Monday, 10 February 2014

$20bn not missing, NNPC, NPDC insist

NIGERIAN National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, weekend, denied claims that it failed to remit $20 billion crude oil revenue to the Federation Account, adding that it submitted all the documents on domestic crude and subsidy claims to the Federal Account and Allocation Committee, FAAC.

Also, the Nigerian Petroleum Development Corporation, NPDC,  a subsidiary of the NNPC, disclosed that the allegation that $20 billion was not remitted to the Federation Account is false, blaming the loss of revenue on inadequate funding of oil exploration activities by the Federal Government.

Mr. Iyowuna Briggs, Managing Director, NPDC, who stated this in Benin, noted that the Federal Government’s inability to fund oil exploration, over the years, is depriving the country of billions of dollars in oil revenue.


He maintained that the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, lacks understanding of the workings of the oil sector, saying that majority of the funds that should have accrued to the federal government from the sale of crude oil was paid to its technical partners who provided the financing for its operations.

According to him, the growth the country is seeking in the petroleum sector is no longer coming, adding that Nigeria’s goal of producing about four million barrels of crude daily would have been attained if the issue of funding and security had been addressed.

He stated that the Federal Government, by not funding oil operations, is bringing third parties to lay claims to crude oil revenue, saying that proceeds from the sale is gotten, a substantial part of the proceeds is used to pay back the person who provided the funding for the operation.

He said, “What does this mean, it means if I produce one million barrels per day, five years ago, at $100 per barrel, government gets certain revenue. Five years after, government is no longer funding the way it should, if I produce the same one million barrels per day at the same price, guess what, government gets less.

“By not funding, you are bringing a third party to lay a claim. By funding, all of that one million barrels, when they pay, it goes to government.  By not funding, when they pay, part of it is the cost to pay back the person who provided the funding, part of it is the compensation to pay back the person who has funded. By not funding, you don’t expect to get the same amount.”

Also speaking in Abuja, Dr. Abiye Membere, Group Executive Director, Exploration and Production, NNPC, said the issue raised against it by Mallam Sanusi Lamido, Governor, CBN, would be vividly tackled at the next public hearing of the Senate Committee on Finance.

Membere vowed that the NNPC would inundate the Senate Committee with deluge of documents detailing all transactions, adding that, the NNPC works with the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency, PPPRA, and other agencies of government, which scrutinize “all our documents.”

He declared that the missing money was never in the hands of the NNPC, adding, “this subsidy is not the money that the NNPC collected from government.”
He said, “For example, the subsidy on kerosene, it is not that government will pay the NNPC the remaining N100 on the product directly. What happens is that the NNPC sells the product at N50 and then pays that into the Federation Account and then expects government to balance it up in the Federation Account with the subsidy claims of the NNPC.

“Nigerians must understand that NNPC has never collected any money from government as subsidy claim. The NNPC simply paid the N50 we collected at pump into the Federation Account. Now, people turn around and say the NNPC owes government.

“It is simply because the Federation Account is not balance and they think that because the NNPC has defaulted simply because we have not paid the required figure forgetting that the balance of what we ought to pay is with the Federal Government.

“The Ministry of Finance has not denied this position. The CBN must know that that the NNPC cannot pay what it does not have.

Vanguard

No comments:

Post a Comment