Tag: PIB

  • Missing fund: Falana urges NASS to pass PIB

    Missing fund: Falana urges NASS to pass PIB

    Lagos lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), has urged the National Assembly to pass the much publicised Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) now if the federal legislators are genuinely interested in promoting accountability and transparency in the oil and gas industry.

    Falana made the suggestion in a statement issued in Lagos on Tuesday titled: “The Limit of Investigative Powers of the National Assembly.”

    He lamented that the PIB was quietly jettisoned by the lawmakers who he noted have been beating their chests for enacting irrelevant legislations like the Anti-gay Act (same sex was never recognised under the law) and the Prisoners Exchange Act ( to swap convicts with the United Kingdom when there are no British prisoners in Nigeria) among others.

    He said it was shameful that the Central Bank of Nigeria governor does not seem to have any understanding of the operations of the Federation Account which is kept in the apex bank.

    “Hence, his figures of the missing fund have varied from $49.8 billion to $12 billion and $20 billion while the reconciliation carried out by the Finance Minister revealed $10.8 billion,” he noted.

    Falana urged the Auditor-General of the Federation to proceed with the auditing of the Federation Account as well as the accounts of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation and the CBN before the nation is further exposed to unprecedented ridicule by the CBN, NNPC and the Federal Ministry of Finance.

    “In particular, the auditing of the CBN account should cover the illegal payment of over N2 trillion by the CBN to fuel importers in 2011 when the National Assembly appropriated the sum of N245 billion,” he said.

    The activist recalled that before the general strike and mass protests of January 2012, the CBN governor had claimed that the amount involved was N1.3 trillion.

     

  • PEF to pay marketers  one week after bridging

    PEF to pay marketers one week after bridging

    Marketers are to receive their payments from the Petroleum Equalisation Fund (Management) Board one week after submission of their claims for bridging.

    According to the Chairman of House of Representatives committee on Petroleum Downstream, Peterside Dakuku, the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) has passed first and second readings in the House of Representatives and is with the Ad hoc Committee on PIB.

    He assured that the bill would be passed by the National Assembly before the end of the year.

    While receiving the committee in Abuja, the Executive Secretary of Petroleum Equalisation (Management) Board, Mrs. Adefunke Kasali, said the Board pays marketers within four weeks.

    She added that the introduction of ‘Project Aquila 2’ is intended to further fast-track payment to marketers in one week.

    Her words: “We are confident that one week payment of verified claims is achievable. By the time we roll out ‘Project Aquila 2’, which is intended to monitor movement of products from the depots to retail outlets, which will enable us have the required information within a very short period of time, we should be able to make that happen. My job is to extend the charge to my staff to get ready to make that happen and I am sure within a short period of time we will achieve that feat.”

    Earlier in his address, the Chairman of the committee, Peterside Dakuku, stated that the prompt payment of marketers in a very short time would ensure continued availability of petrol in most parts of the country at the approved price.

    He lauded the PEF for reducing corrupt practices in the payment of bridging costs with the introduction of ‘Project Aquila’.

    “We are impressed with ‘Project Aquila’ by PEF and noticed that it has led to the reduction of infractions in the administration of equalisation fund. The committee is convinced that Project Aquila has substantially addressed marketers trying to cut corners. Our concern, as a committee, is to ensure that products are sold at the same price across the country irrespective of closeness or farness from the Niger Delta or coastal areas.”

    Dakuku called on agencies in the oil and gas sector to gear up for re-positioning on how to fit into the new regime that PIB passage would midwife.

    “Nigeria’s oil and gas sector is almost in transition to another phase, which is post-Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) phase. In the next one-year, we expect to have a new legal framework governed by the PIB. Therefore, there is urgent need to reposition the PEF otherwise it will find it difficult to survive and perform its functions when the PIB takes effect”, he added.

  • PIB’ll be passed, says Peterside

    PIB’ll be passed, says Peterside

    The Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) will be passed, the Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream), Dakuku Peterside, has said.

    He spoke when he led members of his committee on an oversight visit to Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency (PPPRA). The committee also visited the Petroleum Equalisation Fund (PEF).

    A statement yesterday by his media aide, Sylvester Asoya, quoted Peterside as urging both agencies to re-double their efforts towards ensuring that petroleum products are available to the people.

    He urged the agencies to do everything possible to mitigate any problem that may further lead to the suffering of Nigerians. According to him, anybody in this season who is entrusted with public trust must exhibit first rate dedication and seriousness because Nigerians are watching.

    At PEF, Peterside and his colleagues were received by Adefunke Sharon Kasali, Executive Secretary and management of the board. After a short presentation and a tour of the agency’s facilities, Peterside spoke on the expectations of Nigerians but however commended PEF for keeping faith.

    “We have observed tremendous improvement in the management board. My colleagues and I are concerned about developments in the downstream sector because anything that happens there affects everybody. Therefore PEF plays a very important role in our daily lives and we must give them all the necessary support”, he said.

    Peterside said there is need to reposition PEF. He said: “If PEF is not repositioned, Nigeria will suffer in view of the fact that we are in transition to the PIB regime. But our business is to ensure that Nigerians do not suffer. Therefore if you have challenges, we are here to make sure that they are solved.”

    The committee urged the PPPRA to address price disparity and fuel scarcity in some parts of the country.

    PPPRA’s Executive Secretary, Reginald Stanley, promised to revisit all the outstanding issues. He told the members that the agency has also saved some money for the country.

    Peterside said: “Your assignment is critical to this country. You monitor and administer subsidy. All of us benefit from subsidy administration in Nigeria and to save N409 billion in one year is highly commendable. We are not where we should be as a people therefore a lot more work still needs to be done. That is why we are committed to the passage of the PIB.”

  • PIB: The ultimate lubricant of the Nigerian economy

    PIB: The ultimate lubricant of the Nigerian economy

    A care-free and seeming loose assertion by Sylvia Pankhurst that “wars will never come to an end” appears a most innocuous statement to make to an average reader of global political and economic trends.

    Pankhurst writing in 1922, a 27-page pamphlet titled: “The Truth about Oil War”, actually alluded the statement that ‘war will never come to an end’ to an anonymous capitalist.

    However radical Pankhurst and several other scholars on crisis in the oil business may appear to the world, the truth still stands that wherever there is oil, there is bound to be conflicts stemming from the astounding monetary gains that the oil business brings to investors.

    It is on this premise that the lingering controversy that has trailed the delay in the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) is understandable and must be dealt with without any further delay.

    As long as the PIB remains in coma, the logjam that has been witnessed in the oil industry would be sustained and painfully for the greater number of the citizens of this country, they shall be the weeping lot they have been.

    For those who have constituted themselves as opposition to this one document which for the first time in the long history of oil business in Nigeria seeks to put Nigeria in the same stead with established oil-producing and exporting countries of the world, they must be aware that it is trite legal principle that law is an agent of social change and the PIB in its various amended versions, aims at bringing about an optimal solution to change in the nation’s oil industry which has been accused severally of sluggishness.

    And for other citizens who are ignorant of the essence of the PIB, when it is passed into law, then and only then would the Nigerian petroleum industry have a direction from the upstream operation (exploration, development and production activities), the midstream (gas processing) down to the downstream activities of servicing, refining, distribution, transportation, marketing and retailing.

    Essentially, the PIB seeks to bring about major reforms in the industry and by so doing create a conducive environment for petroleum operations, tilt the conduct of exploitation and exploration of petroleum resources in the country in favour of Nigerians, optimise government revenue from the industry, deregulate and liberalise the downstream petroleum sector. In its acceding to the yearning of Nigerians, the Bill seeks to create efficient and effective regulatory agencies, promote the development of Nigerian content in the oil industry, and perhaps most critical at this phase of the country’s development, the PIB will drive at optimising domestic gas supplies for home use, power generation and industrial development, among other benefits.

    While the PIB establishes the Federal Government of Nigeria as the owner and manager of all petroleum resources, offshore or onshore, the government manages these resources on behalf of all Nigerians. Thus, irrespective of where oil is found, it belongs to the government of Nigeria.

    However, the PIB recognises for special consideration the localities where the resources are extracted and this is taken care of by the revenue sharing laws and certain provisions of the PIB like the Host Community Fund.

    For investors, whether local or foreign, the level of risks involved in any venture is of immense importance and there are such identifiable risks in the Nigerian oil industry such as there are in other countries where oil is found in commercial quantity.

    Such commercial risks will include cost overruns, delays and shortfall in project revenue caused by uncertain sales and prices. This is juxtaposed against established political risks like possible expropriation of assets, civil unrests, environment laws, tax policies, among several others.

    In the case of Nigeria, in recent times, militant unrest and price distortion of petroleum products have been clearly identified as project risks and the immediate response from the International Oil Companies has been the consistent reduction in their participation in the industry as they continue to sell off some of their oil blocks in the country.

    In spite of this seeming threat, efforts by the Nigerian government to establish a clear regulatory and fiscal regime, deregulation of the downstream sector and the establishment of a globally-acknowledged amnesty programme have appreciably addressed the issues of militancy in the Niger Delta region, hence projects financing of the petroleum industry in Nigeria are still quite reliable transactions and the responses of banks, local and foreign, to these are an attestation to this attractiveness.

    Despite the expressed fear of insecurity of investments and lives as a constraint for the IOCs and other investors in the Nigerian oil industry, the most critical area of opposition by the IOCs has been the fiscal area of the PIB.

    This is for obvious reasons as has been maintained by the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mr. Andrew Yakubu, who has accused the IOCs of not wanting to let go of the incentive past they have enjoyed.

    “When we started the deepwater project, we had to give incentives to investors in order to encourage them. Now, the deepwater project is mature, we can’t continue to give such incentives.”

    Allaying fears expressed in certain quarters, the GMD of NNPC insists that the PIB would not in any way retard investment in Nigeria’s oil industry rather, the PIB, he assures, will provide a win-win situation for both Nigeria and the IOCs.

    Change, obviously, is the most difficult thing for humans to embrace and the fiscal arrangement in the PIB which is an overhaul of what used to be in practice is attracting criticisms and it is the most critical aspect of the Bill.

    This opposition insists that it will create a harsh environment that would materially change the economics of existing and new operations particularly in the deepwater sector.

    Without any doubt, the tax changes as contained in the PIB will favour increased government take from an average of 73 per cent to a projected 82 per cent and this figures are derived on the projections of a mid-size deepwater oil field with production of around 50 million barrels per annum and oil price benchmarked at US$75bbl.

    This opposition to the PIB in terms of the fiscal component is ideally an advantage to oil companies who could reap greater share from higher production and current high oil prices.

    In spite of what appears as increased returns to government, the Nigerian fiscal terms are considered lenient when compared to its peers, particularly those countries with the same geological character like Libya which operates 93 per cent government take and UAE Abu Dhabi which operates on an average of 94 per cent.

    And with the recent rise in oil prices, the global trend in fiscal terms is for governments to have built-in mechanisms of increased government share in windfall prices through increased royalty/taxes and linkages of royalty/tax rates to prevailing prices to ensure automatic adjustment in share to price increases.

    Why IOCs or any operator in the Nigerian oil industry would expect anything less from an industry Bill only exposes how overtly lenient the country has been with its investment climate and this is impacting negatively on its people.

    For a document that has travelled around for well over a decade, various changes have been made to the original document. Obviously, part of it has been the restructuring of the regulatory framework for the oil industry into separate regulators for the upstream, midstream and downstream sectors.

    Fiscal changes have also been introduced for the upstream, provisions for gas utilisations, refining/downstream sector reforms and most pronounced is the replacement of the joint venture (JV) agreements between NNPC and the producing companies which cover most of Nigeria’s onshore and shallow-water fields with the incorporated joint ventures (IJVs).

    What the PIB expects is that the IJVs as legal entities will be capable of raising loans commercially and repay them from generated income. As a result, the IJVs will operate independent of the often contentious government cash call obligations.

    Under the PIB, two layers of tax are introduced, namely the Nigerian Hydrocarbons Tax (NHT) and Companies Income Tax (CIT) which are applicable to both JV and PSC operations.

    While NHT replaces the Petroleum Profit Tax (PPT) and is set at 50 per cent for JV, 50 per cent for gas and 30 per cent for PSC, the CIT is introduced for all oil companies at the rate of 30 per cent on net profits.

    A minimum of 10 per cent withholding tax on dividends and education tax of 2 per cent on revenue existing under the current fiscal regime is retained.

    Meanwhile, the streamlined NHT ensures the abolishing of investment tax credits, investment tax allowances and the petroleum investment allowance (PIA) uplift on capital expenditures for existing arrangements and these are replaced with allowances for small oil fields and new gas finds, among other reforms.

    As a way of ensuring control and proper regulation of a more encompassing industry functions, the PIB establishes or restructures key agencies in the industry.

    They include petroleum technical bureau (PTB) as a special unit under the office of the Minister of Petroleum and charged with the responsibility of rendering professional support to the minister; upstream petroleum inspectorate (UPI) which will regulate technical and commercial activities in the upstream sector and will be responsible for issuing licences and permits because it is not profit-driven, it will not pay income tax.

    Others include downstream petroleum regulatory agency (DPRA), the petroleum technology development fund (PTDF), the petroleum equalisation fund (PEF), the national petroleum assets management corporation (NAPEMC) – this will be responsible for managing government investments in the upstream industry and will have subsidiaries to carry out different aspects of these activities.

    Another offshoot of the current NNPC will be the National Oil Company (NOC). The NOC will be listed on the Stock Exchange, meaning Nigerians can acquire its shares to as much as 30 per cent.

    Another PLC in the offing will be the National Gas Company (NGC), with certain employees, assets and liabilities of the NNPC to be transferred to it.

    Perhaps of most interest to most Nigerians is the Petroleum Host Communities Fund (PHCF) and in the PIB terms, for the fund’s sustenance, oil and gas-producing companies are required to contribute an amount (10 per cent of their profits after adjusting for Hydrocarbon Tax and Companies Income Tax) into this Fund.

    The funds will be used to develop the economy and infrastructure of the producing communities.

    And as a way of ensuring that the rights of these communities are matched by an equal obligation to the common good, the PIB provides that any community that still goes ahead to destroy assets of companies producing in its locality will forfeit its share of PHCF.

    Based on the above clarification which is far from being exhaustive given the elaborate contents of the PIB in its more than 200 pages, it cannot be said that the document is designed to benefit a small group of interest against over all national interest.

    Rather, its continued delay is only a result of self-centred, short-sighted and irreconcilable political interest of a few against the good of the majority of Nigerians.

    Suffice to say that when the PIB is eventually passed into law, which has become urgent given sporadic changes in the global oil industry, it would create more jobs for Nigerians since it will be an illegal act to employ foreigners for certain skills that can be sourced locally, as has become rampant in the current dispensation.

    Since the PIB also provides for preference of local materials sourcing against foreign, it will only encourage more jobs for indigenous contractors, especially those from the oil-producing regions.

    The precarious situation of gas utilisation in Nigeria is still a sour statement on our economy and resource management system and only a PIB which has taken this into cognisance will bail the nation out of this malaise.

    End of subsidy will become a reality with the deregulation of the downstream sector of the industry and in turn, increase in government revenue from oil industry will mean more funds for infrastructure development, among other value-adds.

    Given our background as a people and the near mishaps that we have suffered as a people due to the mismanagement in part of the oil resource, and in the spirit of the Nigerian centenary, the 7th National Assembly will only be doing this nation of over 160 million people proud by passing this PIB into law this early in the year.

    Anything short of this will only amount to an outright sabotage of a common patrimony.

     

    – Omoniyi, a journalist, writes from Abuja

     

  • Abe identifies implementation as challenge to PIB

    The Chairman, Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), Senator Magnus Abe, says the challenge facing the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) is not the passage but implementation by relevant government agencies.

    He spoke when addressing youths of the Rivers South-East in his office in Bori, the headquarters of Khana Local Government.

    “We are working on the PIB. Everybody is saying if the National Assembly passes the PIB, it will solve the problems in the petroleum sector. It will not, because our laws are not being implemented impartially and courageously without politics,” Abe said.

  • ‘PIB will affect gas venture agreement’

    The Chairman, Oil Producers Trade Section of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Mr Mark Ward, has said if the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) is passed into law in its present form, it will affect the Joint Venture Gas Agreement between the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the international oil companies (IOCs).

    Delivering a paper titled: ‘’Fiscal provision and challenges to investment in the petroleum industry,’’ at a power summit in Lagos, Ward said the PIB will not benefit the foreign oil companies that are parties to the agreement.

    He said PIB would encourage local participation in oil and gas, as well as affect the stake holdings of multinational oil companies in the project.

    He said: ‘’Studies have shown that PIB will affect the involvement of oil majors in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry. PIB will make Joint Venture Agreement on Gas fiscally uncompetitive. The reason is because PIB will increase participation in the gas sector, thereby affecting the foreign oil companies. The cost of gas project is higher than the regulated gas prices in Nigeria.’’

    He said crude production would drop by 800,000 barrels per day by 2022, unless the government took steps to resolve issues such as oil theft and pipeline vandalisation.

    He argued that Nigeria will have one of the harshest fiscal regimes when the PIB is passed because there would be less foreign participation in the oil industry.

  • ‘Don’t politicise PIB’

    Some experts have blamed the oil industry’s woes on past leaders. They spoke at a workshop on the Petroleum Industry Bill(PIB), organised for members of the Lagos State Executive Council, Permanent Secretaries and other officials.

    According to an oil and gas expert, Dr Mohammed Ibrahim, the past leaders should be held responsible for the problems in the petroleum industry.

    He said the way Nigeria’s past leaders surrendered the sector to foreign domination has left the nation worse off than it was before hydrocarbon was discovered.

    The PIB, he said, was a step in the right direction, advising against its politicisation.

    He called on the National Assembly to scrutinise the bill and ensure that it does not tie down the economy to foreign partners.

    Ibrahim observed that 95 per cent of oil and gas players are foreigners whcih poses serious danger to the existence and stability of the nation. He added that the bill has been doctored to suit the interest of foreign players in the industry.

    He said Nigeria technically cannot be regarded as an oil producing nation given its operational system where 95 percent of operators in the upstream oil and gas sector are foreigners. The PIB is set to reform the oil and gas industry, he stated.

    The Commissioner for Energy and Mineral Resources, Taofiq Ajibade Tijani, an engineer, said it was important that officials are well informed about the bill and what it’s going to achieve.

    He said the state would soon be a major player in the oil and gas sector, and as such must educate its officials on issues and policies in the industry.

  • ‘PIB will become law before 2015’

    ‘PIB will become law before 2015’

    The National Assembly would pass the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) before the 2015 general elections, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on the Downstream Sector, Magnus Abe, and his House of Representatives counterpart, Dakoko Peterside, have said.

    Both law makers who spoke during the 2013 Oil Trade and Logistics (OTL) Exhibition for Downstream Operators in Lagos, yesterday, said the National Assembly has found out that the PIB is critical to the growth of the industry and the economy, and have resolved to pass the bill before 2015.

    Abe, who stood in for the Senate President, David Mark, said the passage of the bill was delayed because of some knotty issues, adding that the Senate has resolved to do its best to ensure its passage soon.

    He explained that the Senate delayed the passage of the bill because of the problems outside it. “We have decided to come out with a time-table on how to deal with issues affecting the bill,” he said.

    He said investments in the downstream sector is in excess of N1.8trillion, adding that Nigeria is one of the highest consumers of petroleum products in the world.

    He said Nigeria will not only become a hub, but would dictate the price of petroleum products in Africa, if its refineries were working well.

    Dagogo explained that the bill has passed through the first and second reading without any dissenting voice raised against it.

    He explained that the Public Hearing on the bill was held in the Six-Geo-political zones of the country. This was followed by another hearing in Abuja where representatives of major oil companies were in attendance.

  • Senators’ on Hajj stalls public hearing on PIB

    Senators’ on Hajj stalls public hearing on PIB

    A public hearing on the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) was stalled yesterday because of the absence of senators, who are on pilgrimage to mecca.

    Chairman of the Senate Committee on Petroleum, (Upstream) Senator Emmanuel Paulker, said the hearing was postponed “due to circumstances beyond our control.”

    Paulker said: “At the end of the day, national interest will prevail and the PIB will see the light of the day in the life of this National Assembly.”

    The panel chair, who spoke in Abuja, said there was no cause for alarm adding: “Every thing humanly possible will be done to see the PIB through this time around.”

    Paulker said contrary to insinuations, opposition against the bill was only against some clauses.

    International Oil Companies (IOCs), he said were only opposed to the fiscal regime of the bill while some northern governors are opposed to 10 per cent equity participation of the host communities.

    Stakeholders, he said, agreed that oil and gas laws were obsolete and needed to be reviewed.

    Insisting that there is no problem with PIB, Paulker said: “The first outing we had we slated two days for our public hearing. But we lost a colleague.

    “The first day of the hearing we started but the second day was the burial of Senator Pius Ewherido.

    “Between me and you I cannot sit in the Senate for a public hearing when a colleague was being buried.

    “So because of the circumstance, it was compelling on me to postpone the hearing. I was just paying the last respect to a colleague.

    “We now agreed in a smaller committee of chairmen and vice chairmen that there was need for us to create room for those that never attended the hearing to attend.

    “Unfortunately enough, we scheduled it for 9th of October but here again a lot of our colleagues went for Hajj.

    “The PIB is a very important bill, so important that we cannot exclude a good majority of members of the joint committee that are going on Hajj. I was made to understand that some have already left for Hajj.

    “It will not be fair for those who left for Hajj to come back and hear that we have gone ahead with the public hearing. So it is not correct to say that the PIB has suffered many postponements.”

    On the controversy trailing the bill, he said the PIB was important to every Nigerian and all sectors of the economy.

    He said: “Oil is the main stay of our economy. We are looking forward to a day that the economy would be diversified. There is so much reliance on oil.

    “As long as the economy rests on oil and there is an Act that is coming to repeal all laws surrounding this single all important commodity, every serious-minded Nigerian would be interested.”

    Paulker said he had receiving calls that “if we hold the public hearing on 9th October, it will not be possible for them to appear for the public hearing.

    “One thing I will assure Nigerians is that everything humanly possible will be done to ensure that the PIB will see the light of the day.

    “As soon as we have this last outing of the public hearing we will retreat to our committee level. We can decide to lock up ourselves for a week or two weeks to filter the bill so that we can forward it to plenary.”

  • Bumpy road to PIB

    Bumpy road to PIB

    The uncertainty over the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) vis-à-vis the direction the federal government is likely to chart post-PIB, analysts have argued, is making multinationals in the oil sub-sector fret, reports Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf

    Just as Salman Rushdie, author of the controversial Satanic Verses, courted the angst of a section of the Moslem Ummah across the globe, it seems, in all appearances, that the much-hyped Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) in its present form is not in sync with the thinking of a majority who are clearly opposed to its passage because of what they consider some “irreconcilable differences.”

    Growing stalemate

    The overriding objective of the much-hyped bill when it was first put forward in 2000, as stated in its forward document, is “A Bill for an Act to provide for the establishment of a legal, fiscal and regulatory framework for the petroleum industry in Nigeria and for other related matters.”

    But almost 13 years after, the bill has been returned to the Executive for fine-tuning many times over, to no avail.

    The much-awaited bill which has continued to go back and forth in the chambers of the National Assembly is scheduled to go on a road show across the nation’s six geo-political zones. But there are fears that what may eventually be passed by the legislators could be a shadow of the original document.

    Ouster clauses

    The 223-page document, made up of 362 items, gives clear views on what should be the structure of ownership, and management of petroleum resources in the country, including the roles and functions of managers and other stakeholders in the petroleum sub-sector.

    But it does not appear that this is not as simple as it gets because in the contention of many opposed to its passage, especially oil majors, there is more to it than really meets the eye.

    There are many areas which the multinationals appear not to be comfortable with.

    According to analysts, the new bill is bound to be a game changer, as far as the regulation of the upstream and downstream sector of the petroleum industry is concerned.

    Corroborating the foregoing, President of the Institute of Mediators and Conciliators, ICMC, Dr. Brown Ogbeifun, while ventilating his views on the bill, among others, said: “The Petroleum Industry Bill has very good intentions. The laws we currently use to drive oil and gas process in Nigeria are dispersed in about16 pieces. This Bill seems to streamline these into one readable text.

    “Furthermore, the laws and fiscal regimes put in place at the infancy of the oil and gas industry when we were virtually begging investors to invest in Nigeria are still applied today and time is running out in the oil and gas industry.”

    Waxing philosophical, he said: “It is like saying that the clothes a child wore in its infancy should still be worn at 18 years. Paradoxical, is not it? This definitely cannot develop our oil and gas sector beyond developing other economies. If we must fix the energy sector, unemployment, infrastructure, then we do not have readymade alternatives to PIB. Secondly, the agencies involved in oil and gas business have several overlapping and chaotic functions that need to be streamlined. This Bill is supposed to do that.

    “Thirdly, the federal government has been accused of opacity in running the oil and gas business. The Bill in all intents and purposes is trying to enthrone openness, transparency and accountability in the governance structure of the oil and gas post –PIB. If the Bill is passed, it becomes easier to monitor the inflow and outflow from crude business. The issues of deregulation, subsidy and the commercialisation of critical agencies in the value chain of the oil and gas sector become a done deal from the point of law. We shall now do oil and gas business as a world class industry.”

    PIB in brief

    A cursory view of the PIB bill reveals that it clearly gives direction of what to expect in the sector.

    Among other things, it canvasses the establishment of a number of agencies including the Upstream Petroleum Inspectorate, National Petroleum Asset Corporation of Nigeria, National Oil Company, National Gas Company Plc.

    Other far-reaching changes the bill is expected to bring about is the introduction of the Petroleum Technical Development Fund, Petroleum Host Communities Fund, Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Agency, Petroleum Technical Bureau, to mention just a few.

    Growing fears over PIB

    It is, however, instructive to note that many oil majors are less than comfortable with the bill as it is currently constituted.

    Sharing similar sentiments, a top management staff of Mobil Producing Unlimited, which is a joint venture partner with the federal government, who would not be named, said many operators have palpable fears as far as the implementation of the bill is concerned.

    “Agreed, there are some areas where the international oil companies (IOCs) are favoured, like the fact that they won’t have to be tied to the apron strings of the NNPC. But all in all, the bill is skewed in favour of Nigeria, leaving little or no room for outside players.”

    The consequence is that many would be persuaded to close shop in the country, the source said.

    But Ogbeifun does not share such sentiments.

    If anything, he holds the view, and very strongly too, that the bill, a well-articulated and intentioned PIB, will lead to job creation in the long run. “My appeal is that all the stakeholders must come together and see Nigeria as the essential goose that should be protected against dangers and death in order for her to continue to lay golden eggs.”

    Expatiating, he said: “Even without PIB they are already divesting massively from Nigeria to other areas of Africa because of insecurity, illegal bunkering, corruption, policy inconsistency, tax issues, vandalism of their pipelines and equipment by vandals. All these have been articulated as causes of increasing overhead, which is compounded by the yearly negotiation cycles between them and their unions; and the increasing hard stance of the union. Rightly or wrongly, they may have their justifications for the assertions. PIB or no PIB, those that will go shall still go and those that will stay will.”

    Best practice abroad

    Investigation by The Nation revealed that in several oil-producing countries, the counterpart subsidiaries of the Nigerian companies operate strictly according to the laws of the countries where they are resident.

    In more than 80 percent of the countries that have oil and gas driving their economies, expatriates do not remain on the job for more than two years.

    However, in Nigeria, most expatriates stay on the job for so many years without due compliance with the understudy clauses. The result is that Nigerians are not empowered to take over their duties.

    Like Nigeria, like others.

    Apart from Nigeria, no government allows the luxury of breaching the expatriate rules as they do in Nigeria. The fiscal regimes in most of those countries are more stringent, compared to what obtains in the country, yet they are not forced to divest or quit from those countries.

    “The truth is that going by our current fiscal regimes, monitoring strategies and expatriate quota policy, Nigeria remains the most generous and our take in financial terms remains one of the lowest in the world. So the truth is companies are allowed to relocate where they so desire. It is for the Nigerian nation to know who our true friends in plenty and adversities are and respond appropriately when we are out of the woods. Lastly, those who will remain will surely do so no matter the turn of events,” emphasised Ogbeifun.

    View in government quarters

    Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, has described the draft oil reform law, currently before the National Assembly for legislative action, as a vibrant document which would remain relevant to the oil and gas industry long after the exit of President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.

    She spoke to newsmen recently as at the end of the two-day Senate Public Hearing on the Petroleum Industry Bill.

    Mrs. Alison-Madueke called on stakeholders in the oil and gas industry not to politicise/personalise provisions of the bill, stressing that the draft legislation was not proposed or written with any administration in mind.

    “By the time the PIB is fully articulated and implemented, the current president and minister of petroleum resources may no longer be in office. This bill takes a while before it is operational,” she stressed.

    Drawing a parallel between the PIB and the Power Sector Reform Act of 2004, which was passed over eight years ago and is currently being implemented by the Jonathan administration, Alison-Madueke argued that it was important for the law to sufficiently empower any administration to act in the best interest of Nigerians.

    Shedding more light on the what the minister said, a statement by Tumini Green, Acting Group General Manager, Public Affairs Division of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, said that contrary to fears in some quarters that the proposed law vests too much discretionary power in the president and petroleum minister, she explained that the responsibility for the exercise of the powers proposed in the bill for the president and petroleum minister will ultimately rest on any administration in power at the time and so should not be personalised.

    It would be recalled that President Goodluck Jonathan had, in the heat of the tension arising over the passage of the bill late last year, mandated the petroleum ministry to constitute a task force to ensure the speedy passage of the bill.

    In the memo to the minister, the SGF, Anyim Pius Anyim, had noted that given the president’s desire for the accelerated passage of the bill, he had mandated the ministry to set up a bi-partisan Special PIB Task Force to work with the ministry to further facilitate the quick passage of the bill.

    The taskforce headed by Senator Udoma Udo Udoma as chair had other members including Senators Tunde Ugbeha, Lawan Shuaibu and members of the lower chamber like Hon. Chibudom Nwuche, Abdullahi Gumel, Habeeb Fashinro and former president of the Trade Union Congress, Mr. Peter Esele.

    But as it turned out, the committee could not achieve its set objective, even as speculations were rife that some had elected to do the bidding of some of the IOCs.

    Although Nigerians are desirous of taking ownership of the petroleum industry, which they hope the PIB will help to actualise, it appears it is going to be a long wait as there are still many unresolved issues with the PIB.