Tag: NNPC

  • Return of fuel queues

    Return of fuel queues

    When most Nigerians had thought that the days of motorists spending the night at filling stations in a seemingly endless wait for fuel had long gone, the devil appeared again in Lagos, Abuja and most of our major towns and cities last week crippling economic activities. And as usual, the government is blaming saboteurs for the scarcity.

    For most of last week, many people could not leave their homes either because they couldn’t get fuel for their vehicles (cars) or couldn’t afford the astronomical fare hike imposed by commercial transporters. While the pumps at filling stations could not dispense petrol as their tanks were dry, the mobile filling stations operated by touts along busy roads and highways were in full operation selling a litre of petrol for as high as N500 and in some cases N1,000 depending on how desperate the situation of the intending buyer was.

    From one filling station to another, motorists wore long faces in frustration as their vehicles gather dust after several days on the queue with no hope of getting fuel. At the stations they were told there were no supplies from the marketers, yet they heard on their radio and television government officials insisting that fuel was available and was being hoarded by God knows who.

    From the comfort of their homes and offices the Minister of Petroleum and her officials at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) could see millions of litres of fuel out there being diverted and the people were asking; by who and to where? If truly the fuel was there and being taken elsewhere, whose duty is it to apprehend those diverting the commodity? Is it not the government? When the queue first appeared the usual response was to blame it on panic buying. Each time one hears this one gets annoyed. Why would anybody rush to buy fuel if it is there at the filling stations in abundance? Why would anybody buy the commodity if he doesn’t need it? With people’s disposable income fast depleting, nobody would want to buy more that the quantity of fuel he requires at a time, but if somebody would need like 60 litres over a period of two/three days he would look for money to buy the 60 litres at once if he suspects that he might not get the commodity to buy again the next day or the day after at the official price due to one reason or another. Is this what they call panic buying? I think it’s just common sense; preparing ahead of time. If the Minister of Petroleum, Madam Deziani Allison-Madueke and her officials had been planning ahead, no amount of fuel diversion by whoever would be enough to cause petrol scarcity. But we all know that they don’t plan ahead; we know that this government has no plan beyond today. If they do, why is it that there is no strategic reserve from where petrol can be pumped into the market in times of emergencies or shortage like we’ve just had?

    One is not even sure the NNPC or its subsidiary in charge of fuel supply could say the exact litres of fuel Nigerians consume daily, because if this is known, then it would be easier to foresee shortage before it arrives any time there was likely to be disruption in supply. Oil business is essentially a futures business. Supplies (whether crude oil or refined products) are ordered and paid for months ahead and contingencies are made ahead of time for any disruption or delay in supply by wise buyers. The spot market is there to take care of any emergency order. Of course this comes at a higher price but at least the problem of disruption would have been solved.

    We all know the problem facing our refineries and even if the problems are no longer there and they are operating at installed capacity, their entire production would not be enough to satisfy the Nigerian market so we would still need to import. For a very long time now, we have had to rely on fuel import either directly or through marketers and this must be paid for. Did we order and pay for enough fuel?

    The major marketers always complain about government owing them for fuel import and each time Nigerians hear this they fear that scarcity was around the corner. And from experience this had always been the case each time there was fuel shortage. So why was the government owing these people? If somebody is helping you to discharge your responsibility to your people the least you can do is to pay that person promptly. If the government through its appropriate agency had made sure our refineries are working and have enough capacity to satisfy the market, there would have been no need for fuel import, therefore no need to rely on marketers. In fact, the marketers would be buying from the refineries here for sale at their various filling stations scattered across the country. So why can’t we fix the refineries?

    This is a million Naira question that only the government could answer. We have been told several times that Port Harcourt and Warri refineries are about coming back to life. Even if and when they are back, how far can they ameliorate the problem? Kaduna refinery? Don’t even talk about that.

    I think it is about time we decide on what to do with these refineries; should government own and operate them or sell them to core investors? The modern trend tend to support privatizing the refineries but then if the experience of the recently privatized Power Holding Corporation of Nigeria (PHCN) is anything to go by, Nigerians wouldn’t want the refineries to be sold.

    Since the private investors in the power sector assumed control of the electricity companies, not much has been felt by Nigerians in terms of improved power supply. What we have been having in the last couple of months is darkness, sprinkled with few hours of light. So if the refineries go to private hands, Nigerians are afraid of a similar treatment. But then they are also worried that the government has not shown any capacity to do the job better. So what do we do? Most people, especially would argue that the solution lies in privatizing the existing refineries and encourage private businesses to build more refineries to increase local capacity to refine our crude oil into petrol, diesel and other petroleum products not just for internal use but also for export.

    I do not know the extent of damage the last fuel scarcity has done to the battered image of the Jonathan administration, but I do know that if the trend should continue it would spell doom for the President and his party in the 2015 general elections.

    A word is enough for the wise.

     

     

     

  • Why I can’t  audit NNPC, by Auditor-General

    Why I can’t audit NNPC, by Auditor-General

    The Auditor-General of the Federation (AGF) has said the Constitution bars him from auditing the account of the the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    He spoke at the resumed hearing of the Senate Committee on Finance’s public hearing on the allegation made by suspended Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi that $20 billion has not been accounted for by the NNPC.

    Ukura said Section 85 (2) (3) of the Constitution barred him from auditing NNPC’s account.

    He said the Constitution empowered him to list qualified auditors out of which those to audit NNPC could be selected.

    Ukura told the committee that 20 of his officials were in NNPC, conducting periodic check on the corporation’s revenue and expenses. He said it included expenses on subsidy.

    The Chairman of teh committee, Ahmed Makarfi, mandated Ukura to confirm in writing that he was conducting check on the NNPC and that the checks cover all items identified by the committee, including subsidy issues.

    On the $2 billion third part financing, the Group Managing Director of NNPC, Andrew Yakubu, said the submission to the committee gave a detailed account of the fund.

    Yakubu said the details included Reserved Development Projects, Satellite Oil Field and others.

    He said what NNPC is accounting for is the total oil lifting on behalf of the Federal Government.

    On the controversial $6 billion said to have been paid to the Nigeria Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) by the NNPC, the Acting CBN Governor, Sarah Alade, told the committee that it depended on what the law provides.

    Mrs Alade noted that they noticed that $6billion was on the operations of NPDC but “we don’t know what they are to actually remit” because “it depends on what the law says.”

    She recalled that Sanusi stated at the public hearing that the law would determine what would go to the Federation Account of the $6 billion.

    On reconciliation with NNPC, she said since they left the public hearing last week, they have not been invited for further reconciliation.

    Mrs Alade said: “The new figure, after reconciliation, we have not been invited to any reconciliation. On the second issue, which is the $6bn, for NPDC, we don’t know the portion to be paid to the Federation Account.

    “The legal opinion, according to the governor, would determine what part should go the Federation Account.”

    Makarfi said there was need to be specific instead of building figures.

    He added that without being specific some people would continue to assume that the $6 billion was supposed to have been paid into the Federation Account.

    He noted that though it was wrong to assume that $6 billion should go to the Federation Account, the committee would determine what part of the $6 billion should go to the Federation Account. But Makarfi said the NNPC ought not to have stated that $2 billion went to third party arrangement.

    The committee chairman said his total calculation amounted to about $1.3 billion.

    He said the committee was interested to know how much went to each of the financiers, including Exxon Mobil and Total Nigeria, out of the 67 billion lifting.

    As the disagreement continued, Makarfi asked NNPC GMD whether he wanted to withdraw his submission to rework it.

    He noted that it was obvious that if the entire figures provided by NNPC are calculated, they cannot add up to $2 billion.

    Yakubu said the governing structure of the third party arrangement explained what went to the parties.

    Makarfi insisted that the calculation did not still add up to $2 billion.

    Yakubu noted that “in view of the confusion, there is the need to further clarify and align all figures.”

    Yakubu also said on the $2bn third party financing of some projects, Reserve Development Project between January 2012 to July 2013 cost $1.53bn; remittance to FAAC is $211m and $700bn went back to third party financing arrangement.

    The NNPC GMD added: “It is good that we have this opportunity to drill down to the dynamics of these funds and that is what we have been saying all along.

    “We cannot take it on the face values without looking at the details. Now we are going into detail disbursements of these money.

    “A substantial frame has gone back to the Federation Account and that is what we have been saying that if we had been patient enough to go into the details, we would be able to see them.

    “Yes, we captured $2bn but we are seeing clearly in our details that it was actually $2.4bn and a substantial part of it had gone back to the Federation Account.

    “The governance structure of the third party financing is what we will take back to see how we can have a detailed explanation to the distinguished committee to see how the third party financing governance is done.

    “The escrow account system, and how it is managed from the beginning of the project to the end. When you borrow money from the bank or any financial institution, you have governance structure you will adhere to and when you have an escrow account, that means you will have some money trapped until the end of the obligation.

    “These are some of the details that are beginning to come out and we have the opportunity to go back now to give a detail explanation including how the funds are being managed and then we would be able to account for every stream that is being managed within the third party financing.”

    Petroleum Product Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) Managing Director, Farouq Ahmed, said in 2012, the total quantity delivered by the marketers that qualifies for subsidy claims was 7, 714, 735, 580.71 litres which corresponds to N461.40.7bn .

    For 2013 (other marketers), he said the total volume delivered which qualified for subsidy claims was 8,997, 776, 652.81 litres which corresponds to N467, 620 ,657, 674.24.

    He put the total claims for the two years at N928, 668, 365, 37.70.

    He said in October 2011, the total volume of PMS based on the certificate granted to NNPC in terms of volumes delivery of PMS was 520, 464, 371 litres corresponding to N40, 385, 473, 266.32 while the volume for HHK is 171, 515, 288 litres and the total naira value for the two components (PMS and HHK) is N17, 643, 898, 129.01.

    He said: “There is also one for October of the same year which is classified as October arrears and its for HHK alone.

    “The volume is 18, 240, 866 litres corresponding to a value of N1, 935, 691.442.2. PMS volume delivered in November 2011 was 431, 755, 629 litres corresponding to N34, 63, 432, 840.66.

    “Volume delivered for HHK was 129 209, 34 litres with the value of N13, 504, 495, 477.84. For December 2011 batch A, PMS in terms of volumes 960, 674, 907 litres corresponding to N77, 006, 459, 517.65.

    “For HHK December 2011 batch A, volume was 94, 564, 678 litres corresponding to N10, 135, 880, 308.08. December batch B, volume delivered was 144, 961, 484 litres corresponding to N11, 318, 805, 386.1. December batch B for HHK the volume delivered was 88, 643, 792 litres corresponding to N9, 576, 977, 84.55.

    “The total of PMS delivered in the first quarter of 2011 by the NNPC is 2, 057, 856, 391 litres corresponding to N162, 774, 171, 10.73 while the HHA was 504, 173, 658 litres corresponding to N52, 786, 942, 442.3.

    “Therefore the total certification granted to NNPC by the PPRA for 2011 (PMS and HHK) was N215, 561, 113, 453.03.”

    The committee directed the Nigeria Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) to submit in writing what it received from the NNPC and part of the $6 billion that went to the federation Account.

    The Committee asked the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) if it received $869.9 million from NPDC.

    The DPR told the committee that when companies pay money, it takes them some time to confirm the payment.

    The agency, however, confirmed receipt of $415,239,365.66 and another $722,943,664.

    The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) confirmed the receipt of $863 million from NPDC.

    The committee asked NPDC to hasten the payment of the balance to FIRS since it (NPDC) accepted the liability of the balance in their submission.

    Makarfi said the committee would start technical session after yesterday’s sitting.

    He said the Senate had approved the appointment of a consultant while the executive was free to conduct its forensic audit.

    He said the work of the consultant would enrich the submission of the committee to the Senate.

  • NNPC: How Boko Haram stalls oil exploration in Chad Basin

    NNPC: How Boko Haram stalls oil exploration in Chad Basin

    The Group Managing Director, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Andrew Yakubu, has said activities of insurgents in the Northeastern is affecting exploration of oil in the Chad Basin.

    The NNPC GMD spoke yesterday when he appeared before the Senate Committee on Petroleum (Upstream) to defend the 2014 budget of NNPC.

    Yakubu also told the committee that NNPC is exploring new technology to lay oil pipelines in the Niger Delta to curb vandalisation.

    He noted that apart from Chad Basin, there are seven other basins being explored for oil.

    He said the low performance in the Chad Basin in 2013 was as a result of increased insurgent activities in the region.

    Yakubu said: “What we did last year was to acquire the aero magnetic data from the geometric survey department.

    “We have Yola, Bida, Sokoto, Dahomey and others. The main focus now which was a result of an extensive geological study that was done a couple of years ago is on the Chad basin.

    “The data for the other basins had been acquired and as soon as we progress with the Chad Basins we will intensify action in the others.”

    He added that the Chad Basin has 13 phases “and we are now in phase six”.

    On pipe line breach, he noted that there was no doubt that the current experience is worrisome, adding that the environmental damage is even more than the economic loss.

    He said: “But a number of proposals are coming up, we are reviewing them with security agencies. The pipe lines are strategic national assets. By the time the proposals are implemented every Nigerian will own the assets. The Justice Ministry is also looking at all the laws to determine how anybody who tampers with the assets will be treated. It will involve communities, local governments and states.”

    Chairman of the committee, Senator Emmanuel Paulker, asked the NNPC management to explain to Nigerians the actual money earned from crude oil sales.

    Paulker said such explanation would disabuse the minds of some Nigerians who might sit in their offices and multiply the quantum of crude production per day with oil bench mark as the total money earned by the government.

    The committee wanted to know what NNPC did to mitigate fall in revenue in 2013.

    The GMD agreed that there was drop in revenue but added that there was also advantage of price.

    He said the production projection for 2014 is 2.4mbpd, which the committee described as good but ambitious.

    The NNPC boss said the corporation was working to arrest decline in production.

    On the effect of oil pipe line vandalisation, he noted that any thing that has to do with the breach of oil pipe line will automatically impact on the environment.

    Yakubu insisted that the best way to stop the menace is to intensify campaign for those perpetrating the act to cease.

    This followed the question by a member of the committee, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, who wanted to know what NNPC was doing to address the effect of pollution on those living around the affected areas.

    On challenges, he said funding continues to be a major challenge for the Joint Venture.

    Partners, he said, are not willing to continue funding through Modified Carry agreements.

    He also said partner and external financing close date negatively impacted by the delay in passage of national budget which in turn leads to schedule slippage and low performance.

    Yakubu said high cost resulting mainly from high crude oil price continue to negatively impact government revenues.

    He said NNPC was working with partners with a drive towards cost reduction.

    He added that “having overcome initial reluctance of partners to fund domestic gas projects, there has been a steady increase in performance versus plan. Sustained funding from 2014 through 2016 will be the key to achieving government’s domestic gas objectives”.

    He said national gas infrastructure projects needed to be fully funded to ensure upstream domestic gas gets to the market.

    Yakubu also said that resolution of all commercial issues will help improve project delivery.

    On the ongoing fuel scarcity in parts of the country, he said: “We have a full team right now in Lagos. Last week, the team was in Abuja.

    “We went round the clock to clean it up to get strategic reserved released to the stations and we are able to reduce the fuel queues.

    “We shifted to Lagos at the weekend but we have injected quite a lot into the Lagos market. All the marketers, the DPR, the PPPRA, NNPC, and the PPMC have a very strong team out there to ensure that the deliveries are made offshore.

    “We have some vessels that had not been offloaded into the tank farms in Lagos and a lot of supplies have gone into most filling stations.

    “In the last couple of days, we have close to 1000 trucks that had been loaded out of the various depots and jetties in Lagos and the entire fuel are being supplied to the various stations in Lagos and beyond.

    “As at the close of business on Tuesday, most filling stations in Victoria Island and Ikoyi were dispensing fuel and we expect that other parts of Lagos will be impacted by the increase in the fuel supply strategy that the combined team has been doing.

    “Hopefully by the end of work today (Wednesday) we would begin to see a change in the fuel scarcity situation in Lagos.

    “The best way to distribute fuel is through the pipeline network to our various depots that are all over the country.

    “We have over 20 of them and about 5, 000 kilometers stretch of pipelines and that is the best and the most efficient way to distribute petroleum products but when they are breached then you have this kind of challenge.

    “Making use of 1000 trucks per day to distribute fuel across the country is usually not the best but when we are faced with this situation, then the fall back will be the truck and that should be temporary and as soon as we fixed the pipelines normalcy would be restored.

    “The projection of a daily crude production of 2.44m is realistic however the security challenges occasioned by the breaches.

    “We have the capacity but we need additional investment to address the security breaches that we continued to have.”

  • Fuel scarcity bites harder in Ogun

    Fuel scarcity in Abeokuta, Ogun State, bites harder as motorists and residents who need the product to power their vehicles and generating set, spent hours at the filling stations waiting for  reluctant marketers to sell.

    Few of the filling stations visited with prospects of selling the products today witnessed long queue as early 5:30am amid chaotic situation as station owners and pumps attendants laboured to contain surging crowd of desperate buyers.

    Although, a litre of fuel is sold at between N100 and N110 in some stations while a handful of others sold at the official pump price but buyers had to part with N50 or N100 before they could buy.

    At the NNPC mega station opposite the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Secretariat, there was long queue which began at the station on Abiola Way and snaked into the IBB Boulevard road stretching up to the Federal High Court opposite the Ogun State government Secretariat.

    A second queue stretched backward into Abiola Way and beyond the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) building on the same road.

    As at 11:35am this morning, a cab operator who had queued at the NNPC mega station told The Nation that he had been waiting for his turn for over four hours and may not get the product until the evening.

  • The Economist: decision to sack Sanusi is bad news

    The Economist: decision to sack Sanusi is bad news

    Investors are spooked, interpreting the decision as a sign of the authorities’ lack of stomach for fighting corruption. Already, $2 billion of the $9 billion in foreign cash invested in Nigerian bonds has moved out; bankers predict more will follow. The naira plunged to an all-time low of 169 to the dollar on February 20th. Sarah Alade, a highly regarded technocrat who will run the bank until June, has pledged to continue to support the currency. But the foreign-exchange reserves she needs to do so have fallen by almost 14% from 12 months ago.

    The controversy has a strong political tinge. The Senate’s investigation was prompted by a leaked letter from Mr Sanusi to the president in which he accused the NNPC of violating the law. This put him in conflict with Diezani Alison-Madueke, the petroleum minister and a close ally of Mr Jonathan’s. The NNPC has repeatedly denied the allegations. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Nigeria’s finance minister, says an independent audit must establish the truth. Many see her outspokenness as a sign she doubts that Mr Jonathan will hold a credible inquiry. “The key question we need answered is what is the correct amount,” she says. “We need urgent action to bring this to the fore.”

    He claimed tens of billions of dollars in oil-and-gas revenue had been siphoned off in 2002-12. The president ordered three reports into it, but they never saw the light of day—if they exist at all—and no one was prosecuted. Months later the Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, part of a global lobby for transparency in natural-resource revenues, revealed a leakage of more than $9.8 billion in 1999-2008.

    Mr Sanusi’s suspension has also provided ammunition for Mr Jonathan’s political opponents in the run-up to the elections in 2015. The All Progressives Congress, the main opposition party, described it as “the clearest indication yet that President Jonathan…is willing to silence any whistle-blower”. Although acclaimed abroad, Mr Sanusi has a mixed reputation at home. He tackled widespread financial fraud and overhauled Nigeria’s banks during a banking crash in 2009. He has stabilised inflation in single digits and cracked down on money-laundering. But his staff say he has dragged the bank into politics. His blunt outbursts criticising Nigeria’s governance propelled the legislature to propose a bill (which failed to pass) compromising the bank’s independence. Some accuse him of having political ambitions of his own.

    The Senate is due to confirm Mr Jonathan’s new choice of governor, Godwin Emefiele, who heads Zenith, a private bank. He is expected to keep quiet and stick to tight monetary policy. “He is hardly seen nor heard—a typical attribute of the central banker the Nigerian establishment prefers,” says Oluseun Onigbinde, an economist at BudgIT, a start-up that publishes Nigerian economic data on social media.

    Investors want the stability that came from Mr Sanusi’s policies and which Mr Emefiele supposedly seeks. But they are losing faith in Mr Jonathan’s administration. Thanks to its vast oil-and-gas reserves and the vitality of its 170m people, Nigeria remains hugely attractive. But Mr Sanusi’s tumultuous exit is another instance of the country’s squandered potential

     

  • The Economist: decision to sack Sanusi is bad news

    The Economist: decision to sack Sanusi is bad news

    WHEN President Goodluck Jonathan suspended Lamido Sanusi, the governor of Nigeria’s central bank, on February 20th, he succeeded in removing an opponent. But over the past week it has become clear that this small victory has come at a steep price. Not only has Mr Jonathan signalled his unwillingness to tackle the rampant corruption that is eating away at his country—he has also scared foreign investors and presented an open goal to his political enemies.

    The outspoken Mr Sanusi courted a stormy end to his tenure, due to finish in June, by accusing the state oil company, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), of failing to remit $20 billion in revenues to government accounts. The ministry of finance puts the figure at $10.8 billion. Mr Jonathan says he suspended Mr Sanusi because of “financial recklessness and misconduct” and “far-reaching irregularities” at the bank. But the decision came just days after Mr Sanusi presented detailed evidence to a Senate committee investigating alleged fraud and mismanagement at the NNPC. Most concluded that the suspension was politically motivated.

     

  • Fuel scarcity: Marketers to commence distribution nationwide

    Fuel scarcity: Marketers to commence distribution nationwide

    Oil marketers in Lagos State on Tuesday said the distribution of imported petrol to filing stations has commenced nationwide.

    The marketers in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos disclosed that vessels laden with imported petroleum products had berth at the high sea.

    One of the major marketers told NAN anonymously that the delay by the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) in approving the first quarter fuel allocation to marketers, was responsible for scarcity.

    He added that ships laden with petrol had started to berth since the early hours of Tuesday on the high sea.

    The marketer said they would immediately begin the discharge the product into system 2B for channelling to all NNPC depots.

    He gave Nigerians the assurance that the observed queues at filling stations would disappear by Thursday “when all stations would have received the product before the close of work on Wednesday.

    “The queues in some filling stations in some states will soon disappear as the Federal Government has approved the importation of petroleum products.

    “Petroleum vessels have started to berth at the high sea to discharge the product into the pipeline to depots.

    “We are assuring Nigerians that the ongoing scarcity and queues will soon disappear,’’ he said.

    The marketer advised motorists to remain calm and avoid panic-buying.

    “Since the importation approval has been signed, Nigerians should expect prompt and effective distribution of petroleum products in all filling stations across the country,’’ the marketers added.

    An independent marketer, who exonerated marketers of any blame, commended the Federal Government for its intervention in the clearing processes.

    He said that the clearing process had become cumbersome and caused the experienced delay of ships in the high sea.

    “I totally disagree with the insinuations that marketers are the ones hoarding the product at the filling stations.

    “The real issue is in the high sea because to what extent can a marketer hoard the product in the filling station?

    “In the high sea, we have 42 days sufficiency, so, how can a marketer hoard?

    “The situation we have today has to do with logistics. That is the operations at the jetties, including the shore tanks.

    “I am talking about the little problem we had one week ago which was the contraction in supply,’’ he said.

    However, the management of Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) on Monday injected additional three million litres of petrol into Lagos to ease scarcity.

    The Acting Group General Manager, Public Affairs Division of the Corporation, Dr Omar Ibrahim, said that extra 33 million litres of petrol would be supplied to end the artificially induced scarcity.

    “While we intensify direct monitoring of fuel stations across Lagos and its environs, we are providing extra volume of the product to eliminate the noticeable queues arising from the induced scarcity,’’ Ibrahim said.

    NNPC has appealed to marketers and members of the public to refrain from hoarding and panic-buying.

  • NNPC releases 33 million litres of petrol for Lagos

    NNPC releases 33 million litres of petrol for Lagos

    In its determination to ease the discomfort being experienced by motorists and commuters in Lagos and its environs, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) yesterday supplied an additional volume of 33 million litres of  Premium Motor Spirits (PMS) to the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN) for onward distribution to fuel stations across the metropolis.

    Acting Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division of the Corporation, Dr. Omar Farouk Ibrahim stated in a statement that the extra volume of 25, 000 metric tonnes of fuel, the equivalent of 33 million litres of petrol  was supplied to the marketers  as part of measures by the oil giant to end the artificially- induced scarcity.

    “While we intensify our ongoing direct monitoring of fuel stations across Lagos and its environs, we are providing the extra volume of product to eliminate the noticeable queues arising from the induced scarcity,’’ Dr. Ibrahim stated.

    The NNPC appealed to marketers and members of the public to refrain from hoarding and panic buying.

     

  • 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.

     

  • Why fuel is scarce,  by marketers

    Why fuel is scarce, by marketers

    COntrary to claims by the National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) that the fuel scarcity was caused by hoarding, the problem is a result of late release of import allocation to oil marketers, gap in importation and short-supply of petroleum products to filling stations, The Nation has learnt.

    It was gathered that the first quarter (Q1) import allocation released in February by the Petroleum Product Regulatory Pricing Agency (PPPRA) did not only come late, but made it difficult for major oil marketers to import products.

    An independent marketer, who pleaded for anonymity, said the inability of government to place order for the first quarter allocation early has resulted in the shortage of the petroleum products.

    “The truth is that the products are not available in Nigeria now. You can only stockpile the commodities that are at your disposal. NNPC is being economical with the truth. Instead of telling the public the true position of things as relates to fuel scarcity, they are playing around. The import allocation came late, and as such, marketers have to wait for at least two weeks to bring the products in. In between the period, there is tendency that they have run out of stocks.

    The Chairman, Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMON), Femi Olawore said hoarding was not responsible for the scarcity of petroleum products that pervaded the country since last Thursday, adding that the problem is beyond that.

    Olawore told The Nation that short-supply of the products has been the major problem in the country.

    He said: “It is not true that hoarding is the chief cause of the lingering fuel scarcity.

    However, we are making efforts to resolve the problems this week. NNPC is bringing the products to reduce the gap in supply and make them available to consumers. In fact, one marketer has just brought a shipload of fuel into the country. Before this week runs out, the problem would be resolve. Nigerians needs not panic as efforts are being made to proffer solution to the fuel scarcity.

    Dr Omar Ibrahim, the Acting Group General Manager (Public Affairs) in NNPC, still insisted that fuel scarcity in Lagos was artificial.

    Ibrahim said the corporation would introduce new measures to halt the “artificially-induced fuel scarcity.”

    “NNPC, in conjunction with the Department of Petroleum Resources and the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency, will commence detailed monitoring of fuel stations in Lagos and environs,” he said.

    Ibrahim said the monitoring would also extend to other states of the federation to check the incidence of hoarding.