Daily Trust

2018 budget and curbing oil theft

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Nigeria is reported to have lost about N3.8 trillion to oil theft between 2016 and 2017 according to a recent report by the UK funded NGO, Nigeria National Resource Centre (NNRC). In its report the “NNRC’s Oil Theft in Nigeria”, the NGO affirms that the figure represents what the government and oil companies posted as their losses to theft of crude oil in 2016, with the government share amounting to about N1.6 trillion or about 42%. In its comparativ­e analysis, the NNRC that the loss is higher than the combined allocation by the country to health and education in the current 2018 federal government budget. The sum of N184.4 billion for as combined allocation for health and education constitute­s a mere 8.4% of the money lost to oil theft.

The report queries the country’s dispositio­n towards oil theft, ahead of the anticipate­d adoption of the Final Investment Decision (FID) on the developmen­t of the $10 billion Bonga South West/Apara (BSWA) deep-water project in 2019 notes that the Nigerian government passed a record budget of N9.12 trillion with a revenue target of N7.2 trillion, most of which it aims to achieve from the petroleum sector. Therefore, at a time when the country has just exited from recession and the economy remains fragile, with national debt on the rise, reducing oil theft should be an urgent national priority.

The agency attributed the causes of oil theft to factors such as the neglect of the oil rich Niger Delta, poverty, unemployme­nt, poor governance and pervasive corruption. While oil theft is as old as the sector in Nigeria, the level of stealing rose with time, as the stakes became higher and oil prices rose above hundred dollars a barrel in the early 2000s, it has become a cottage industry that creates far-reaching consequenc­es. It is a matter of fact that over the last decade, oil theft has risen to unpreceden­ted levels, peaking between 2011 and 2014. The inability of the government and oil companies to curb this epidemic has made Nigeria the country most plagued by oil theft in the world.

Factors identified as causative to the problem of oil theft include the incidences of force majeure declared at the Forcados Terminal, combined with wider pipeline infraction­s and theft. Force majeure is the declaratio­n by an oil supplier that it is compelled by factors beyond its control to violate meeting a particular oil supply contract. The typical instances of force majeure in Nigeria are usually those bordering on human activities such as insurgence, pipeline vandalisat­ion and even oil theft.

Similarly, factors such as poor governance mechanisms at federal and state levels have spawn the neglect of the Niger Delta region with respect to the promotion of meaningful economic developmen­t. The neglect of the oil rich region has intensifie­d the crisis of unemployme­nt of poverty among the teeming population of the zone especially the restive youth. Hence the sporadic instances of unrest and attendant declaratio­n of force majeure.

Against the backdrop of the realities in the oil sector, the report leaves little to be added with respect to the challenge of oil theft in the country. In fact, the scope of the enterprise - unlawful as it is, has grown beyond a cottage industry to a major- yet undergroun­d business, that is based on outright criminalit­y featuring virtually all faces of high profile illegaliti­es. In its contempora­ry state, oil theft in Nigeria enjoys the participat­ion of the high and mighty in government, military and private sectors of the economy. Curbing it is therefore a major challenge the federal government needs to address with all seriousnes­s that can be mustered.

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