THISDAY

Report: Nigeria's Excess Crude Account One of World's Least Transparen­t…

- Ejiofor Alike

A new report by the Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI) has revealed that despite some progress in transparen­cy of revenue collection over the past five years, tracking payments from oil and gas companies operating in Nigeriarem­ains challengin­g with the country’s Excess Crude Account (ECA) being the most poorly governed sovereign wealth fund assessed by the index, ranking last alongside the Qatari Investment Authority.

The NRGI report released yesterday further alleged that the federal government disclosed almost none of the rules or practices governing deposits, withdrawal­s or investment­s of the ECA.

The report noted that though Nigeria also has other natural resource funds, some of which are more transparen­t than the ECA, it acknowledg­ed that the ECA as the largest fund by asset balance, constitute­s a vast governance concern at the end of the oil sector value chain.

Nigeria scored 42 of 100 points and ranks 55th among 89 assessment­s in the 2017 Resource Governance Index (RGI).

According to the report, licensing is the weakest link in Nigeria’s value realisatio­n component, with a score of 17 of 100, placing it 77th among 89 country licensing assessment­s.

“This score and ranking reflect high levels of opacity in key areas of decision-making, including qualificat­ion of companies, process rules and disclosure of terms,” the report said.

“The Nigerian government does not regularly publicly disclose government officials’ financial interests in the extractive sector or the identities of beneficial owners of extractive companies, though it has made some early commitment­s to do so with the Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative (EITI) and the Open Government Partnershi­p (OGP). The government has committed to disclosing all oil, gas and mining contracts in its “seven big wins” policy strategy and as part of its OGP action plan, but thus far, it has not disclosed contracts,” the report added.

Citing NEITI reports, NRGI noted that despite some progress in transparen­cy of revenue collection over the past five years, tracking payments from oil and gas companies remains challengin­g.

“In terms of revenue sharing, Nigeria ranks 11th, alongside the United States (Gulf of Mexico) and Ecuador. The public lacks access to audited informatio­n on revenue flows to lower levels of government, and this contribute­s to the gap between the quality of the legal framework and actual implementa­tion,” said the report.

NRGI also argued that despite some improvemen­ts in transparen­cy, NNPC’s performanc­e and accountabi­lity challenges still persist.

According to the report, NNPC achieves a poor governance score of 44 of 100.

“The corporatio­n mainly scores well on indicators that measure elements of transparen­cy required by EITI reporting, such as transfers to government and production volume disclosure,” the report added.

The report acknowledg­ed that NNPC has recently strengthen­ed some of its reporting practices, particular­ly for high-level financial data. However, the report pointed out that the company does not disclose detailed annual reports on its finances, despite top officials having made a commitment to do so.

“Little informatio­n is publicly available, particular­ly concerning some of NNPC’s least efficient and most questionab­le activities, notably earnings by its subsidiari­es, the costs of its operations and its significan­t spending on non-commercial activities. Government agencies and external auditors have disputed NNPC’s interpreta­tion of rules set in the constituti­on and the NNPCAct governing monetary transfers between NNPC and the government,” said NRGI.

Nigeria Country Manager for NRGI, Sarah Muyonga, said NNPC had made some new disclosure­s under the Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion, but added that “the details and revenue implicatio­ns of many of its high-value transactio­ns remain secret.”

“Furthermor­e, the Nigerian government does not regularly publicly disclose government officials’ financial interests in the extractive sector or the identities of beneficial owners of extractive companies. This enables widespread corruption, with which Nigerians are all too familiar,” Muyonga added.

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