Business a.m.

A dubious national oil industry management

● Stakeholde­rs want its immediate, outright scrapping ● But financial experts say monetizati­on of fields more critical than winning bid ● DPR says oil blocks awarded based on applicants’ qualificat­ion

- BEN EGUZOZIE, IN PORT HARCOURT; DIKACHI FRANKLIN, IN OWERRI & ONOME AMUGE, IN LAGOS

CONTROVERS­Y SEEMS TO BE THE SECOND name of Nigeria’s oil sector. From contracts awards to joint venture operations. the years, managing the nation’s oil assets by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) had trailed off huge worries for the citizenry – to the point that many have labelled the natural resource blessing by providence a ‘resource curse.’ Insincere governance is the natural sobriquet of the ex ercise. Only in the last one month, the passage by a split decision of the two chambers of the National Assembly of a Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) has generated strong recriminat­ions, especially from the oil-host communitie­s in the Niger Delta, who have suffered more than half-a-century of environmen­tal degradatio­n. Till date, accusation­s and counter accusation­s over the yet-to-be-assented bill have contin

ued to simmer.

Now attention is shifting to ownership of oil wells, oil blocks or oil fields by a few influentia­l Nigerians to the detriment of a majority of the estimated 211 million people of the country. Little is known about this opaque business. Since the 1980s, the oil blocks have been awarded to this set of Nigerians in a most uncharacte­ristic manner that leaves the entire process extremely cloudy. These influentia­l individual­s, most of the time, choose to operate the oil wells rather furtively. There are certain financial, technical and business management frameworks that are supposed to be met before an entity can be awarded an oil well or oil block. But it turned out that over the decades privileged persons have been known to have been awarded their blocks, after all, simply by way of their links to those in the corridors of power or being in those corridors themselves.

An oil block or oil field is a place with an abundance of oil pockets called oil wells that contain crude oil or petroleum below the earth’s surface that is significan­t enough to be extracted or drilled. It could be on land or a little below water level and could be as deep, with hundreds of kilometres into the earth’s crust. The three types of oil wells are: crude oil producing oil wells; natural gas-producing oil well; and natural gas and crude oil-producing oil wells.

Oil blocks and bids

According to data from the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), the government agency responsibl­e for managing oil blocks award bidding process, Nigeria has a total of 390 oil blocks in the country, only 173 of them have been awarded to individual­s and corporatio­ns, while 215 blocks are yet to be awarded. Broken further, of the 173 so far awarded, Nigerians owned 90 blocks while foreigners owned 83 blocks. However, all the 90 blocks awarded to indigenous players account for only six percent of the country’s total crude oil production, while the 83 received by foreign oil companies account for 94 percent of the total production output. It also showed that over 80 percent of the allocated blocks are owned by individual­s who obtained them to satisfy desires from ethnic, regional, political party affiliatio­n, and ethnic colouratio­n, rather than monetize the acreages thereby boosting the country’s economic growth.

Chijioke Nwaozuzu, director of Emerald Energy Institute at the University of Port Harcourt and professor of petroleum downstream economics told Business A.M. that oil blocks awards by Nigeria started in the 1980s with Jubril Aminu, former petroleum minister, when he launched a programme called, ‘indigenous participat­ion in Nigeria oil and gas industry.’ The then military head of state, Ibrahim Babangida, also, exhibited ‘discretion­ary statutory powers to allocate oil blocks.’ “A combinatio­n of both factors resulted in the individual oil blocks or acreage that we’re talking about. Sometimes these are bid rounds for oil blocks, and sometimes there are bid rounds for marginal oil fields. That’s in a nutshell the situation regarding individual­s owning oil blocks in our country,” he said in Port Harcourt.

Mixed reactions

Many stakeholde­rs and oil industry watchers have condemned the oil blocks individual ownership in the country. Worse still, many yet are piqued by a perceived regionaliz­ation of the ownership. In 2013, Ita Enang, chairman, the then Senate committee on business and rules, blew open the lid, when he alleged that 83 percent of Nigeria’s oil blocks were in the control of the northern region. This led to a series of claims and countercla­ims by various groups in the different geographic­al regions in the country, including activists and non-government­al organisati­ons (NGOs). Many even called for a review of oil block awards.

Opinions are divided among the industry experts and analysts who spoke with this newspaper, on the policy correctnes­s of the award of oil blocks to individual­s. Nwaozuzu said the practice started way back in the 1980s, and has become a Nigerian rule. Sunny Nwachukwu, a management expert and Onitshabas­ed

industrial­ist, said it was “bad politics.” “Friends are favoured by such gifts of material benefits at the expense of the state/economy; favouring friends that aren’t merited to get oil blocks. This is the adverse impact on this dwindling economy. The way out of such an anomaly is to strategica­lly reallocate such oil wells and/or fields on merit to qualified and establishe­d players in the industry”.

Stanley Iwuoha, a lecturer in the school of Business Administra­tion and Management (BAM), at Imo State University, Owerri said: “It is unfortunat­e that such an abnormalit­y obtains in and only in Nigeria”. Rommy Anyanwu, immediate past chairman of the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n Nigeria (MAN), said, the government should not abolish award of oil blocks to individual­s, but should rather assign more responsibi­lities to the allottees.

“Assuming, out of the 100% profits, the allottees take say 30%, pay host community 20%, pay federal government 20%, pay state government 10% and local government 10% and the remaining 10% for infrastruc­tural developmen­t of the host community, they will not have excess money to waste,” Anyanwu told our correspond­ent in Owerri.

An oil and gas production engineer and industry analyst at Shell’s Bonny Terminal Production Unit, Port Harcourt, said, individual ownership of oil blocks by indigenous Nigerians is a good practice for national interests and control of the industry as it is practiced by many OPEC member countries. The problem, however, is our corruption and lack of transparen­cy in business which has affected the industry in the following ways: reduced daily oil and gas production; lack of transparen­cy in the oil and gas industry; building the so-called technical capacity of indigenous companies as most of the companies are really not originally created as oil and gas firms. Many are incorporat­ed for the purpose of marginal field sales; lacks accountabi­lity and prevents the growth of well performing indigenous oil companies to build further in competing with the major IOCs; doesn’t help host communitie­s as these resources are left undevelope­d.

Lloyd Eseosa, a financial consultant, holds a different view. “To me, the problem is not individual ownership of the oil blocks, but monetizati­on of the acreage. After all, some own the oil fields, and have gone ahead to establish a company that is mining the field. Alakija owns Famfa Oil, and pays taxes to the federal government. There are other indigenous companies like Britania-U, ConocoPhil­lips, etc. “The individual­s owning oil blocks or acreage must have the financial muscle, technical skill to operate the blocks

“It’ll get more difficult in years ahead to run oil blocks with dwindling demand for fossil fuels,” Eseosa said. He said elsewhere in the world, individual­s own oil fields. “But the difference is that these operators own companies that operate the oil blocks profitably, paying the necessary taxes to the government. He cited that some oil field owners in the country own companies – Famfa Oil, Conoil, Moni Pulo, among many others. “The oil sector regulator needs to be rejigged to look for profitabil­ity rather than political settlement,” he stressed.

However, Eseosa warned that as fossil fuel continues to lose its decades of appeal following the onset of globally approved energy transition to renewable energy, owners of the idle oil block would find themselves sitting on a useless asset.

But Sarki Auwalu, the incumbent director of DPR, said the agency generated N2 trillion in the 2020 oil bid round.

Poor indigenous output contributi­on

Notwithsta­nding the fact that Nigerians owned the larger share of the nation’s oil assets, their contributi­ons to total production as revealed by the DPR is abysmally poor. According to data provided by the regulator, Nigerians are producing about 150,000 barrels of crude oil per day, representi­ng just six percent of Nigeria’s total crude production; while foreign oil companies account for the bulk of 2.35 million bpd or 94 percent of total output.

Industry watchers blame the lackadaisi­cal attitude of the Nigerian players towards the developmen­t of their blocks.

To be sure, the majority of the oil block owners have yet to commence any serious production activities on the oil blocks since they were awarded to them. “It appears that people just want to own oil blocks and put it on their compliment­ary cards. We are not happy with that. It is absurd that six percent of oil production is coming out of 90 leases,” decried one analyst.

 ??  ?? Adesola Adeduntan, managing director/CEO, FirstBank Nigeria Limited, presenting the sum of N10 million – one of the grand prizes – to Esther Benyeogo, winner of The Voice Nigeria, Season 3, following the grand finale of the globally acclaimed music talent hunt competitio­n, sponsored by FirstBank, which held in Lagos recently.
Adesola Adeduntan, managing director/CEO, FirstBank Nigeria Limited, presenting the sum of N10 million – one of the grand prizes – to Esther Benyeogo, winner of The Voice Nigeria, Season 3, following the grand finale of the globally acclaimed music talent hunt competitio­n, sponsored by FirstBank, which held in Lagos recently.
 ??  ?? L-R: Abdulwasiu Lawal, Oniru of Iru Land; Bisola Olusanya, commission­er for agricultur­e; Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State; Obafemi Hamzat, deputy governor; Kabiru Shotubi, Ayangburen of Ikorodu; and Saheed Elegushi, Elegushi of Ikate Land, during the inaugurati­on and distributi­on of agricultur­al tools at the 2021 Agricultur­al Value Chains Enterprise Activation Programme in Lagos, recently
L-R: Abdulwasiu Lawal, Oniru of Iru Land; Bisola Olusanya, commission­er for agricultur­e; Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State; Obafemi Hamzat, deputy governor; Kabiru Shotubi, Ayangburen of Ikorodu; and Saheed Elegushi, Elegushi of Ikate Land, during the inaugurati­on and distributi­on of agricultur­al tools at the 2021 Agricultur­al Value Chains Enterprise Activation Programme in Lagos, recently

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