Tag: ‘Non-passage

  • Non-passage of Budget 2018: Our pains, by LCCI, MAN, others

    The delay in passing the 2018 Budget is taking a debilitating toll on the real sector and the economy. Many operators, particularly manufacturers, have been forced to put critical business decisions on hold, leading to a lull in economic activities. Others believe that infrastructure development projects have slowed down and that local and foreign investors’ confidence has dipped. Assistant Editors CHIKODI OKEREOCHA and OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE report.

    •Stakeholders lament relive toll on real sector

    THESE are not the best of times for real sector operators, particularly manufacturers. For a sector struggling to bounce back after a debilitating recession forced it on its knees, the delay in the passage of the N8.6 trillion 2018 Appropriation Bill by the National Assembly (NASS) may have added to its litany of woes.

    Not a few operators who spoke with The Nation lamented that the delay in the passage of the budget has naturally slowed down economic activities. To them, critical business decisions have been put on hold. Some of them believed key capital/infrastructure projects would be delayed or abandoned.

    The Director-General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Mr. Muda Yusuf, said the delay in the budgetary process would entrench the vicious cycle of poor budget implementation.

    On the likely effect of the budget delay on its implementation, especially its capital component, Yusuf said: “The risk is that recurrent spending will be fully implemented while capital projects suffer the usual implementation deficiency.”

    Strategic planning, for many organisations, takes a cue from the budget structure and the policies that come with it.

    The National Assembly reneged on its promise to pass the N8.6 trillion 2018 Appropriation Bill on April 24, 2018. The “Budget of Consolidation”proposal was on November 7, last year, presented for consideration and approval to the joint session of the National Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari. But, the executive and the legislature have been trading blame for the delay in its passage. The chambers again raised the hopes of operators and Nigerians that the budget will be passed this week

    The Chairman, House Committee on Media and Publicity, Abdulrasak Namdas, told reporters in Abuja:  “By the grace of God, we will lay the budget on Tuesday (tomorrow) and then try to pass it that same week. Actually, we’ve been working hard so that we can beat the deadline, and hopefully this time around, I can assure you that by next week (this week), everything about the budget will be concluded and passed.”

    His assurance followed that of the Senate spokesman, Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi.

    If both chambers make good their promises this time, it means that the implementation of the budget will begin five months into the fiscal year.

    The delay, according to Yusuf, has implications for planning in both the public and private sectors of the economy.

    “To the extent that the budget is not in place, uncertainty and associated business risks are heightened,” the LCCI chief said, adding “this is surely not good for investors’ confidence, either from a foreign investor’s perspective, or from domestic investor’s standpoint.

    Equally worried is the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN). Its President Frank Udemba Jacobs said: “As a key player in the real sector of the economy, MAN can boldly say that the delay in passage of the budget would have dire consequences on the economy.

    “This is chiefly because the delay in the passage of the budget would make implementation of the capital expenditure component of the budget for the year an uphill task and these capital expenditure components are needed for sustainable economic growth as against our present growth rate that is premised on improved oil production and increase in crude oil prices in the international market.”

    He described the annual budget as a vital compass expected to give stakeholders in the economy information on the likely flow of the economy as well as income and expenditure in a given year.

    He also said the budget is a strategic indicator that helps domestic and foreign investors and businesses to plan their economic activities, decisions, projects and expenditures for the year.

    Dr. Jacobs, therefore, said that the late passage of the budget slows down economic activities.

    He said: “Critical to the private sector is the expectation that the budget shows the direction the government aims to take for the year in terms of provision of incentives, infrastructure development needed for the smooth operation of businesses and procurement of goods and services.”

    The MAN chief pointed out that the delay would negatively affect the job creation capacity of government contractors.

    Those job losses, he added, would worsen the purchasing power of the populace, with its resultant effect on the economy and the manufacturing sector in particular.

    Stating that the delay has dire consequences for the economy generally, he said: “For an economy such as Nigeria, a budget is more than just a plan; it a fiscal tool that has been empirically used for the development and growth of economies in many other climes.

    “In fact, national budget provides the link between public sector activities and that of the private sector needed for the growth of the economy. Taking the budget expenditure angle for instance, through public procurement for government capital projects, particularly locally-made products, the entire sectors will be stimulated as liquidity expands.

    “Expansion in these activities stimulates growth and development in terms of employment creation and poverty reduction.

    “Early passage of national budget therefore ensures early commencement of implementation and full-blown economic activities.

    “Conversely, the late passage of the budget as we are witnessing in Nigeria at the moment causes sluggishness in the economy, which affects all economic actors and agents negatively.”

    The non-passage of the 2018 budget is affecting sales of goods in warehouses of many manufacturing firms. Since the budget is yet to be passed, there has been no money in circulation, leading to low purchasing power of Nigerians.

    With lots of unsold goods, manufacturers are hurting. Their production targets have been disrupted.

    The MAN president said: “What the National Assembly is doing presently by not finishing up with the 2018 budget is causing a major challenge to the economy because the disposable income is not there for Nigerians to spend at will.

    “It is only when this budget is passed and implementation begins that the public will have money to spend freely. As long as they don’t have money to spend freely, the manufacturing sector will continue to have large stock of unsold inventory of goods and these could decay and be at production risk.”

    Jacobs also expressed worries over the proposed budgetary deficit of N2.22 billion, which the government intends to finance to the tune of about 42.4 per cent from domestic borrowing.

    According to him, this would crowd out private sector borrowing, particularly the manufacturing sector.

    Jacobs argued that with debt service charges rising to N2.014 trillion, accounting for 24.7 per cent of the 2018 budget, this portends imminent danger. Besides, high debt profile, he said, leads to debt over-hang, which discourages investment, particularly foreign investment.

    the Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA) warned of the dangers in delayed passage of the budget was dangerous for the economy.

    Conveying NECA’s concern at the end of its recent Governing Council meeting in Lagos, its President Larry Ettah said the development could drag the nation into a state of inertia.

    He said: “It appears to have become a tradition in this democratic dispensation for the budget to be unduly delayed, thereby plunging the economy into a state of inertia, particularly in the first quarter of the year.”

    He recalled that in December 2016, the President presented the Appropriation Bill for last year to the National Assembly, but lamented that the lawmakers did not pass the bill until May 11, 2017, almost six months after it was presented.

    Ettah, also recollected that the President presented the 2018 budget to the legislators in November 2017 and expressed dismay that the budget is yet to be passed.

    He implored the two arms of government to mutually agree on a time frame that would ensure that the budget for the following year is passed into law before the end of every current fiscal year.

    The Nation learnt that the delay in the passage of the budget was caused by the alleged refusal of heads of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), to appear before the chambers to defend their votes.

    The refusal, or late appearance of some heads of MDAs was said to have made the sub-committees of both chambers to also submit their budget reports late to the Appropriation Committees.

    By Tuesday last week, when the National Assembly failed to pass the document as promised, reports of sub-committees were reportedly still being collated by the Appropriation Committees for onward submission to the Senate and House in plenary for passage into law.

    But, Jacobs blamed the delay on administrative challenges, saying: “From all indications, it appears that the reason for the delay of passage of the 2018 budget is due to administrative challenges.”

    According to him, economic activities have been dampened and the private sector that grows the economy in real terms could not find any impetus and direction, which the government is supposed to provide through the passage of the budget.

    On the efforts made by the manufacturers to end the cycle, Jacobs stated that in various representations, MAN has always advised the government to begin early budget preparation in the preceding year.

    He said in doing that, all administrative hiccups would have been resolved early before the current year.

    “I hope the National Assembly and the Presidency quickly resolve the current quagmire and move on to pass the 2018 budget,” he said.

    NLC President Ayuba Wabba blamed the delay on lack of synergy between the executive and the National Assembly. He called on the executive and the legislature to expedite action to pass the budget.

    Pointing out the implication of the long, Wabba noted that the implication of not passing the budget five months into the year translates to delay in delivering on infrastructure development and dividends of democracy.

    The unionist said: “Based on facts in the public domain, the position of both arms of government was wrong-headed and does not warrant holding the nation to ransom.

    “We find it rather unwarranted to play politics with such issue and refuse to carry out their statutory functions. We call on the Senate and the Federal Government to bury their hatchet to expedite the passage of the budget.”

    According to Wabba, there must be synergy in the work of the three arms of government through meaningful consultations, constant communication and collaboration for the common good of the people.

    Echoing the labour leader, Yusuf said: ”They need to be on the same page with regard to the fundamental principles of the budget.”

    The LCCI the boundaries of responsibilities between the executive and the legislature in budgetary appropriations should be clearly defined to avoid the recurring problem of delays.

    Noting that the ruling party has a role to play in this matter, especially when it has the majority in the legislature, he added that a judicial pronouncement is necessary to lay the matter to rest.

    He said: “It is important as well for all arms of government to demonstrate an unmistakeable commitment to the spirit and letters of the Nigerian constitution and other complementary legislations.

    “It is worrisome that many agencies of government are not complying with the provisions of the Fiscal Responsibility Act.

    “Compliance with this Act would improve the budget process and enhance the capacity of the NASS to discharge its responsibilities with regard to the appropriation,” Yusuf told The Nation.

    The Federal Government had in 2017, made a commitment to an early submission of the 2018 Appropriation Bill for early passage before the end of 2017. The idea was to return the nation’s budget cycle to the regular January-December.

    Subsequently, the 2018 budget, which was put at N8.612 trillion, was presented to the National Assembly by President Buhari on November 7, 2017.

    But five months into the year, the budget is yet to be passed, as lawmakers accuse the executive of refusing to submit the 2018 Finance Bill, which it said traditionally accompanies the budget proposal.

    The parliament was said to have requested the submission of the finance bill as part of its working tools, saying that it was necessary as it guards against revenue leakages and inconsistency in government fiscal policy.

    As it is, the controversy over submission of the 2018 budget and budget defence by ministers and directors has continued to hold the nation to ransom, with predictable consequences for businesses and the economy.

    The situation, according to experts, is hurting the country’s quest for both local and foreign investors.

    Because budget approval and implementation are critical to investment decisions and enhanced economic activities, experts believe that the nation’s recovery from recession on a sustainable would have been accelerated had the 2018 budget been passed on time.

  • Non-passage of N8.612tr 2018 stalls economy, say experts

    Not a few financial experts have experts have expressed worry over the delay in the passage of the 2018 Budget by the National Assembly.

    They said that the continued delay in the passage of the bill by the National Assembly was affecting the recovery of the economy.

    According to them, it was shameful that the N8.612 trillion Appropriation Bill, which was presented to a joint session of the National Assembly on November 7, 2017, was yet to be passed six months after.

    To Dr. Samuel Nzekwe, a former President, Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN), the delay created confusion within the system because there was no way the economy could move forward.

    According to him, lack of cash in the system has also led to more poverty and suffering among the citizenry.

    Nzekwe said: “There is no liquidity in the system and this has affected the nation’s capital market as the government is the biggest spender in any economy.

    “People do not have sufficient funds to throw around by investing in the stock market as they used the little they have to keep the body and souls together.”

    Besides, the one-time ANAN president said the delay was taking a debilitating toll of on local contractors.  He urged the legislature and the executive to resolve their difference and pass the budget.

    Nzekwe urged the MDAs yet to defend their votes in the budget proposals to do so in the interest of the country.

    A former Director, Budgetary Department at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Dr. Titus Okunronmu, noted that the passage of the national budget had in the last three years suffered undue delays.

    The former CBN director stressed that there was no country where budget passage is being delayed until May.

    He said: “This development will obviously affect Medium Term Programmes as well as slow down economic development in the country.”

    Okunronmu advised the Federal Government to put its house in order and do the right thing at the right time to pave the way for meaningful development.

    Prof Uche Uwaleke, the Head of Banking and Finance Department, Nasarawa State University, Keffi, said the delay was hampering full recovery of the economy.

    Uwaleke said the blame game by the lawmakers and the Presidency was not good for economic growth and development.

    According to him, blaming the MDAs for not providing the required information on their budgets showed that the lawmakers were yet to get the budget formulation process right.

    The professor said: “Going forward, this crucial stage of the budget process needs to be made more transparent and inclusive with the input of the National Assembly accommodated at the early stage before the document is finalised and formally presented for consideration.

    “More importantly, specifying timelines for stages of the budget is needed now more than ever before.”

    Prof Sheriffdeen Tella of Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, also described as shameful that almost six months after the 2018 Budget estimate was submitted to the National Assembly, it was yet to be passed.

    Tella said the legislature failed to perform its function of completing the consideration and authorising expenditure five months into the year.

    He said: “It seems they do not know that one of the main duties of the National Assembly is to pass the federal budget on time to facilitate economic growth and development.

    “Non-passage of the bill has locked down rapid recovery from the recession and movement towards growth. This is because capital expenditure aspect of the budget, which has higher growth multiplier effects on the economy, cannot be executed without authorisation of the budget by the National Assembly. So, production on major fronts is put on hold, so also is employment opportunities.”

    According to him, Nigeria’s economy is public sector-driven and when government is not spending, even the private sector is held down.

    Tella said: “In many states, when civil servants are not paid, the patronage in local markets would be very low and poverty becomes glaring in many households.

    “The legislators should do less of politicking with the lives of Nigerians and the Nigerian economy, but focus more on what they are being heavily paid for.

    “The problems they have with the executive arm should be solved without holding the Nigerian economy down.

    “In other climes where literacy level is high, such action is enough to vote them out for a new crop of legislators who have interest of the common man at heart.”

    Malam Garba Kurfi, the Managing Director of APT Securities & Funds Ltd, described the situation as unfortunate for a country that just exited recession and should be concentrating on recovery strategies.

    Kurfi urged the Senate President to rise beyond complaining and sanction those responsible for the delay, saying that National Assembly failed to keep to its April target for passing the budget, a development he noted, was unhealthy for the economy.

    “The budget should have been passed latest by January as it was submitted early”, Kurfi said, adding, “I hope that National Assembly does the needful by ensuring the approval comes this month to enable the economy grow faster.”

  • Local content impaired by non-passage of PIB

    Local content impaired by non-passage of PIB

    The Nigerian Content Act is being impaired by the non-passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) that was supposed to be a veritable complement to the local content and also ensure the success of vision 2020, the Managing Partner, J.O Adidi & Co, John, has said.

    The PIB was  designed  to complement the Nigerian Content Act in 2010. It was meant to drive the vision of the Nigerian Content Act. However, the Nigerian Content Act has since been passed while the PIB, which should complement it is yet to see the light of the day.

    Local content is about local capacity development and transfer of technology to ensure that Nigerians participate effectively in the oil and gas industry and also enable new investments to come in.

    John Adidi said it was only when new investments come in and jobs are created that local content could be effective. According to him, these new investments are not coming in because of lack of clarity and certainty in the laws guiding the oil and gas operations.

    As a result, local content was being disadvantaged. He recalled that PIB started in the year 2000 when the Nigerian Oil and Gas Sector Reform Implementation Committee (NOGIC) was inaugurated.

    According to him, that committee produced what was called the National Oil Policy. That policy covered all the aspects of the petroleum sector including the upstream, downstream, gas, petrochemicals and many others.

    Adidi said several versions of that bill were produced including Senate version and the inter-agency  version; at least about five different versions of the bill were produced blaming it on the general problem of the country.

    Speaking with The Nation on telephone, he said the PIB needed to recognise Nigerians that should be protected against the operations of the international oil companies (IOCs). Owners of marginal fields need to be protected because they don’t have the financial muscle, he said, adding you cannot be talking about local content when you cannot encourage the development of your little players.

    He stated that the only way that can be done is to give marginal field players some little incentives over and above what are given to the IOCs. “So they need the protection of the law and that law is not there. Local content cannot be said to be effective when local players are not there and the law that should give them that muscle has not been passed.

    “Let there be laws because oil and gas is a long term investment. You need the laws so that Nigerians who have the money seeing the laws and incentives, opportunities, and the environment, will venture into oil and gas and own oil blocks,” he added.

  • ‘Non-passage of PIB hurting economy’

    ‘Non-passage of PIB hurting economy’

    The delay in the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) is hurting the economy and stunting progress in the extractive sector in particular, experts have said.

    The experts, who spoke with The Nation in separate interviews, lamented that, despite being touted as the best thing that would happen to Nigeria’s oil and gas industry and also the economy, the PIB has remained stagnated at the National Assembly (NASS) since 2007.

    The PIB, introduced in 2007, was expected to produce a dynamic policy framework for massive reforms in the oil & gas industry. The reforms were expected to form the nucleus of Nigeria’s aspiration of becoming one of the most- industrialised nations by 2020.

    For the country to realise this dream, it was envisaged that the major source of revenue to the Federation Account, the oil and gas sector, must be repositioned for greater efficiency, openness, and competition built on corporate governance as obtained in other resource-rich nations.

    Sadly, the PIB, which is the vehicle to achieving these goals, is yet to be passed into law, with experts noting that the industry and the economy would continue to lose with the its non-passage.

    “It is unfortunate that the PIB, which is touted as the best thing that would happen to Nigeria’s oil industry and also boost the economy has been stagnated at the National Assembly,” the Chief Executive Officer, Holistic Security Background Checks Limited, Don Okereke, lamented.

    The security expert attributed the non-passage of the PIB to high-wire politics. “It appears some powerful cabals are opposed to it, he told The Nation, pointing out, however, that the  Senate is reportedly making arrangements to expedite or fast track its passage.

    Also, the Director, Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), Mr. Nnimmo Bassey, said: “When a suitable PIB is passed into law, it will provide a good playing field for all stakeholders in the sector.”

    Bassey, a renowned international environmentalist, told The Nation that if Nigeria valued its people and the environment above money, it ought to show this in the formulation and enforcement of environmental laws.

    He said this bridge could be crossed by having uniform provisions for the environment and host communities in the extractive sector.

    According to him, this will eliminate parochial considerations and arguments that stymie progress in the sector, thus, allowing an unacceptable regime to persist.

    Bassey noted that the reasons the initial PIB could not be passed after eight years of negotiations and debates were still at play, adding that the unfortunate fact was that some of the contentious aspects of the Bill ought not to be seen as such.

    “The current approach has been to break the PIB into four bills and have them passed into law in bits. The troubling aspect of that approach is that the concerns of communities and the environment may be pushed to the back burners, while financial management issues take the front seat,” Bassey argued.

    Noting that the PIB is a good first step in reforming the industry, he said the delay in passing it into law was unacceptable. He attributed the delay to several factors among which are toxic politics and pressure from the International Oil Companies (IOCs) which, he said, had stated hat they would not accept laws that curb their excessive profits.

    Bassey also identified the pressure points as wrong perception by some legislators that provision of funds for communities meant more money to the oil-bearing states.

    “Actually, the PIB makes the offer of money to communities on one hand and takes it away on the other. It criminalises communities when it says that if oil facilities are tampered with then the communities, local govt areas and states would pay,” he said.

    He argued that communities were not the policemen of oil facilities.

    “The PIB speaks the old language of subsisting laws that free IOCs of responsibility where facilities are interfered with by third parties. That has made the claim of sabotage the favourite refrain of the oil companies even before incidents are investigated.

    ‘’The PIB fell into the same anti-people trap,” he said.

  • Operators decry losses from non-passage of PIB

    Operators decry losses from non-passage of PIB

    Operators of the Nigerian oil and gas industry are counting their losses arising from the non-passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), which has been before the National Assembly for over a decade.

    The non-passage and its consequences, according to them, include uncertainties over investment in exploration and production, which boosts oil output and reserves as well as funding of operations.

    The bill has been undergoing changes from one legislative assembly to another as a result of disagreements between stakeholders over fiscal and structural provisions in the bill. The development led to abandonment of decisions in taking risks to make new discoveries, developing existing acreages and injecting new technologies, therefore, activities have been very low in the industry over the years.

    The lingering bill has created uncertainty that has continued to hang on the business environment, compelling foreign and local investors to cancel or delay business decisions that would have kept activities in the industry alive and growing.

    The Managing Director of Seplat Petroleum Development Company, Mr. Austin Avuru said: “There are too many contending issues that are lumped into one piece of legislation including issues that were never in dispute; including issues that we didn’t need to revisit. And in the process they have thrown the industry into an impasse; you can’t move forward because everybody, especially the multinationals operating in the deep offshore and who have to make multibillion dollar investments, are in an uncertain business climate. Clearly they have pulled back their pen and they are not taking final investment decision (FID).

    “What is stopping the industry from moving forward is the uncertainty created by the possibility of a new legislation that is not clearly understood. And, therefore, you can’t take the risk of making heavy investments because you can’t be certain until that piece of legislation becomes law. And so, as long as there is suspense, there will be a lull. The entire industry is in suspense. Every month, you hear about dwindling revenues in the federation account. Yes, it will continue,” he pointed out.

    On the whole, he said: “our survey of oil industry challenges in the wake of the oil price fall exposed crippling challenges that are eroding profitability.”

    Avuru also said: “Across the industry, cost has gone up 10 fold from where we were 25 years ago. As a young well-site geologist in the 1980s, and if you recall those terms of the 1985 and 1987 memoranda of understanding (MoUs) nominal technical cost was pegged at $3.50 per barrel. It was expected that average technical cost (operating expenditure and capital expenditure) was $3.50 per barrel. That means you have to be operating below $3.50 to be efficient. If you are doing above $3.50 you are considered expensive.

    “Today, that cost has gone up to $30.50 per barrel. So, in the past 30 years, we have allowed a lot of things to creep in. There is the crisis in the Niger Delta; increase in the security apparatus to do the business, there is an increase in everything. All the costs have piled up onto the cost of production.

    “And one of the biggest issues, why there appears to be a disagreement between government and operators over the PIB is because government believes that the fiscal regime cannot be predicated on $35 per barrel. And you can understand their frustration. They were there when the cost was $3.50 per barrel.

    “But the industry is saying the cost is the cost. If it is $35 per barrel then it is $35 per barrel.  People don’t realise that this is where the disagreement resides. The debate is on the cost parameters used to model the fiscal regime.  So, the industry has undergone a huge escalation in cost. Unfortunately, nobody has tried to stem that tide because it has escalated beyond control.”

    However, beyond the arguments is the fact that the domestic operating environment appears to be losing the necessary conditions required for commercial investments to make appreciable returns and deliver profits to shareholders.

  • ‘Non-passage of PIB delaying investments in oil, gas sector’

    There has not been any major investment in the oil and gas sector in the last four years, due to the non-passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) by the National Assembly, the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Frontier Oil Limited, Dada Thomas, has said.

    He said Nigerians should hold the lawmakers responsible for the non-passage of the PIB.

    Thomas said: “I don’t believe that the bill would be passed into law before this National Assembly goes. I think the PIB will have to be addressed by the incoming National Assembly.’’

    He said as long as there is uncertainty surrounding the bill’s passage, the exploration and production firms might not want to invest.

    “The damage is that there has not been any exploration in Nigeria to find new oil or gas reserves. We need to make sure that the cloud of uncertainty, which is the lack of passage of the PIB is removed so that people know, the rule of the game. With the uncertainty removed, the regulators will be able to know what their roles and responsibilities are, and every stakeholder, including the communities, will know the rules of the game in the operation of the industry,” he said.

    Thomas urged political leaders   to put politics aside and think of the economic well-being of the people and the nation. He said: “They should put politics aside and do what is good for Nigerians and investors so that we have a bill that would address all the concerns and needs of the various stakeholders including the investors. We need to show commitment to the growth of the industry.”

    Also, the Managing Director, Treasure Energy Resources Limited, Rivers State owned Oil and Gas Company, Eddie Wikina, in a telephone interview, agreed that the government is prolonging investments in the country due to the non-passage of the bill.

    He also listed corruption and insecurity as other major factors affecting investments in the sector.

    According to him, if the bill is passed into law, it will help to check corruption in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). He said that the government has  misapplied the funds appropriated to the corporation by put them in wrong priority areas.

    Since the NNPC is not autonomous of the Federal Government, it acts on instructions.

    Wikina claimed the government was aware of this and continued to play down the passage of the bill.

    “Such a bill as the PIB has been shrouded in so much secrecy that certain unscrupulous elements begin to profit from the quagmire. Such a bill should be openly debated in the Senate and passed immediately in the interest of the nation,” he stated, urging the lawmakers to pass the bill before they go in May.

  • ‘Non-passage of PIB, oil theft killing petroleum industry’

    ‘Non-passage of PIB, oil theft killing petroleum industry’

    Stakeholders in the oil and gas industry foresee grave uncertainty in the sector. They say the non-passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), oil theft and vandalism of pipelines and other facilities, are gradually killing the industry, that urgent measures need to be taken to move the sector forward. EMEKA UGWUANYI, Assistant Editor (Energy) reports.

     

    The direction of the oil and gas sector this year remains a conjecture. Despite assurances from the government that Nigerians should expect a better year, stakeholders think otherwise. They said the non-passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) is detrimental to growth of the petroleum industry.

     

    Upstream

    The immediate past President of the Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE), Dr. Mayowa Afe, expressed disappointment that the government has been unable to draw a pathfinder for sustainable growth of the oil and gas industry. He said the non-passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) is killing the industry and makes Nigeria a laughing stock outside this shore.

    For the industry to witness a change this year, he said: “The ongoing ridiculous grammar about the Petroleum Industry Bill must stop. The Executive, Legislature, Judiciary and other stakeholders must find a way to end this unnecessary debate and tussle over PIB.

    “In my view, the PIB is being politicised. This unpatriotic approach to a very important national issue is not giving our country a good image outside the shores of this country.

    “Investors are moving their investments out of this country while potential investors are diverting to other countries. Oil companies are moving to other neighbouring countries – Ghana, Angola, Mozambique and even the war-torn Somalia, among others because of the uncertainty surrounding the future of Nigeria’s oil and gas industry.

    “I must tell you that the oil companies in Nigeria currently are just sustaining production in-country to use the money made from here (Nigeria) to invest in oil and gas blocks they acquired outside Nigeria.

    “We want to see activities in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry increased, more exploratory and development wells come on board. Kidnapping in the industry must end even if it entails engaging more youths in the Niger Delta region on sustainable basis. Crude theft, vandalism of oil facilities and unreliable regulations must end.”

    On investment, Afe said the way the industry is going, investors may at a point lose interest in Nigeria completely. Major oil companies in Nigeria are divesting their assets and reinvesting proceeds from such divested assets in other countries.

    He said: “Investors will be hesitant to put down their money in any investment and any country if there are no dependable regulations and platforms to ensure the safety of the environment and their investments.

    “The 10 per cent for oil producing communities in the Niger Delta as provided in the PIB makes sense. Certainly, it will tremendously help to achieve security aspirations of the industry and give the expected safe investment environment.

    “If the PIB is not passed as soon as possible this year, it will be a killer for Nigeria’s oil and gas industry,” he added.

    A petroleum lawyer and solicitor who practises in the United Kingdom and Nigeria, Ms. Efuru Nwapa-Obua, said for the industry to move away from where it is, some anomalies must be addressed.

    She said: “The Industry lacks effective regulatory institutions and is bogged down by gross corruption, mismanagement, poor governance and inefficiency. The fuel subsidy scam in which trillions of dollars were fraudulently paid out to marketers who falsified records with the active connivance of government officials and regulators is a case in point. The scale of the fraud is as mind-boggling as it is audacious and could have only happened in an industry with very weak, or no regulation.

    “Absence of international best practices, transparency, openness, good governance and corporate social responsibility, should be addressed. Inability of the sector to provide the nation with petroleum products is a situation that is disgraceful and unacceptable. Under capacity utilisation of refineries which are producing well below installed capacity must be addressed.”

     

    Downstream

    There are concerns as the country continues to depend on imported fuel. The future of the downstream sector remains unpredictable. According to the stakeholders, because the NNPC is the only company importing products, particularly premium motor spirit (PMS), it is also expected that the downstream would be stable this year considering the stability in supply and distribution recorded last year. Apart from occurrences such as vandalisation of pipelines and strikes by marketers, or oil workers such as the petroleum tanker drivers, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, said the Ministry would ensure that there would be adequate supply and efficient distribution of petroleum products this year.

    The Group Managing Director, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Andy Yakubu also said the corporation is revamping all dysfunctional fuel depots across the country to actualise the aspiration of stamping out fuel scarcity completely and permanently from the country.