Tag: NNPC

  • Pay more to flare less? Calculating the costs of flaring gas in the oil and gas sector

    It’s been 60 years since Nigeria joined the World Oil Producers and reaped riches from its oil production. It made its first oil discovery at Oloibiri, Bayelsa in 1956. In 1958, its first oil field came on stream, producing 5,100 barrels per day. By the late sixties and early seventies, Nigeria had attained a production level of over 2 million barrels of crude oil a day.  In 2016, the country could boast of 37 billion barrels oil and gas reserve as reported by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), the State’s oil company. Today, Nigeria’s crude oil production is at 2.2 million barrels per day.

    Since 1956, a good number of oil and gas companies (foreign and local) have set up shop in Nigeria. Shell Petroleum Development Company (formerly known as Shell BP) was the first oil and gas company in the country. It drilled 12,008 feet at Olobirin Well No.1 (now dried up). Today, Chevron Nigeria Ltd, ExxonMobil, Nigeria Total, Nigerian Agip Oil Company are some of the other key players in the Nigerian oil market.

    What we got from oil and gas in 15 years

    Data from the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) shows that companies in the oil and gas sector in Nigeria paid about $347 trillion revenue from 1999 to 2014. This amount was paid to government agencies through a variety of revenue streams such as extraordinary taxes on income, profits, and capital gains, royalties, bonuses, emission and pollution taxes, and general tax on goods and services etc.

    While extraordinary taxes on income, profits, and capital gains are paid for the sale of assets like land and properties, general taxes on goods and services are indirect taxes paid on consumption of goods and services by private individuals. Royalties, on the other hand, are paid for the exploitation of natural resources connected with land and minerals. In the oil and gas industry, royalties are pay for oil produced from a concession. he rates are set based on the location of the field. Therefore, the deeper the concession area is, the lower the applicable rate.

    Bonuses in the oil and gas industry are paid at a specific time within a project timeline. A very important one is the signature bonus. A signature bonus is paid by a concessionaire at the time an oil prospecting licence or oil mining lease is granted. Finally, emission and pollution taxes are paid for the emission of toxic particles that are devastating to our environment and harmful to health.  Oil and gas companies pay a certain amount for gas flared and oil spilled.

    In this article, because of their direct impact on host communities and the environment, we focus on the latter: emission and pollution taxes.

     

    The charts above help to identify the sources of gas flaring in Nigeria. If the assumption that the more gas an organization flares, the more emission and pollution taxes it pays is correct, the first set of companies to hold responsible for air pollution and environmental degradation in Nigeria would, of course, be Shell Petroleum Development Company and Chevron Nigeria Limited. These companies paid the highest taxes ($44,787,000 and $44,570,000) in 15 years. Addax Petroleum Development Nigeria Ltd (ADDAX/APDNL), Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC), and Mobil Producing Nigeria Limited (MPNU) follow. How much volume of gas have these top emission and pollution taxpayers flared in 15 years? Let’s dig into data. A little arithmetic might also be needed.

    Charts E-I shows the top emission taxpayers, the amount paid in dollars and the exchange rates applicable in years covered by the data. Chart J shows the naira equivalent of the sum total of each company’s payments in those years. From the charts, it can be seen that Chevron appears to pay a little higher than Shell in naira while the converse is the case in dollars. It might therefore seem that one of these companies flares the most gas in Nigeria. However, a little more insight is required to draw any useful conclusions.

    In Nigeria, there are regulations governing gas flaring. Over time, there have been different penalty rates per 1,000 Standard Cubic Foot (scf). For example, N10 per 1,000scf was applicable in 1998-2008 while in 2009 – 2017, the government set $3.5 for every 1,000scf gas flared (although, a report by NEITI states that, up until now, the penalty hasn’t been enforced and adhered to). Going by the N10 per 1,000scf rate which was paid until 2018 when the rate was reviewed and set at $2 for 1,000scf, Shell Petroleum Development Company paid about N5.2 billion between 1999-2014. At N10 per 1,000scf rate, the company had flared a total of 520,392,266,400 scf gas. Using the same calculation model, Chevron Nigeria Limited flared 550,007,562,600 scf gas, Addax Petroleum Development Nigeria Ltd flared 317,890,191,000 scf gas, Nigerian Agip Oil Company 261,554,792,800 scf and Mobil Producing Nigeria Limited flared 249,794,641,300 scf gas.

    For those not familiar with SCF, the oil equivalent of the volume of gas flared might be easier to follow: If gas were to be oil, it simply means the five top companies had spilled more than 92 million, 97 million, 56 million, 46 million, and 44 million barrels of oil from 1999 – 2014 respectively. The chart below presents a clearer picture of this data.

    Making Amends

    The facts have not gone unnoticed. In 2015, the NNPC and Chevron Nigeria Limited (NNPC/CNL) Joint Venture revealed its plan to reduce gas flaring by 98 percent and it announced the completion and load-out of the topside module of the SONAM Non-Associated Gas, NAG, Wellhead Platform project in 2016. Unfortunately, the positive effect of this has not really been felt nor seen.

    It was also reported that the Federal Government’s plan to end gas flaring by 2020. It also planned to introduce the “National Gas Flaring Commercialisation Programme”, an initiative that would generate about 36,000 direct jobs, 200,000 indirect jobs in the Niger Delta and ensure the redirection of the utility of gas for cooking, electricity and other industrial purposes.

    In the meantime, Nigerians continue to suffer from the health hazards of gas flaring. The ordeal and agony of residents of Edo, Delta, Bayelsa, Imo, Akwa Ibom and Rivers states, (especially the host and neighboring communities of the oil and gas companies) are better imagined. Media reports have it that satellite images provided by the tracker located 222 of gas flaring incidents happening around 65 onshore oil wells these states.

    Respiratory problems, cardiac diseases, bronchitis (inflammation of the lungs), silicosis (lung disease contracted by inhaling impure air) skin rashes, insomnia (sleeplessness), and eye irritations are some of the frequent ailments in such communities. The residents are exposed to all kinds of airborne diseases.  Egbema and Mgbede  and many more cases were reported in the media.

    With the new law of $2 for 1000 scf gas flared, the oil companies are likely to flare less. The new penalty is aimed at discouraging gas flaring, to encourage the redirection of gas flared from waste to wealth and preserve the environment and the lives of the residents in such environments. The government might also call back the debt of companies who defaulted when the rate was at N10 and make them pay at the current rate. If this is done, the organisations involved would be made to pay heavily and as such, gas flaring would not be considered an alternative anymore.

     

  • Eraskorp, OMS, NNPC and parable of the talents

    For days, I ponder on how to approach this topic, just then, I realised that the Parable of the Talents in the Holy Book of Mathew, provides a helpful framework to illustrate the media circus that has been on the road for a while now.

    The Parable of the Talents is not about salvation or works righteousness, but about how we use our work to fulfil our earthly callings. It is about whole-life stewardship, or “Stewardship with a capital ‘S‘.”

    The unfaithful steward in this parable did not so much waste the master’s money – he wasted an opportunity. As a result, he was judged wicked and lazy. We are responsible for what we do for God with what we have been given, and one day we will be held responsible.

    ‘Talent’ usually refers to ability, but in this parable, it is used as a measure for money. Greek sources state that one talent was equivalent to the money worth twenty years of labour done by a common person or helper.

    This parable discusses the trusting nature of a master towards his servant and the responsibility of a servant towards his master. It also highlights the need for faithfulness and obedience, not only when the master is around, but also when he is not.

    We are told a story of how a Chief Executive assigned responsibilities to his agents, while he was away on a trip. Upon his return, he assessed the productivity of each servants or if you like, the caretakers. He evaluated them according to their faithfulness and creativity in protecting his investment.

    It is clear from the story that even the rich Pharisee was interested in making some profit from his investment. A gain indicated faithfulness on the part of the servants. And this gain could be possible, only if the servants play their caretakers role diligently. The measure of rewards was based on how each has handled his assignment. He judged two servants as having been “faithful” and rewarded them positively. The unfaithful servant got query and was not compensated.

    According to theologians, another version of the parable of talents was provided by Eusebius of Caesarea from a “Gospel written in Hebrew script”. In that gospel, Eusebius wrote that, while the man who had hid the talent was rebuked for his wasteful approach to business. The man who had received two talents had invested and gained a return on his investment, the recipient of the five talents instead “wasted his master’s possessions and trust with harlots and flute-girls”. The Hebrew Gospel also revealed that this ‘prodigal man’ was sent into the darkness, and Eusebius expressly identified the darkness as being imprisonment.

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) aptly fits the role of the rich Hebrew man in the ‘Parable of Talents’. It is the statutory responsibility of the company to manage Nigeria natural resources on behalf of the government. NNPC in turn, also employ the services of individuals and corporate entities to ensure service delivery. Bearing this truism in mind, Nigerians became curious and confused with the imbroglio that has trailed the award of contract for Trans Forcados Pipeline the security surveillance to the preferred company – Ocean Marine Solutions (OMS).

    Unlike the characters in the ‘Parable of Talents’, three principal actors are in the ongoing ‘black gold’ thriller’ – Eraskorp, Ocean Marine Solutions and the NNPC. At the heart of the contest is the ‘Trans Forcados Pipeline’ (TFP) surveillance contract. According to the management of Eraskorp, the company was contracted by NNPC to provide security and surveillance services for the pipelines and the resources they convey, until recently when the contract was terminated by NNPC due to poor service delivery.

    The corporation had stated in a press statement signed by Ndu Ughamadu, that the nation lost 11 million barrels of crude oil, worth $800 million, whilst the TFP was placed under the watch of Eraskorp when their contract subsisted. But in another release, Eraskorp dismissed NNPC claim as “redundant falsehood”, insisting that its effort was geared to making positive impacts in the Nigeria oil industry.

    Eraskorp also challenged NNPC to provide Nigerians with cogent evidence of the “spurious claim”. The company then distanced itself from the responsibility of safeguarding the Trans Forcados Pipelines, just as it claimed that “a surveillance contractor cannot be held liable for production shut-ins due to technical hitches.

    “The NNPC is fully aware that the so-called losses have nothing to do with the performance of our contract and is just a convenient excuse for their own misconduct”. The narratives so far, points to a situation of no going back, with the ‘fight-to-finish’ attitude of Eraskorp against the management of NNPC who they also accused of failing to follow due process in re-awarding the surveillance contract for the protection of TFP to OMS.

    Several questions should be begging for answers from Eraskop and NNPC. Principal amongst which is the status of the former contract that was terminated – was there a determination clause, based on performance? Did Eraskorp deliver on its mandate to protect the TFP? Is it true that NNPC and Nigeria lost 11 million barrels oil worth $800 million under the watch of Eraskorp? Conversely, NNPC management had backed their claims with verifiable documents that the TFP was a major waste conduit during the period they contracted Eraskorp to protect the pipelines. The corporation was short of accusing Eraskorp of economic sabotage. Like the man who was given a single talent, in my opening story, Eraskorp management have safely distanced itself and laid the losses squarely on the Operation and Maintenance (O&M) division of NNPC. This attitude is completely wrong and negates against good business ethical values.

    But how could this be? From the understanding of the workings in NNPC, the failure or inability of the O&M division is the primary reason why the Eraskorp was contracted to watch over the Trans Forcados Pipelines in the first instance and for this, the company admitted to have been paid $1.5 million each month. Eraskorp argument is merely an attempt by an inefficient contractor to evade responsibility.

    By the way, NNPC decision to discontinue with Eraskorp and enter a new contract with a more technical oriented company is based on the “ Proof of Concept”, basically because OMS has successfully prevented oil thieves from bursting the Escravos-Warri and Bonny-Port Harcourt pipelines since they entered into surveillance agreement with company. This is the basis and justification for the use of “Proof of Concept” methodology for the re-award of the TFP surveillance contract to Ocean Marine Solutions, after the failure of Eraskorp to protect the TCP. Like the rich Hebrew merchant, NNPC can only reward her performing contractor, not the ‘servant’ that went frolicking and wasted his master’s trust with “harlots and flute-girls”. The ineffective servant was sent into the darkness, which has been interpreted by theologians as imprisonment. Today, the only place fit for economic saboteurs in Nigeria remains the prison.

    But what may be the real reason for Eraskorp’s objection to the discontinuation of their TFP surveillance contract? Could this be because of their proclaimed “national interest”? Or, is the fight akin to the unnamed Hebrew woman who wanted the newborn child butchered, if she cannot claim ownership of the baby?

    In economic disputes, the phrase – “splitting the baby” describes a compromise somewhere in the middle of the opposing parties’ (requested demands). The phrase comes from a dispute, where King Solomon faced a challenge where two women claimed the same infant child as theirs.  Both women had given birth to a child in the same house and sadly, one of the babies died in sleep. The allegation was that the mother had switched the dead child for the living one, while the other mother slept. Solomon’s proposal was to cut the baby in half with a sword so that each could have half, as a solution to the dispute. However, when the real mother gave up her demand to save the child, Solomon knew who the mother was and handed the child to her.

    The Trans Forcados Pipeline is Nigeria’s baby that needs to be protected from perilous attack from oil thieves and vandals. Eraskorp management must reconsider their present uncooperative stance with NNPC to prevent the continued loss of crude and revenue on the TFP. It is the responsibility of NNPC to select technical partners and vendors that they consider qualified to provide services to the corporation, including the TFP surveillance that is aimed at safeguarding the resources of Nigeria. A failure to do this, may amount to deliberate act of economic sabotage.

     

    • Omo-Ojo, JP is a former Edo State Commissioner for Oil and Gas

     

  • NNPC, Sahara Group’s JV boost LPG supply

    The Joint Venture (JV) between the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and Sahara Group has delivered 437,170 metric tons of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) to consumers in two years.

    The firms, in 2017, in Ulsan, South Korea, unveiled two new LPG vessels with a combined capacity of 38,000 cubic meters (cbm). The vessels – MT Africa Gas and MT Sahara Gas, have since delivered 437,170 metric tons of LPG, making households, communities and nations cleaner and safer; boosting economic growth and development across markets, Sahel Corporate Communications Manager of Sahara Group Limited, Mr. Bethel Obioma.

    Obioma said: “It had to be the product of collaboration – at its finest and most strategic level – a Joint Venture (JV) between the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and Sahara Group, a leading international energy and infrastructure conglomerate.

    “The Joint Venture operates as the West Africa Gas Limited (WAGL) and is run by two companies, NNPC Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary of NNPC and Sahara Energy’s Oil and Gas trading arm, Ocean Bed Trading Limited (BVI). The JV is addressing LPG related transportation bottlenecks, availability and quality concerns, deepening the LPG market in West Africa and other markets and above all, enhancing access to clean and safe energy.

    “Sahara Group is delighted to play a pivotal role in the JV as it continues to provide leadership across the entire global energy sector value chain, with a distinction for safety, excellence, good corporate governance and outstanding corporate citizenship.

    “The two vessels have performed several transatlantic voyages delivering 437,170MT of butane in mainly West Africa with spot calls in Europe and South America.”

    NNPC Group Managing Director, Dr. Maikanti Baru, at the inauguration of the vessels in South Korea, said their acquisition was an achievement for Nigeria considering that the JV was  recording successes within a short period having been established in 2013, adding that the continuing success of the operations of these vessels lends credence to the comments.

    Also during the maiden voyage of MT Sahara Gas to Nigeria, the  Asharami Synergy Plc (A Sahara Group Downstream Company) Chief Executive Officer, Moroti Adedoyin-Adeyinka, said: “What we see here today speaks to the power of collaboration and the great things that can be achieved when the private and public sector work together with the right strategy, expertise and capacity. At Sahara, this is the kind of collaboration that we push for; one that makes our economy better and saves our planet.”

  • NNPC inaugurates 25m-litre tank at Ejigbo Depot

    Fuel depots are now loading effortlessly following the repair of 25million litre tanks at the Ejigbo Satellite depot of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    Prior to this period, marketers were experiencing hitches loading their trucks as those tanks were not in good shape and unable to meet demands from the depot.

    However, the story changed two months ago when NNPC concluded the repair of the tanks, as part of efforts to fix the 20 depots of the Corporation in the country.

    Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) Chairman, Ejigbo Depot, Mr. Alanamu Balogun, said repair of the 25 million litre tank was a good omen for the depot as marketers resume loading seamlessly there.

    According to him, the depot is getting supplies from Atlas Cove regularly now following repair of the tank.

    Balogun said: “During the period the tank was faulty, the depot was loading 60 trucks to 70 trucks daily, as there was not enough storage facilities to accommodate fuel in the depot. Now, the depot can comfortably load 100 trucks in a day. Currently, more than 100 trucks are being loaded daily.

    “The repair of the 25milllion litre tank is aiding supply of fuel to areas such as Suleja, Ore, Ilorin and other parts of the country. Now, scarcity of fuel is no longer prevalent in the South-Western states as the depot has taken care of that area.”

    On the issue of kerosene, he said the depot lacked capacity to supply the depot as it does not have functioning kerosene tank on ground now.

    “The petrol and diesel tanks are working well now. There are no cases of leakages from the tanks as NNPC has taken up the responsibility of repairing the tanks,” he added.

    He urged the Federal Government not to relent in its efforts to improve infrastructure in the oil and gas industry, adding that efforts to strengthen  the downstream sub-sector of the oil industry would help in ensuring adequate supply of fuel in the country.

  • Presidential election: IPMAN endorses Buhari

    The Independent Petroleum Marketers  Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) on Friday at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, gave its full backing to the re-election bid of President Muhammadu Buhari in the forthcoming presidential election.

    IPMAN’s National President, Elder Chinedu Okoronkwo, conveyed the association’s endorsement when he led a delegation of IPMAN on a courtesy call on the president.

    Okoronkwo said that IPMAN controlled 80 per cent of investments in the downstream sector of the oil industry with over 50 thousand members scattered throughout Nigeria having more than 2 trillion investments in the oil industry.

    He said that IPMAN was appreciative of Buhari’s immense support to the oil industry which had made it possible that in the last three years, Nigeria had not witness the incessant fuel scarcity which had dogged previous administrations.

    “This is indeed an indication of your managerial capability, sagacity and experience; by virtue of this, I want to assure you our dear President that all members of our great association are solidly behind you – one hundred percent and are unshaken in our resolve to ensure your re-election.

    “In the same vein, we are committed to ensuring that this good work continues as we pledge our own contributions to ensure the continuous free flow and distribution of petroleum products across the country without any hitches.

    “It is on record that before your emergence, petroleum products distribution was a big racket riddled with highwire scam and decadent corruption.

    “The perennial fuel scarcity was the noticeable symptom of this malaise. But when you came on board that evil network of graft in the sector was dismantled and the nation is better for it as there is unhindered products availability all-year -round.

    “This new working environment is inspiring more investment by IPMAN members and we are further emboldened to establish a refinery in the near future with your support.

    “We shall soon furnish your office with detailed presentation of our plans and timelines for the actualisation of this project,’’ he said.

    In his response, Buhari thanked IPMAN for the significant support and contributions in ensuring Nigerians had adequate supply of petroleum products throughout 2018.

    The president said he was particularly happy to note that IPMAN used its large network of petrol retail stations across  country to distribute petroleum products sustainably.

    “ I am told that your members, in many instances, went beyond the call of duty to support the NNPC and other government agencies in ensuring products are adequately available for our citizens especially during the festive seasons.

    “I am also very pleased to hear that your members are planning to invest in refinery and petrochemical facilities.

    “This clearly shows that IPMAN, like the APC, also has plans to move to the NEXT LEVEL.

    “ I want to assure you that this administration will fully support this investment which aligns with Nigeria’s Energy Security Agenda.

    “ As I commend you on the successes you have recorded so far, I also want to ask that you continue to support the government in ensuring petroleum products meant for Nigeria are not illegally taken out of Nigeria.

    “We all know this illegal smuggling of products out of Nigeria is a threat to our national economy and security and must be stopped. I, therefore, want to urge all IPMAN members to remain committed to complying with the laws and regulations that govern the Nigerian oil and gas sector,’’ he said.

    The president also urged the IPMAN leadership to fully collaborate with the Federal Government by exposing those members who participated in illegal activities.

    He commended the association for the support and confidence it had shown to his administration and pledged to continue doing his best to move Nigeria forward.(NAN)

  • Six-hour inferno consumes Aba Guinness Brewery

    A wild fire on Friday engulfed parts of the Guinness Nigeria Plc, Aba Brewery, Abia, razing bottles, chemicals, office structures and furniture to ashes.

    Fire fighters battled hard to contain the fire, which started at about 11 a.m. on Friday until about 6:46 pm when the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) Correspondent left the scene.

    Okezie Uche, Aba Fire Service Commander, told NAN that his men reached the site at about 1 p.m. and fought hard to extinguish the fire with the help of other staff of near-by companies who volunteered.

    “We have water challenges but today, we refilled from the NNPC.

    When the fire seems to be out of control, I called the Controller of Abia Fire Service, Mr V.O Gbaruko in Umuahia office for backup and he sent men and more equipment.

    “We used techniques with the support of NNPC that gave us a foaming chemical which helped to extinguish the fire.

    “Without that chemical, we cannot do much because we are fighting a highly flammable material,” he said.

    Uche said the materials at the brewery included empty bottles, plastic crates and others.

    He said that “poor house-keeping” might have been responsible for the fire, stressing that when the staff could not contain the fire, they called the fire Service.

    A Police Officer, who preferred anonymity, told NAN the police got information on the fire at about 12 noon and called in the Fire servicemen in Aba.

    “They came, the Commander of MOPOL 55 also sent his men; the villagers also assisted in fighting the fire but it has not been easy as efforts were slowed because there was no power from EEDC to pump water.

    “And the water the Fire Service brought finished but the efforts continued with the help of Glover Paints that mobilized their men to bring water to help.

    “When the Umuahia Fire Service Commander sent his men, they joined with the help of staff of Geometric, to contain the fire to this level,” he said.

    He assured that the fire would be over before 6 p.m. following combined efforts, addig that fire reached nearby NNPC Gas Pipeline but was put out at that end.

    He said the fire reached the NNPC Gas Pipeline area near the depot but when the Fire Service came, they first tackled the area which was why the pipeline did not explode.

    Eric Otuonye, the Station Officer in charge of Security of the Brewery, said workers noticed the fire and smoke in the compound at about 11:30 a.m. from a nearby bush hence they mobilized to fight it.

    He said that the fight had been tough as firemen from Fire Service office in Aba and Umuahia, the Staff  of Clover Paints and Guinness Nig. Plc fought the fire from 12 p.m.

    “I think the fire got to a chemical that has escalated it, this is after 6 p.m. and if it is not put out, I do not know what will happen at night.

    “I believe the fire must have started from our compound. But there is a bush close to our fence on that side where it started, that is what we are suspecting.

    “But now what is important is fighting the fire, when it is over we can now trace where it started,” he said.

    Otuonye said that the damage was to be estimated in billions of Naira.

    Otuonye said the brewery had been shut down already since July 2018, adding that only a few police personnel and company security guards were around.

     

    NAN

  • NEITI’s audit report puts NNPC on the spot

    The Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) has stirred the hornet’s nest with its audit report on the oil and gas industry. The report raised some weighty issues that require the attention of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). But, with NNPC’s status as a regulator and commercial player, stakeholders are wondering whether it can address the issues, writes AMBROSE NNAJI.

    Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) Executive Secretary Adio Waziri touched raw nerves when he said more than 50 per cent of the problems in the oil and gas industry were traceable to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) because it is both a regulator and a commercial player.

    “You can even say the NNPC is the government; the difference between the government and the NNPC is yet to be clearly defined,” Waziri said, in his presentation of the findings of NEITI’s audit report on the oil and gas industry.

    According to him, the audit report was to ensure that the income made from the sector was used to develop the sector and build the economy.

    The NEITI boss also said it was to ensure that income from the sector was invested in the people to increase their productive capacity as well as turn the nation to a reproductive rather than extractive economy.

    He, therefore, stressed the need to give good stewardship of the resources so that those who coming behind would also have something to lean on. “It’s not about NEITI, but about all of us. We could better use and enhance the resources, but we have not done this as a country,” he said.

    Waziri added that the NEITI audit’s driving interest was about the collective resources that “we all own as a nation and the collective resources that we all hold in trust for generations to come.”

    He noted that although, there have been improvement; there was still room for more improvement. According to him, the oil and gas industry was still the country’s major source of foreign exchange and revenue to the government. “On the basis of this, we have to use it judiciously,” he said.

    Waziri’s submissions have reopened an age-long controversy over whether or not the NNPC remains an unbiased industry umpire. NEITI identified a number of outstanding and critical industry issues, including the Petroleum Support Fund (PSF) debt, inadequate measurement infrastructure in the oil and gas industry, failure to tender receipts and royalty by companies, delay in payments by companies and delay in completion of audit templates.

    Others are unpaid consideration for Shell Joint Venture (JV) assets, unpaid consideration for Agip Joint Venture (JV) assets, unpaid royalty from crude oil sales, unpaid Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) levy, and Petroleum Profit Tax (PPT) liability, among others.

    Most of the findings of the report, Waziri said, have been recurring, but what NEITI normally observes are changes that replace one problem with another kind of problem. “The issue of subsidy was a very big topic in the NETI audit report, but today there’s no more subsidy, at least, in the public knowledge,” he said.

    Continuing, Waziri queried: “But do we say there’s no more subsidy, and we talk about exchange of product, product importation arrangements? Do we say there’s no problem; do we say there’s no audit issue arising from this?”

    On the issue of cash call, Waziri noted that there is still over a billion dollars cash call refundable by the National Petroleum Development Commission (NPDC), demanding that something should be done about this.

    “They (NPDC) were still receiving cash call on it, so why should we stop talking about it,” Waziri said.

    On the issue of Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) dividends, the NEITI executive secretary said the last response NEITI got from the NNPC was that they got the NLNG dividends and a letter from the Presidency that they should retain and use the dividends as directed.

    “But we demanded to see the letter, to see what is spent and what is left. Until we get clarity about all these issues, what is resolved, we take it off the table because there are fundamental issues. Money was paid and acknowledged it was paid. What happened afterwards is not clear,” Waziri added.

    Waziri said when NEITI started the remediation process, the first thing it did was to do a status update. He said many times the agency had to shift the deadline for the NNPC to tell them the status of those issues.

    “We expected them (NNPC) to say this is what we have resolved; this is what we are doing. What we have here is the status update of the various remedial issues. What have been resolved, we acknowledged them, we strike them off.

    But the ones that were partially resolved, the ones that are yet to be resolved, we put them in red. We didn’t just sit in our office,” he clarified.

    Waziri, however, noted that the NNPC is now more responsive, adding that the Corporation has published its financial and operational report up till June 2018. “NNPC is actually more open, more advanced than it used to be, but we also need to engage them the more in what we are putting out,” he said.

    He, however, insisted that “the NNPC should make efforts to open its books to engage different stakeholders so that you tell people that you don’t have anything to hide and that we are all working together.”

    The Assistant Director, Solid Minerals, NEITI, Dr. Dieter Bassi, urged the government and its agencies, including the NNPC, to summon the political will to implement the audit findings.

    He also advised the government to change some of the policies and practices in the industry. This, he said, will help resolve some of the lapses observed in the audit findings.

    He said looking at the issues that have been occurring over the years, there are things that required to be changed including the Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) Act.

    “These are laws that are out-dated and needed to be amended in tune with what is obtainable in the industry today. We need to be proactive and start putting these legislations in order,” Bassi said.

    The NEITI director said even though the country is still waiting for the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) to be signed into law, there is room for a quick fix by adjusting and putting some regulations to address some of the issues.

    He, therefore, recommended the use of executive order in amending the guidelines, adding that once there is the political will to effect the changes, it becomes more beneficial for the industry.

    But as Bassi lamented, “It’s quite frustrating because of the disconnect between the policy makers in the organisations and people that attend meetings. There’s hardly any concrete roadmap on how these things can be done and effected within a time frame.”

    He pointed out that NEITI does not have the legal backing to effect these regulations/findings by itself even though it is being perceived as part of the presidency.

    Bassi noted that although, some reforms are on-going at the NNPC, the Corporation was still a long way to getting it right.

    “We are in a situation where we need revenues coming into the country.  We need more revenue for the government. As it is now, we are operating virtually on deficit; we are out of recession, it is believed, but we need as much revenue as possible,” he said.

     

    Operators, experts speak

     

    The National Coordinator, Publish What You Pay, Nigeria, Peter Egbule, observed that stakeholders, including the ordinary Nigerians, saw the NNPC as the major challenge in terms of revenue accrual and crude allocation.

    Egbule argued that what’s important at this time around is how to better engage with the Corporation in very concrete, specific terms different from previous engagements on how to come up with solutions to the NEITI report findings.

    He expressed regrets that from 1999 till present, a number of critical industry issues have been raised by various audit reports, yet the industry has not gotten to where it supposed to be.

    He added that by now “We ought to have gotten to a point where there is minimal and possibly no gap between where we are and where we ought to be.”

    Egbule advised the government through the NNPC to begin to close observed gaps, discuss and bring out alternatives, and look at the things they have been doing and find innovative ways to improve on them and possibly look at alternative means of resolving the knotty issues.

    He also noted that there are a lot of things around the political will, and one of the things that should be looked at is how to get to a point where the country will have a president that’s elected not based on the interest of some political elites, but on issues based politics where he could be held accountable.

    Egbule also stressed the need to push the issue of the petroleum industry reform to the front burner, where, according to him, there’s a clear statement that whoever becomes the president could be held accountable and ensure he delivers on his promises.

    For the Managing Partner, TSEDAQAH Attorneys (TA), Ikechukwu Uwanna, there is the need to revisit the legislative and legal framework in the industry. According to him, a number of regulations in the oil and gas sector including the gas flaring regulation are mere rules.

    He advised that such rules should be transformed into legislations, adding that laws have sanctions that back them up.

    Uwanna pointed out that a lot of the inadequacies in the industry are because it is more difficult to get the International Oil Companies (IOCs) and the multinationals to respect the laws.

    The legal practitioner recommended the use of class actions, where a number of stakeholders including the government agencies, individuals, communities, and civil society organisations can come together to address some of the outstanding remedial issues that have been on the table for a long time.

    The Project Director, Nigeria Anti-Corruption and Criminal Justice Fund, Chinedu Nwagu, gave kudos to NEITI for its efforts in trying to ensure a broadened transparency particularly in dealing with the remedial issues from the audit reports.

    Nwagu said the Fund’s partnership with NEITI was to ensure that the nation’s extractive industry, which accounts for the bulk of its resources, was governed with as much transparency as possible.

    He noted that lots of unremitted revenues from the oil and gas industry had significantly undermined the country’s socio-economic development, as monies that could be invested in infrastructure, health, and education were frittered away.

    Nwagu observed that there’s little or no oversight in the sector hence, NEITI occupies a critical space. He said although, the agency may not have the backing of the law to enforce decisions, its reports are good materials for advocacy by the civil society and the media.

    He said the anti-corruption fund was set up to support the presidential advisory committee against corruption. According to him, NEITI was one of the platforms the Fund found as an entry point to beaming the light on accountability and transparency in Nigeria.

    “NEITI has done a lot of work, a lot of background research. So, we support them to publish those reports. We will also mobilise other interested actors to speak and to galvanise actions towards ensuring that those responsible for not making the account straight are brought to book,” Nwagu said.

    A former member of civil society and NEITI, Dr. Mohammed Mustapha, said the issue of political will had been a major problem in the implementation of the audit findings, wondering how the industry would move forward without this.

    “We talk about political will, but how do we make it work?” he asked, pointing out that most of the agencies that were indicted in the NEITI report in the past didn’t take any practical steps to addressing the issues raised.

    “We need to get a practical solution to this; we need to get to the point where these organisations can be made to participate”, Mustapha said, stressing the need to get the commitment of the office of the vice president to make these organisations participate in the exercise.

    Indeed, in addressing the issues of remediation, the civil society has a lot of work to do in trying to educate the public. They make a lot of noise such that policy makers would really get involved in doing what they needed to do.

    This is more so because it is not about single issues, but about total reform of the oil and gas industry especially changing the NNPC’s business model, which accounts for a lot of the issues.

    Although, stakeholders acknowledge the reforms going on in the sector, but their consensus is that there need for more reforms, which must be timely and properly implemented for the sector to move forward.

    An industry stakeholder, who gave his name as Leo Adafor, advised the presidency to extend its anti-corruption fangs on those persons/organisations that are benefiting from the continuous re-occurrence of the remedial issues in the NEITI audit reports.

    According to him, there are certain powerful persons that are benefiting from the status quo. He also called for political will by the National Assembly, noting that lawmakers, through their oversight functions, also need to be close to NEITI and hear them out on all issues being highlighted.

     

    NNPC reacts

     

    The General Manager, Crude Oil Marketing, NNPC, Mr. Mansur Sambo, said some innovations are going on in the NNPC. He, however, said the problem was that people would not know except through engagements.

    Sambo said the NNPC was ready to support the initiatives of NEITI, civil societies and others in order to support transparency.

    “We will continue to support such initiatives and provide all the support and information that we need to provide in order to move forward,” Sambo added.

    He said the NNPC has made substantial progress in the EITI initiative. According to him, what brought NNPC to the level that it is today is the frequent engagement over the years since the enactment of the NEITI Act.

    Sambo said the engagement started with the reconciliation of crude oil produced, recalling that at some point one of the allegations/issues was that the NNPC does not even know what Nigeria produces as a country. He added that through frequent engagement, that’s not the discuss today.

    He maintained that the NNPC has moved from hydrocarbon accounting to hydrocarbon revenue accounting, and has even transited to hydrocarbon revenue utilisation.

    His words: “We have moved through all these stages because of the engagements we have been having in the past.

    “We moved from the level where we hear that crude oil is disappearing at the terminals through ships, and the engagements brought much of enlightenment to the public on what happens in the terminals.”

    Sambo clarified that some of the perceptions people were having about crude oil disappearance did not even happen in the terminals. “We have been able to clear some of the issues with further engagements,” he said.

    He also stated that with engagements the Corporation has been able to convey to its stakeholders and the civil society organisations that it is not only oil that should be focused on, but many other elements of the agreements it signed in the past.

    The NNPC general manager further said the NNPC has continued to pursue the deep offshore act, but that there are many fundamental and salient items that could be looked at that will give the country more revenue than the deep offshore act.

    Sambo, who also pointed out that the PIB is part of the solution to the push for increased revenue, however, said PIB alone will not address all the issues in the industry.

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    The Managing Director, NNPC Capital, Godwin Okonkwo, said some of the issues that happened in 2014 have been addressed. He, therefore, stated that it does not help matters if NEITI continues to repeat them.

    According to Okonkwo, there is something called post balance sheet paid event, which is an issue that happens after the cut-off date of an audit. He said there was need to look at those events and if they had been addressed within the period of the audit, then they should be deleted from the list of the outstanding.

    He pointed out that it is by addressing issues raised and removing them from the list so as to address new things that the country and the oil and gas industry will make good progress.

    The NNPC managing director insisted that since the new regime came on board, there has been remarkable difference in what is coming from the NNPC. He advised NEITI to continue doing what it is doing, and also report any issues in the field to the appropriate authority and the relevant office in charge.

    “I insist that whatever you (NEITI) do, you must put the NNPC Capital in the list. This will ensure that any information going out reflects the actual position and that you can be sure it is the position of the Corporation,” Okonkwo said.

    He also advised NEITI to always crosscheck their findings from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Ministry of Finance and other government agencies whether the information the NNPC is giving out is true or not.

    Okonkwo also urged NEITI to be open mindedness when expecting a response from the NNPC. According to him, NNPC’s answer must not be exactly what NEITI expects.

    He promised to make himself available for questions and clear some of the issues in the NNPC. He also assured NEITI of the Corporation’s continued support of its efforts, noting it’s for the benefit of the nation.

    “For sure, they have been doing good jobs. On our own part, we will continue to give all the support that will make our operations very clear to everybody. If we have recommendations for improvement, we will accept them. We have an open mind,” Okonkwo said.

    Waziri, however, explained that NEITI sent the finished audit report to the relevant entities, especially the NNPC, for their response.

    “We include it if we are satisfied and take it off if we are not satisfied. We will live it for the public to decide,” he said.

    The Executive Secretary said this was unlike the past where NEITI would just go to town with its claims, then the entities will come latter to state their our position.

    “No! This time around we give it to them, they sign off, any stage we have reached we put it there, and some of these responses are worth noting because what we are talking about is Nigeria,” he said.

    A new dawn in the offing?

     

    But it would appear that things are gradually changing at the NNPC. Sambo said, for instance, that the NNPC has started dealing with some of the legal issues, adding that things have changed for the better in terms of the challenges the Corporation faced. He said the Corporation has established a vocal entity within the system to address issues wherever they may be coming from. “We are making internal arrangements/adjustments such that whatever you are looking for we give it to you.

    “Today, we have the group compliance division in the NNPC where people can make enquiries. It deals with all enquiries that come to NNPC, because many entities are not aware that we have such structure within the system.

    “They will direct their request to areas where they will not get responses, so whenever they do not get responses they will say that NNPC is not responsive to issues,” Sambo said.

     

    Last line

     

    While some of these internal mechanisms aimed at repositioning the Corporation for more efficient service delivery are not doubt, it remains to be seen how the NNPC will navigate the landmine tossed on its path by virtue of its status as regulator and commercial player.

  • NNPC inaugurates 25m-litre tank at Ejigbo Depot

    Fuel depots are now loading effortlessly following the repair of 25million litre tanks at the Ejigbo Satellite depot of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    Prior to this period, marketers were experiencing hitches loading their trucks as those tanks were not in good shape and unable to meet demands from the depot.

    However, the story changed two months ago when NNPC concluded the repair of the tanks, as part of efforts to fix the 20 depots of the Corporation in the country.

    Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) Chairman, Ejigbo Depot, Mr. Alanamu Balogun, said repair of the 25 million litre tank was a good omen for the depot as marketers resume loading seamlessly there.

    According to him, the depot is getting supplies from Atlas Cove regularly now following repair of the tank.

    Balogun said: “During the period the tank was faulty, the depot was loading 60 trucks to 70 trucks daily, as there was not enough storage facilities to accommodate fuel in the depot. Now, the depot can comfortably load 100 trucks in a day. Currently, more than 100 trucks are being loaded daily.

    “The repair of the 25milllion litre tank is aiding supply of fuel to areas such as Suleja, Ore, Ilorin and other parts of the country. Now, scarcity of fuel is no longer prevalent in the South-Western states as the depot has taken care of that area.”

    On the issue of kerosene, he said the depot lacked capacity to supply the depot as it does not have functioning kerosene tank on ground now.

    “The petrol and diesel tanks are working well now. There are no cases of leakages from the tanks as NNPC has taken up the responsibility of repairing the tanks,” he added.

    He urged the Federal Government not to relent in its efforts to improve infrastructure in the oil and gas industry, adding that efforts to strengthen  the downstream sub-sector of the oil industry would help in ensuring adequate supply of fuel in the country.

  • NNPC: Nigeria earns $640.35m from oil, gas

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) yesterday said Nigeria earned $640.35million from the export of crude oil and gas for the month of October, last year.

    NNPC Monthly Financial and Operations Report for October 2018 which contained this, also showed that the total export receipt of $640.35 million recorded during the period was higher than the $527.70 million logged in September.

    The report showed that the receipt showed $450.44million accrued from crude oil sale with gas while miscellaneous receipts stood at $173.92 million and $15.99 million.

    In the  downstream sector, the Petroleum Products Marketing Company (PPMC), a downstream subsidiary of NNPC, posted a receipt of N231.33billion from the sale of white products in the month of October 2018 compared with N150.25 billion sold in of September 2018.

    Total revenues generated from the sale of white products for the period October 2017 to October 2018 stood at N2.684trillion, where petrol contributed about 88.32 per cent of the total sales value of N2.371 trillion.

    The corporation raised an alarm over the increasing incidents of pipeline vandalism across the country, saying during the month under review,  its pipeline network suffered a 42.9 per cent increase in the incidents of pipeline vandalism compared to the previous month during the year.

    He said the corporation recorded 219 pipeline vandalised points in the month under review, compared to 125 incidents it suffered in September of the same year.

    He said the findings that were captured in the NNPC Monthly Financial and Operations Report for October 2018 showed that among the breaches, four vandalised pipeline points failed to be welded and one point was ruptured.

    The report stated that cases of vandalism of pipeline facilities were high along Ibadan-Ilorin and Aba-Enugu axis, accounting for 81 (40 per cent) and 39 (18 per cent) vandalised points respectively.

    The spokesman  said that despite the challenge posed by pipeline vandalism, the NNPC kept an eye on Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) stock level to ensure zero fuel queue across the nation.

    To ensure continuous increase of PMS supply and effective distribution across the country, a total of 1.66 billion litres of petrol, translating to 55.50milion liters/day, were supplied for the month under review.

    The report noted that out of the 1,066.88 million standard cubic feet of gas per day (mmscfd) of gas supplied to the domestic market, about 627.33mmscfd of gas representing 58.81 per cent was supplied to gas-fired power plants to generate an average power of about 2,349megawatts (Mw) compared with the September 2018, where an average of 615mmscfd was supplied to generate 2,303Mw.

    The balance of 439.35mmscfd or 41.19 per cent was supplied to other industries.

    Similarly, for the period of October 2017 to October 2018 an average of 1,188.58mmscfd of gas was supplied to the domestic market, comprising an average of 744.06mmscfd or (62.60 per cent) as gas supply to the power plants and 444.52mmscfd or (37.40 per cent) as gas supply to industries.

    About 3,096.18 mmscfd or 89.58 per cent of the export gas was sent to Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas Company (NLNG) Bonny.

  • Nigeria earned $640.35m from oil, gas in October

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) on Tuesday said that Nigeria earned $640.35million from the export of crude oil and gas for the month of October, 2018.

    NNPC Monthly Financial and Operations Report for October 2018 that contained this, according to a statement of the Group General Managing, Group Public Affairs Division, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu, said the total export receipt of $640.35 million recorded in October 2018 was higher than the $527.70 million logged in September 2018.

    It explained the receipt showed $450.44million accrued from crude oil sale with gas and miscellaneous receipts standing at $173.92 million and $15.99 million respectively.

    The statement noted the downstream sector, the Petroleum Products Marketing Company (PPMC), a downstream subsidiary of NNPC, posted a receipt of ₦231.33billion from sales of white products in the month of October 2018 compared with ₦150.25 billion sold in of September 2018.

    Total revenues generated from the sales of white products for the period October 2017 to October 2018 stands at ₦2.684Trillion, where PMS contributed about 88.32 per cent of the total sales value of ₦2.371 Trillion.

    The corporation raised the alarm on increasing incidents of pipeline vandalism across the country, saying in October last year its pipeline network suffered a 42.9 per cent increase in the incidents of pipeline vandalism compared to the previous month during the year.

    He said the corporation recorded 219 pipeline vandalized points in the month under review, compared to 125 incidents it suffered in September of the same year.

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    He said the findings that were captured in the NNPC Monthly Financial and Operations Report for October 2018 revealed that among the breaches, four vandalized pipeline points failed to be welded and one point was ruptured.

    The report stated that cases of vandalism of pipeline facilities were high along Ibadan-Ilorin and Aba-Enugu axis, accounting for 81 (40%) and 39 (18%) vandalized points respectively.

    The spokesman stated despite the challenge posed by pipeline vandalism, the NNPC kept an eye on Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) stock level to ensure zero fuel queue across the nation.

    To ensure continuous increase of PMS supply and effective distribution across the country, a total of 1.66 billion litres of petrol, translating to 55.50milion liters/day, were supplied for the month under review.

    The report noted that out of the 1,066.88 million standard cubic feet of gas per day (mmscfd) of gas supplied to the domestic market in October 2018, about 627.33mmscfd of gas representing 58.81 per cent was supplied to gas-fired power plants to generate an average power of about 2,349MW compared with the September 2018, where an average of 615mmscfd was supplied to generate 2,303MW.

    The balance of 439.35mmscfd or 41.19 per cent was supplied to other industries.

    Similarly, for the period of October 2017 to October 2018 an average of 1,188.58mmscfd of gas was supplied to the domestic market, comprising of an average of 744.06mmscfd or (62.60 per cent) as gas supply to the power plants and 444.52mmscfd or (37.40 per cent) as gas supply to industries.

    About 3,096.18 mmscfd or 89.58 per cent of the export gas was sent to Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas Company (NLNG) Bonny.