Daily Trust

How Baru steers the NNPC ship

- By Namsowo Bassey

It is apparent that most newspapers and columnists in Nigeria fail to realize the need to guard their reputation­s jealously like a woman’s integrity that once lost, it becomes a herculean task to redeem. Owing to the not-too-glowing history of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n, NNPC, it is expected that it becomes an easy sport for mischief makers and those who are overly cynical to think any good thing can come out the public oil and gas corporatio­n.

So, it was not something entirely out of the blues when Yemi Adebowale in THISDAY Newspapers of Friday, July 20 engaged in the usual red herring and sophistry to whip up sentiments not just against the NNPC but the very person of the cerebral Group Managing Director, Dr. Maikanti Baru.

Adebowale failed in the singleness of his narrative to take into considerat­ion many other factors when he wondered why Dr. Baru should still be in office because local premium motor spirit consumptio­n had hit 60 million litres per day.

It would have been instructiv­e if the writer had paid attention to the other impressive strides the NNPC has made under Baru in a little over two years. While it is granted that seems to be some controvers­y over the actual consumptio­n of PMS in the country, what is worth taking note of is the fact that the last time a committee on national consumptio­n, last sat was during the administra­tion of former President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2006, which pegged daily consumptio­n of petrol at 32 million litres daily.

Any honest assessment will show that fuel consumptio­n could not possible have remained at the same average in the past 12 years if one were to apply the mechanics of population growth to that of our consumptio­n habits.

For clarity, the country’s population as at 2012 when it was last collected by the National Bureau of Statistics was around 166.2 million people, and by 2016, the United Nations estimated that we were a country of over 178.5 million. As at 2018, the figure is 196,244,462! So, if under a span of seven years our population has added nearly 20 million additional citizens, what is so shocking that fuel consumptio­n has followed the country’s population growth pattern?

It is on record that the Petroleum Product Pricing Regulatory Agency, PPPRA and the Department of Petroleum Resources, DPR, stated in their various reports that the NNPC trucked out 48 million litres daily in 2016 and 50 million litres in 2017, so there is not much difference in what the GMD has often quoted.

The good news is that efforts are on a collaborat­ive venture involving the Federal Ministry of Finance, the World Bank as well as the NBS alongside the NNPC to undertake a global study that would help the country get around the actual PMS consumptio­n the country.

Without a doubt, there is consensus that given our country’s porous borders, illegal goods flow in ceaselessl­y while from the Nigerian side it is petroleum products owing to Nigeria offering the cheapest source of PMS in the West African sub-region. It is a well-known fact that all our neighbouri­ng countries are selling at over 200 per cent high of the price that is sold at the pump in Nigeria. So, it becomes an incentive for unscrupulo­us dealers and businessme­n to truck out as much as possible, thereby, adding to the numbers.

This point was well enunciated not too long ago by the GMD when he revealed through a detailed presentati­on on the proliferat­ion of filling stations. According to Dr. Baru, 16 states, which have 61 local government areas with border communitie­s, accounted for 2,201 registered fuel stations with a combined capacity of 144,998,700 litres of petrol.

Similarly, eight states with coastal border communitie­s spread across 24 Local Government Areas (LGAs) accounted for 866 registered fuel outlets with combined petrol tank capacity of 73,443,086 litres.

A further breakdown of his presentati­on showed that among the states with land border, three LGAs in Ogun State accounted for 633 fuel stations with combined petrol tankage of 40,485,000 litres, while nine LGAs in Borno State had 337 fuel outlets with combined petrol storage capacity of 21,114,480 litres.

The NNPC boss had also stated that Lagos with one LGA as border community has 235 registered fuel stations with total storage facility of 19,916,600 litres.

On the coastal front, Lagos with six LGAs led with 487 registered fuel stations with combined in-built storage capacity of 50,239,560 litres.

“Akwa Ibom, with five LGAs, has 134 registered retail outlets with capacity to store 8,322,986 litres; while Ondo State, with two LGAs, has 110 fuel stations with capacity to store 3,871,320 litres,” Baru had reportedly said.

An objective and discerning mind will know that with the scenario graphicall­y laid bare, there is little dispute that the country is averaging the 60 million litres a day. Besides that, one only needs to look at his 12-point agenda which though ambitious, has revolution­ized the operations of the NNPC.

Also, it is easy to ignore the fact that when Baru assumed office in July of 2016, the national daily average production stood at 1.83 million barrel, but he grew it to 1.88 million barrels in 2017, and as at 2018, the nation has achieved its projected target of 2.2 million barrels of oil and condensate per day occasioned by the improvemen­t in security and the resumption of production operations in the forcados Oil Terminal (FOT) and Qua Iboe Terminal (QIT) pipelines.

In either a deliberate attempt to mislead the public or the in the general attitude of cynics at mudslingin­g, Adebowale should have known that the so-called memo written by the Minister of Petroleum, State, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, has been dismissed even by its author.

For the avoidance of doubt, Kachikwu at the end of a three-day Nigerian content workshop organised by the Nigerian Content Developmen­t and Monitoring Board, on October 13, 2017 dismissed any attributio­n to fraud.

Here is what the minister said: “The conversati­on has been largely misunderst­ood to border on fraud. It was not on fraud, but on governance and suggestion­s on ways to go about it. I think a lot of people got it wrong.

“People dwell much on issues of sensationa­lism and leave the main substance. The group managing director of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporatio­n, Dr Maikanti Baru, and I are working together as Mr President had directed to move forward.

“Mr President has urged the two of us to find ways of working together to remove doubt and rift.

“Mr President is a decent man and what he wants to achieve in this country is to leave a legacy for posterity. He is a sincere leader, so nobody should accuse him of engaging in fraud.”

If the author of the ‘sleaze memo’ has clarified on the issues he raised, then people like Adebowale can keep fishing in the dark without a bait as they will come away empty handed.

The cheering news in all of these is that Dr. Baru remains focused and not distracted by the vexatious shenanigan­s of a few.

Bassey wrote this piece from Lagos

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