₦6bn Income: Reps Tackle Accountant General Over Records

After its recent announcemrnt of changing names from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) into the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, the Nigerian House of Representatives has begun a major probe into its Joint Venture (JV) operations and Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs), beginning from 1990 till date.

This massive probe will be covering 32 years of contracts.

The objective, according to the House, is to ascertain “whether or not the capital expenditure, operations, financials and related frameworks are within the ambit of the law.”

Read Also: Vacancy News Is False, We’re Not Recruiting – NNPC

An ad-hoc committee will execute the assignment within eight weeks as approved by the resolution of the House passed during plenary in Abuja on Thursday. The session was presided over by the Deputy Speaker, Rep. Ahmed Idris Wase, in the absence of the Speaker, Rep. Femi Gbajabiamila.

Six lawmakers moved the motion that led to the House resolution. They were Rep. Sergius Ose Ogun, Rep. Sada Soli Jibiya, Rep. Isiaka Ibrahim Oyekunle, Rep. Benjamin O. Kalu, Rep. Ado Sani Kiri and Rep. Mark Gbillah.

The motion reads, “The House: notes that section 88 (1) and (2) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 empowers the National Assembly to conduct investigations into the activities of any authority executing or administering laws made by the National Assembly;

“Also notes that Escravos Gas-to-Liquid (EGTL) Project is a Joint Venture (JV) undertaking by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and Chevron Nigeria Limited for the construction of a 34,000 Barrels Per Day (BPD) of Gas-to-Liquids (GTL) Plant at Escravos, Delta State;

“Further notes that a total of $1.294 billion was earmarked for the EGTL project in 2001 and by the time the contract was awarded in 2005, the final approved cost rose to $2.941 billion, which was further increased to $8.6 billion as at 31st December 2011, and upon completion in 2014, the total project cost was over $10 billion;

“Concerned that the ETGL and its JV projects are executed at such huge costs when similar projects in other jurisdictions like Qatar, which have the same capacity, technology, Engineering Procurement, and Construction (EPC) Contractors and even operators cost less than $1.5 billion;

“Also concerned that although EGTL projects are governed by the Heads of Agreement (HOA), Carry Agreement (CA) and the Venture Agreement (VA) in line with various legal regimes such as Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA), Petroleum Profit Tax Act (PPTA), Companies Income Tax Act (CITA) in principle, there is a breach of the principles involved;

“Worried that the Bonga field (OML 118), which is owned by the NNPC but contracted to SNEPCO (55%), ExxonMobil (20%), Agip exploration (12.5%), and Total (12.5%) under the Production Sharing Contract (PSC) now seems to be far from being a PSC arrangement as it runs foul to the relevant financial operational laws;

“Also worried that the Offshore Gas Gathering System (OGGS) which was designed to gather gas from various upstream projects in the Niger Delta region under a PSC and JV arrangement with companies such as SNEPCO, SPDC, NLNG has now become mired in some operational misunderstandings;

“Disturbed that in the brewing misunderstanding, SPDC and SNEPCO allegedly went into certain gas sales and sharing arrangements without the prior knowledge and/or consent of the Federal Government via the NNPC, which has resulted in certain shortfalls in revenue into the Federation Accounts.”

 

Africa Today News, New York

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *