THISDAY

GM: Shell Has Remitted $31bn to Federation Account, NDDC in 13Years

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Shell Petroleum Developmen­t Company (SPDC) has remitted $29.8 billion to the Federation Account and $1.2 billion to the Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission (NDDC) between 2002 and 2016.

The General Manager, External Relations, Mr. Igo Weli, made the disclosure yesterday in Port Harcourt while reacting to the shut-down of SPDC flow station and gas plant in Belema community by angry youths.

The youths accused the company of neglecting them and marginalis­ing their community.

Addressing journalist­s, Weli said the seizure of the company’s facilities by the youths would not only send wrong signal to the internatio­nal community, it was capable of discouragi­ng further investment in the Niger Delta.

He said: “People are having high expectatio­ns from SPDC; they forget the company is not government and do not have the resources to solve world hunger.

“SPDC has made several efforts to sensitise the people on how our business is run, so that their expectatio­ns can be realistic and align with realities of how we run our business.

“The business we do add value in several ways through contributi­ons to the federation account and the NDDC.

“Between 2012 and 2016, SPDC JV contribute­d $29.8 billion to the federation account which flows down to the state government­s, local government­s and to the communitie­s.”

Weli, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), said the company had also set aside three per cent of its annual budget to NDDC as its contributi­on to the developmen­t of the Niger Delta.

The GM described the closure of the company’s facility as `worrisome’ especially as the company and its partners had spent millions of naira on human and infrastruc­ture programmes in the communitie­s.

“If the youths isolate our corporate social responsibi­lity and put all the burden of infrastruc­ture needs on SPDC, then the expectatio­n would not balance.

“In 2016 alone, our contributi­on to NDDC was $106.8 million; people need to define their expectatio­n; ask themselves if their expectatio­n is realistic and if SPDC is government.

“People should express their grievances in a way that follows due process to avoid sending wrong signal to potential investors about how businesses are treated in our society,” he said.

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