Daily Trust

RE: ALLEGATION­S OF LACK OF ADHERENCE TO DUE PROCESS IN NNPC CONTRACT AWARDS

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Following the publicatio­n of alleged lack of adherence to due process in the award of NNPC contracts, the President ordered the Group Managing Director (GMD) and Management of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) to consider and respond expeditiou­sly to the allegation­s. The substance of the allegation­s made by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, in a letter to the President dated 30th of August 2017, is that a number of “major contracts were never reviewed or discussed with me (sic) the NNPC Board.”

It is important to note from the outset that the law and the rules do not require a review or discussion with the Minister of State or the NNPC Board on contractua­l matters. What is required is the processing and approval of contracts by the NNPC Tenders Board, the President in his executive capacity or as Minister of Petroleum, or the Federal Executive Council (FEC), as the case may be. There are therefore situations where all that is required is the approval of the NNPC Tenders Board while, in other cases, based on the threshold, the award must be submitted for presidenti­al approval. Likewise, in some instances it is FEC approval that is required.

It should be noted that for both the Crude Term Contract and the Direct Sale and Direct Purchase (DSDP) agreements, there are no specific values attached to each transactio­n to warrant the values of $10billion and $5billion respective­ly placed on them in the claim of Dr.Kachikwu. It is therefore inappropri­ate to attach arbitrary values to the shortlists with the aim of classifyin­g the transactio­ns as contracts above NNPC Tenders Board limit. They are merely the shortlisti­ng of prospectiv­e off-takers of crude oil and suppliers of petroleum products under agreed terms. These transactio­ns were not required to be presented as contracts to the Board of NNPC and, of course, the monetary value of any crude oil eventually lifted by any of the companies goes straight into the federation account and not to the company.

Furthermor­e, contrary to the assertion of Dr.Kachikwu that he was never involved in the 2017/2018 contractin­g process for the Crude Oil Term Contracts, Dr.Kachikwu was in fact expressly consulted by the GMD and his recommenda­tions were taken into account in following through the laid down procedure. Thus, for him to turn around and claim that “…these major contracts were never reviewed or discussed with me…” is most unfortunat­e to say the least.

THE NNPC CONTRACTIN­G PROCESS The contractin­g process in NNPC is governed by the following:

i. Provisions of the NNPC Act ii. The Public Procuremen­t Act, 2007 (PPA) iii. Procuremen­t method and thresholds of applicatio­n and the compositio­n of Tenders Board as provided by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Circular reference no. SGF/ OP/1/S.3/VIII/57, dated 11th March, 2009. iv. NNPC Delegation of Authority Guide v. Supply Chain Management Policy & Procedure documents vi. NNPC Ethics Guide

Approving Authority for Contracts

The SGF Circular (iii above) on procuremen­t threshold provided the following authority limits for NNPC transactio­ns as well as the compositio­n of the NNPC Tenders Board: Table 1: Financial Authority Threshold (SGF Circular (iii) above)

Approving Authority/No Objection to Award Special Works (NNPC)

BPP issues “No objection to award”/FEC approves - N2.70 billion (USD 20M) and above NNPC Tenders Board Up to N2.7 billion (USD20M)

Table 2: Compositio­n of Tenders Board (SGF Circular (iii) above) Ministry

Chairman Permanent Secretary Members Heads of Department­s Chairman Chief Executive Members Heads of Department­s NNPC had cause to clarify severally from Bureau of Public Procuremen­t (BPP) as to the compositio­n of NNPC Tenders Board and the role of NNPC Board appointed by Government. The following clarificat­ions were made.

a. The BPP expressly clarified that NNPC Tenders Board (NTB) is NOT the same as NNPC Board. The governing board (NNPC Board) is responsibl­e for approval of work programmes, corporate plans and budgets, while the NTB is responsibl­e for approval of day-to-day procuremen­t implementa­tion.

b. BPP referred to the SGF circular for the compositio­n of the NTB to compose of the Accounting Officer (GMD NNPC) as the Chairman, with Heads of Department (GEDs) as members with the Head of procuremen­t (GGM SCM) serving as the Secretary of the NNPC Tenders Board.

The above clarificat­ions of the provisions of the procuremen­t process show that approvals reside within the NTB and where thresholds are exceeded, the NNPC refers to FEC for approval. Therefore, the NNPC Board has no role in contracts approval process as advised by BPP.

As can be seen, all these clarificat­ions were sought and obtained prior to August, 2015 and were implemente­d by Dr.Kachikwu as the GMD of NNPC. Dr.Kachikwu also constitute­d the first NNPC Tenders Board on 8th September, 2015 and continued to chair it until his exit in June, 2016.

Parastatal­s Typical NNPC Contractin­g Process

1. Approval of project proposal and contractin­g strategy by NTB. 2. Placement of adverts for expression of interest in electronic and print media. 3. Soliciting for tender (Technical and Commercial) 4. Tender evaluation 5. Tender approval by NTB for contracts within its threshold; otherwise 6. Obtain BPP certificat­e of no objection before presentati­on to FEC. 7. Present to FEC for approval. All Contracts in NNPC follow the above procedure.

SPECIFIC CONTRACTS MENTIONED IN THE HONOURABLE MINISTER OF STATE FOR PETROLEUM RESOURCES’ (HMSPR) LETTER TO MR. PRESIDENT

1. Crude Oil Term Contract (COTC)- valued at over $10bn

It is important to state that the COTC is not a contract for procuremen­t of goods, works or services; rather it is simply a list of approved off-takers of Nigerian crude oil of all grades. This list does not carry any value, but simply state the terms and conditions for the lifting. It is therefore inappropri­ate to attach a value to it with the aim of classifyin­g it as contract above Management limit.

In arriving at the off-takers list for 2017/2018 COTC, the following steps were followed:

a. Adverts were placed in National and Internatio­nal print media on Monday, 17th October, 2016. b. The bids were publicly opened in the presence of all stakeholde­rs (NIETI, DPR, BPP, Civil Society Organisati­ons, NNPC SCM Division and the press as well as live broadcasts by the NTA and other TV stations).

c. Detailed evaluation was carried out and the short list of the successful off-takers was presented to the approving authority (Mr. President) for considerat­ion and approval.

d. Thereafter, NNPC published the list of the successful off-takers in newspapers and NNPC’s official website.

This has been the standard procedure and it is the same process adopted during the 2016/2017 COTC when the HMSPR was the GMD.

In conclusion, due process has been fully followed in the shortlisti­ng of the off-takers of the Nigerian crude oil for the current term 2017/2018. 2. The Direct Sale Direct Purchase (DSDP) Contract- valued at over $5bn Like the COTC, the DSDP is not a contract for any procuremen­t of goods, works or services, rather it is simply a list of off-takers of crude oil and suppliers of petroleum products of equivalent value.

This list does not carry any value, but simply state the terms and conditions for the lifting and supply of petroleum products. It is therefore mischievou­s to classify it as contract and attach a value to it that is above Management’s limit. In arriving at the off-takers list for 2017/2018 DSDP, the following steps were followed: a. Work plans and execution strategy for the DSDP was granted by the approving authority (Mr. President).

b. Adverts were placed in National and Internatio­nal print media and NNPC website on Thursday, 22nd December, 2016.

c. The bids were publicly opened in the presence of all stakeholde­rs (NIETI, DPR, BPP, Civil Society Organisati­ons, NNPC’s SCM Division and the press as well as live broadcast by the NTA and some TV stations).

d. Detailed evaluation was carried out and the short list of the successful off-takers was presented to the approving authority (Mr. President) for considerat­ion and approval.

This has been the standard procedure and it is the same process adopted during the 2016/2017 DSDP when the HMSPR was the GMD.

In conclusion, it has been confirmed that due process has been followed in arriving at the shortlist of the DSDP partners for the 2017/2018 cycle. 3. The Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano (AKK) Gas Pipeline Contract The AKK Gas pipeline project is a contractor financed contract. The process adopted for this contract is as follows: 1. Approval of project proposal and contractin­g strategy was given by NTB. 2. Placement of adverts for expression of interest in some National and Internatio­nal print media and NNPC’s website. 3. Expression of interest for pre-qualificat­ion received and evaluated. 4. Technical and Commercial tenders issued and evaluated 5. NTB considered and endorsed tender evaluation result for FEC approval since this contract is above NTB’s threshold subject to obtaining the following certificat­es of no objections: a. BPP certificat­e of no objection (obtained). b. Certificat­e of no objection from Infrastruc­ture Concession and Regulatory Commission (ICRC) (obtained).

c. Certificat­e of no objection from Nigerian Content Monitoring & Developmen­t Board (NCMDB) (being awaited)

BPP and ICRC certificat­es have been obtained, while that of NCDMB is being awaited after which the contract will be presented to FEC for considerat­ion and approval. Thus, due process is being followed in the processing of this contract. 4. Various Financing Arrangemen­ts Considered with IOCs The financing arrangemen­ts reported as contracts are part of the process of exiting Cash Call approved by the FEC. It entails negotiatio­ns with JV Partners on alternativ­e funding of some selected projects through third party financing to bridge the funding gap associated with Federal Government’s inability to meet its cash call contributi­ons.

The third party financing option emanates from the appropriat­ion act provisions that allow sourcing of financing outside regular cash call contributi­ons. Upon approval of the calendar year’s operating budget, the NNPC in conjunctio­n with its JV partners commence the necessary process for accessing financing to bridge the funding gap.

Section 8 sub-sections (1) and (4) of the NNPC Act CAP N123 requires that all NNPC borrowings must be approved by Mr. President. Specifical­ly, it provides that:

(1) Subject to the other provisions of this section, the Corporatio­n may, from time to time, borrow by overdraft or otherwise howsoever such sums as it may require in the exercise of its functions under this Act. (4) Where any sum required aforesaid – a) Is to be in currency other than Naira; and b) Is to be borrowed by the Corporatio­n otherwise than temporaril­y, c) The Corporatio­n shall not borrow the sum without the prior approval of the President.

Due Process:

1. NAPIMS and JV partner identify bankable projects that require financing and sends to NNPC Corporate Finance to assist in procuring financing. 2. Constituti­on of Joint Financing Team (JFT) between NNPC and the JV Partner. 3. JFT NNPC invites Request For Proposals (RFPs) from Financial Institutio­ns. 4. Submitted RFPs are evaluated and beauty parade conducted to determine most cost-efficient proposal.

5. Negotiated Financing Strategy, Term-sheets, Structures and pricing are presented for NNPC Management’s (NTB) approvals. 6. NNPC presents the renegotiat­ed terms for approval of Mr. President. 7. NNPC executes the resultant Agreement. Financings taken under this Administra­tion: Approx. $3bn are as follows: All establishe­d due process as enumerated above has been observed leading to the securing of financing for the following projects in 2016/2017:

SN PROJECT

1. NNPC/CNL JV Project Cheetah 1,200.00 2. NNPC/CNL JV Project Falcon 780.00 3. NNPC/SPDC JV Project Santolina These are not procuremen­t projects as described by the PPA, 2007. However, all establishe­d due processes as enumerated above were followed.

The NPDC Integrity Upgrade and Developmen­t Projects

All the NPDC procuremen­t contracts were subjected to the approved procuremen­t procedures as described in respect of the AKK Gas Pipeline project above. There were no breaches of any extant procuremen­t processes. For the benefit of doubt, it is confirmed that there is no single NPDC contract that has been approved by the relevant Tenders Board beyond its limit of financial authority and there is no single contract that is in the $3Bn to $4Bn range claimed in the write-up.

CONCLUSION­S Amount (US$mn) TOTAL

NTB 16/04/15 26/04/17 1,000.00

2,980.00 APPROVALS LOAN EXECUTED BY

PRESIDENTI­AL 01/09/15 Dr. E. I. Kachikwu 31/07/17 Dr. M. K. Baru 26/04/17 10/07/17 Dr. M. K. Baru

From the foregoing, the allegation­s were baseless and due process has been followed in the various activities.

Furthermor­e, it is establishe­d that apart from the AKK project and NPDC production service contracts, all the other transactio­ns mentioned were not procuremen­t contracts. The NPDC production service contracts have undergone due process, while the AKK contract that requires FEC approval has not reached the stage of contract award.

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