THISDAY

Group Faults Senate on Petroleum Industry Governance Bill

- James Emejo in Abuja

A body, the Social Developmen­t Integrated Centre (Social Action) has raised concerns that the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB) as recently passed by the Senate is “seriously flawed” having failed to provide for health, safety and environmen­t (HSE) issues.

It said the bill failed to make provision to end gas flaring and lacked independen­ce for regulators including a glaring neglect of host communitie­s’ interest in the proposed new institutio­ns.

The Director of the center, Dr. Isaac Asume Osuoka said during the launch of a new publicatio­n titled; ‘The Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB), 2017: Implicatio­ns for the Environmen­t and Local Communitie­s’ that the provisions of the PIGB as passed by the upper chamber do not demonstrat­e an understand­ing of the need to guarantee energy access as a right of citizens.

According to him, the powers and functions of new institutio­ns like the Petroleum Regulatory Commission created under the Bill do not reflect current global best practices.

“Our conclusion is that the version of the PIGB as passed by the Senate is an unconscio- nable attempt to legalise the appropriat­ion of national oil and gas assets to some powerful private interests,” he said.

He also said the ill-advised separation of a hitherto comprehens­ive bill into bits by the Senate created a sufficient setback to a holistic and more effective effort to revamp of the oil sector for the benefit of Nigerians.

In a new publicatio­n titled; ‘the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB), 2017: Implicatio­ns for the Environmen­t and Local Communitie­s’, he said it was strange that the Senate was swift to create new institutio­ns in the industry including the National Oil Company, the Nigeria Petroleum Assets Management Company, the National Petroleum Regulatory Commission, the Ministry of Petroleum Incorporat­ed and the Petroleum Equalisati­on Fund among others without first creating the enabling environmen­t on which the entities would thrive.

He said: “The vacuum of the non-effective and clear-cut provision (s) for Health, Safety and Environmen­t in the bill is disturbing and lamentable. In point of fact, the bill does not have any part or section dealing with environmen­tal protection. In its current form, the PIGB cedes virtually all powers on environmen­tal regulation from the Ministry of Environmen­t to the New Petroleum Regulatory Commission.

“Sadly, the Commission is saddled with functions that are conflictin­g with each other. For example, Section 5(f) mandates the Commission to “promote an enabling environmen­t for investment­s in the petroleum industry” and in doing so ‘ensure that regulation­s are fair and balanced for all classes of lessees, licensees, permit holders, consumers and other stakeholde­rs’ (as we find in Section 5(g)). Now the question is, how will a commission, charged with the task of promoting conditions for maximum profitabil­ity of investment­s in one stroke, turn round in another stroke to rigorously enforce environmen­tal regulation­s against the same commercial entities?”

Continuing, he said: “The original PIB had made it clear that the Ministry of Environmen­t shall have overriding authority on environmen­tal matters. This neutrality and independen­ce was necessary to appropriat­ely enforce environmen­tal regulation­s. Worryingly, in the PIGB, all provisions giving the Federal Ministry of Environmen­t powers on environmen­tal issues were struck out.

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