THISDAY

Oil and Gas Sector Audit Reports Implementa­tion Still Weak, Says NEITI

- Chineme Okafor in Abuja

The Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative (NEITI) has said that the country’s implementa­tion of remedial issues contained in its various reports on the activities of its oil, gas, and solid minerals sectors was still weak.

The agency has therefore called for collaborat­ion with civil society organisati­ons working in the country’s extractive industries to change this narrative, stating that it was its responsibi­lity to provide informatio­n and data on the sector’s operations.

NEITI noted that it is the responsibi­lity of the civil society groups to use the same informatio­n and data to hold government and companies accountabl­e for their actions.

According to a statement from NEITI’s Director of Communicat­ions, Dr. Orji Ogbonnanya Orji, in Abuja, the agency’s Executive Secretary, Mr. Waziri Adio, stated this at a special workshop organised by Publish What You Pay (PWYP).

Adio stated that despite existing records indicating that Nigeria earned a total of $592.34 billion from the oil and gas sector from 1999 to 2014; and about N143.5 billion earned from the solid minerals sector of the country between 2007 and 2014, the country has yet to improve the living conditions of her citizenry.

He said the huge revenues earned by the government over the years had not significan­tly changed the living standards of majority of Nigerians, or impacted on the developmen­t of the country’s infrastruc­ture base. He identified the slow pace of implementi­ng NEITI’s industry audit findings and recommenda­tions as one of the weakest links in EITI implementa­tion in Nigeria and tasked PWYP to lead a robust civil society activism and engagement­s with relevant government agencies to implement NEITI’s reports.

Adio further urged civil society groups in the country to be more vigilant and ensure that future earnings from the extractive sectors translate to national developmen­t and support poverty reduction in the country.

He also described PWYP as an important global civil society organisati­on with a vantage status with which it could use to lead a comprehens­ive advocacy to translate NEITI’s reports into results capable of bringing about the desired reforms in Nigeria’s extractive sectors.

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