According to
Wikipedia, Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC was established on 1
April 1977 as a merger of the Nigerian National Oil Corporation and the Federal
Ministry of Mines and Steel. NNPC by law manages the joint venture between the
Nigerian Federal Government and a number of foreign multinational corporations,
which include Royal Dutch Shell, Agip, ExxonMobil, Total S.A, Chevron, and
Texaco (now merged with Chevron). Through collaboration with these companies,
the Nigerian government conducts petroleum exploration and production.
The NNPC Towers
in Abuja is the headquarters of NNPC. Consisting of four identical towers, the
complex is located on Herbert Macaulay Way, Central Business District Abuja.
NNPC also has zonal offices in Lagos, Kaduna, Port Harcourt and Warri. It has
an international office located in London, United Kingdom.
The NNPC is a
huge hazy burden on the Nigerian nation; a cesspit of corruption, a drain on
the nation’s resource, a major source of our economic decline and a major reason
why we remain in economic misery after 59 years of Independence. In 2007, the head of the Nigerian wing of
Transparency International said salaries for NNPC workers were too low to
prevent graft and other forms of corrupt practices that are the hallmark of
this bureaucratic and monopolistic monolith.
Petrobras
(Brazilian), Petronas (Malaysian), Aramco (Saudi Arabia), CNPC/PetroChina
(China), China Petroleum & Chemical Corporation or Sinopec (China), Gazprom
(Russian), Royal Dutch Shell (Dutch-British); British Petroleum (UK - but it's
a very multinational corporation--as much American-owned as it is
British-owned. Brits hold 40 percent of BP shares, while Americans hold 39
percent. JPMorgan Chase owns 28 percent of BP, while BlackRock owns 8 percent),
Amoco (US), ExxonMobil (US), Texaco-Chevron (US), Valero (Venezuelan), Total SA
(French), Agip (General Italian Oil
Company, Italy), Phillips 66 (US) etc are all earning multibillion dollars
annually in revenues, profits and taxes for their countries and are largely traded
on respective World Stock Exchanges.
We need Transparency
for a better country. And where better place to start than the goose that lays
the golden eggs for Nigeria, the NNPC?
The history of
corruption in the NNPC is as old as the corporation itself. And of course, it
makes sense to tie corruption to the NNPC – it is the main cash cow of Nigeria;
being the ONLY corporation in charge of Nigeria’s huge oil wealth that has
turned Nigeria into the notorious corruption-ridden society it is today. The
Federal Government, a centralised form of government, cannot afford to let it
out of their sight. It is the country’s heartbeat. To the military-designed and
imposed central government after the coup of 1966, it is the only source of
wealth for Nigeria (which highlights and confirms the short-sightedness,
mediocrity, ignorance and an acute lack of thinking faculty of our leaders
since the military era of 1966). They thereby abandoned every other source of
income – agriculture, industry, mining, manufacturing, textiles, etc. and
focused ONLY on the black gold beneath their soil and ocean.
Those who work
in the NNPC regard it as a veritable source of personal wealth. They even kill
to preserve that status. I have seen many a former employee gets depressed when
they are eventually forced to retire, resign or dismissed. The easy money is
just too sweet to forgo.
It is
inevitable that a government-controlled monopoly and bureaucracy breeds
corruption. Our officials, be they politician or civil servants, simply cannot
ignore corruption when it beckons to them. This theory is time-tested. It is
the story of the chicken and the corn; the corn is an irresistible magnet to
every chicken; so is corruption to Nigerian officials, and petroleum wealth
attracts corruption like bees to honey.
Corruption
at the NNPC (Culled from Wikipedia)
KPMG Report
In December
2011, the Nigerian government permitted a forensic report conducted by KPMG to
be published. The audit, commissioned by the Ministry of Finance following
concerns over the NNPC's transparency, detailed the NNPC's sharp business
practices, violation of regulations, illegal deductions of funds belonging to
the state, and failure to account for several billions of naira that should go
to the federation account.
Auditors found
that between 2007 and 2009 alone, the NNPC over-deducted funds in subsidy
claims to the tune of N28.5 billion. It has not been able to account for the
sum ever since.
Willbros
Group Inc
In May 2008,
Willbros Group Inc, a US company, admitted to making corrupt payments totalling
over $6.3 million to officials at the NNPC and its subsidiary NAPIMS, in return
for assistance in obtaining and retaining contracts for work on the Eastern Gas
Gathering System (EGGS).
ABB Vetco
Gray
In July 2004,
ABB Vetco Gray, a US company, and its UK subsidiary ABB Vetco Gray UK Ltd,
admitted to paying over $1 million in bribes to officials at NNPC subsidiary
NAPIMS in exchange for obtaining confidential bid information and favourable
recommendations from Nigerian government agencies.
Trafigura and
Vitol
In November
2013 after a report was published by Swiss Non-governmental advocacy
organisation – Erklärung von Bern – allegations of heavy fraud surfaced,
placing the NNPC under suspicion of siphoning off $6.8 billion in crude oil
revenues.
Unremitted
funds (2013–2014)
On 9 December
2013, a letter from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)Governor, Sanusi Lamido
Sanusi to the President of Nigeria, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, dated show of 25
September 2013 details that the NNPC had not remitted over $49.8 billion
proceeds of crude oil sales to the Government surfaced.
The
Reconciliation Committee estimated unremitted funds at $10.8bn on 18 December
2013 while CBN changed its claim to $12bn. CBN then informed senate committee
on Finance on 4 February 2014 that NNPC needs to account for $20bn as the CBN
could only confirm receipt of $47bn out of $67bn revenue for the period under
review. The then Finance Minister recommended the conduct of an independent
Forensic Audit and PwC was officially appointed by the office of the Auditor
General of the Federation (AuGF) to conduct a forensic audit into the
allegations.
No staff of the
NNPC or Ministry of Petroleum has so far been punished, though on Thursday, 20
February 2014, the whistle-blowing CBN Governor was suspended from office by
the President.
Unremitted
funds (2016)
An official
audit reported in March 2016 that the NNPC had failed to pay US$1.6 billion.
The corruption
continues.
In the last 40
years, the four Refineries built under the auspices the NNPC became obsolete, moribund and some
of them were not even producing a single drop of petroleum or petroleum
product, making Nigeria to be sending its crude petroleum to overseas refineries,
some as far away as Venezuela, some sent to rumoured Nigerian or part-Nigerian
owned refineries in South Africa, brazil, and even some West African countries.
Of course, when a corporation decides to do this, with the backing of the
Federal Government, and connivance of its politicians and civil servants, there
are bound to be sharp practices. Several Nigerian nobodies became
dollar-billionaires overnight.
Fuel subsidy
entered the picture and this even gave more allowances and free hands to corrupt
practices. It was inevitable that in a corrupt system and environment, that
NNPC itself will be corrupt.
Suggested
solution:
One of the solutions
that should be looked at is make NNPC a Public Liability Company (PLC), listed
and traded on the floor of the Lagos Stock Exchange (LSE) and give all
Nigerians opportunity to have a stake in the company.
The Federal Government
of Nigeria should periodically offer shares to LSE just like British Petroleum
(BP), British Airways (BA), British Telecom (BT), to raise funds, and reducing its stake to 75%,
50%, 40% then 25%
Remove the much
controversial and totally irresponsible and corrupt Petroleum Subsidy so that
over N1.8 trillion annually can be used to improve Infrastructure, Electricity,
Health & Education.
These are tried
and tested approaches the world over; even Saudi Arabia’s Aramco, the world’s largest
oil company is planning to issue an IPO, for what could shape up to be the
world's largest initial public offering. The massive state-run oil company is
looking to list as much as 5% of its shares sometime in 2020 or 2021. Aramco
officials have suggested the company could be worth as much as $2 trillion in
the past; many others have successfully listed. Why must we continue to operate
one of the world’s most inefficient Oil and Gas company this way, if not
because some people are reaping huge corrupt and illegal benefits from
maintaining the status quo?
Without these radical
steps, Nigeria's advancement will continue to be hampered and curtailed. The monumental
corruption within NNPC will continue unabated and the resulting misery and poverty
of the unfortunate Nigerian masses will know no end.

No comments:
Post a Comment