts until we get further explanations on some of the cost being implemented.

    On the exactly issue with the NNPC, Adeosun said, “Based on oil price, oil quantity you can pretty much calculate what you are expecting to see in the federation account and if the figure is less, then the right question that any stakeholder must ask is why.

    “So we have been going back and forth with NNPC to try and understand these figures before we can accept them. Remember that the FAAC figures have to be formally accepted by the federation-account committee and we were simply not comfortable with the quantum of some of the deductions made and therefore we could not approve those figures. So even as we speak, there is an interface going on between the commissioners forum, ministry of finance, office of the accountant general, CBN and NNPC but we hope to be able to convene FAAC within next few days.”

    While giving updates on the balances of the federation accounts, Adeosun said, “Items to note on the excess crude account is that in May we had an additional credit of $80.6 million that accrued into the excess crude account.

    “The balances on the excess crude account $1,916,742,289.60, stabilization 18,892,864,216.65, Natural Resources N133, 715,427,387.37.”

    Governor Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta State, who briefed the press alongside Adeosun, disclosed that the NEC approved the financial report of the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA), for 2016 and update for 2017.

    He said the report indicated a positive profitability over the past five years, at about $8m per year; and $1.25m as assets at a rate of 6.6% return on assets.

    He said, “At the meeting today, we did take the annual reports and accounts of National Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) for the year ended 2016 and an update on 2017 activities.

    “The main issue was the NSIA report on five years so far of profitability in all forms with core profits of about N26.28 billion which is about $88 million in 2016. NSIA also reported that the total profit on that management was about $1.25 billion for most part of the year but they had received an extra of $250 million that was received in the third quarter of 2017.

    “It also did report that the returns on assets was up to 6.6 per cent in dollar terms which we considered to be quite good in terms of returns. It is actually shifting its focus now to infrastructure and direct investment locally in the country which is of great benefit to us as a nation.

    “The 2017 activities of the NSIA also include the implementation of Presidential Fertilizer Initiative (PFI) in 2017. They commenced the construction of free health projects in Lagos, Kano and Umuahia, Abia State. They continued with the work, the funding of the work on the second Niger bridge in which they had been involved in the past.

    “They also did invest and own 13 per cent of Bridge Academy Ltd, a network of schools which delivers high quality affordable primary education to lower income earners and it is hoped that they will do that too in other states of the federation.

    “They also did invest in Babagona, an agricultural franchise, that empowers small holder farmers across the country, and in 2018, they intend to focus on executing infrastructure investment across the nation which includes roads, investment in agriculture and health.

    “We are hoping that all this will impact on infrastructure development and development of industrial real estates across the country. Council eventually resolved that the account of NSIA presented to us should be approved and council so approved.”

    The NEC also resolved that a Committee comprising Governors of Kano, Osun, Delta, Anambra, CBN Governor and the Minister of Education should look into what needs to be done urgently in the education sector at the State level and report back to the Council.

    The minister of education said this was in recognition of the fact that more investment is needed in the education sector, while emphasising that collaboration among the Federal, States, Local Governments, Private Sector and Development Partners is very necessary, as the standard of basic education at the State level has fallen drastically.