Business Day (Nigeria)

While NNPC forages for cash, its peers record bumper earnings

- ISAAC ANYAOGU

Some oil companies who have released their 2021 first quarter results are reporting earnings similar to pre-pandemic levels, but for Nigeria’s state oil company – the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n ( NNPC), an inability to reform continues to rain on its parade.

Saudi Arabia’s national oil company, Saudi Aramco, reported net income for the first quarter this year of $ 21 billion, up 24 percent year- onyear, and free cash flow of $18.3 billion.

The positive result recorded by the world’s biggest oil company mirrors earnings reported by other big oil companies last week, signalling that

oil is gradually making a comeback, even as that impact seems not to trickle down in one of the world’s poorest countries, Nigeria.

Royal Dutch Shell reported adjusted earnings of $3.2 billion for the three months through to the end of March. This compares positively with $2.9 billion reported over the same period a year earlier and $393 million for the fourth quarter of 2020.

Shell also raised its dividend by about 4 percent, the second increase in six months. Shares of the oil major rose around 1.3 percent last week and the stock price has risen more than 9 percent year-to-date after falling nearly 40 percent in 2020.

British energy giant BP reported profits of $2.6 billion in the first three months of this year compared with profits of $115 million in the fourth quarter of 2020 and $791 million for the first quarter of 2020.

The company said the results were driven by exceptiona­l gas marketing trading performanc­e and significan­tly higher oil prices and stronger refining margins.

The NNPC has not published its first quarter earnings of 2021, but it does not take a seer to understand that the oil corporatio­n is flailing.

Some industry operators say that after shouting itself hoarse over the need to stop the wasteful fuel subsidies, which it claims gulp over N100 billion monthly and being ignored by the government some officials inside the corporatio­n may have started leaking the true state of affairs to the nation.

In a leaked letter addressed to the Accountant General of the Federation (AGF), the NNPC said it was paying the average cost of N56 on a litre of petrol as subsidy, and cost N111,966,456,903.74 in February 2021, which should have been contribute­d to april fa ac.

“Accordingl­y, the AGF is invited to note that the sum of N111,966,456,903.74 will be deducted from April 2021 Oil and Gas Proceeds due to the Federation in May 2021, which will translate to zero remittance to the Federation Account from NNPC in the month of May 2021. This is to ensure the continuous supply of Petroleum Products to the nation and guarantee energy security,” the NNPC said.

NNPC’S contributi­ons to the Federal purse, which is shared by the various tiers of government­s, have been declining on the back of rising crude oil revenues, translatin­g to higher cost for maintainin­g fuel subsidy.

In contrast, Saudi Aramco is delivering a dividend worth $18.8 b ill ion(n7.1trn),w hi ch the Kingdom is applying to narrow a budget deficit that ballooned last year on account of the coronaviru­s pandemic and the shutting down of businesses.

Analysts have severally called for full deregulati­on of the petroleum downstream sector because subsidies on fuel are no longer sustainabl­e.

But the government has failed to muster up the political will to effect this change, even when oil prices are on the floor. It is currently in protracted talks with labour unions who have threatened to shut down the country if the government deregulate­s without fixing the refineries.

“As labour continues to hold their line on preconditi­ons for full deregulati­on, one can then ask, how will salaries of labour be paid next month when oil revenues into the federation account will be zero par NNPC letter?” said Joseph Nwakwue, a former council chair at the Society for Petroleum Engineers (SPE) Nigeria.

According to Nwakwue, the implicatio­n is that FAAC balances will be short by at least N111 billion and the Federal Government, states, and LGAS will struggle to stay afloat.

“Remember that most states are not unable to meet their obligation­s even with full remittance­s. So, the situation will get worse. It is important therefore that all stakeholde­rs get together immediatel­y to agree on a road map to navigate through this turbulence,” Nwakwue said.

 ??  ?? Parents of the 39 abducted students of Federal College of Forestry Mechanisat­ion, Afaka in Kaduna State protesting against nonrelease of their children by their abductors at the entrance of the National Assembly in Abuja. NAN
Parents of the 39 abducted students of Federal College of Forestry Mechanisat­ion, Afaka in Kaduna State protesting against nonrelease of their children by their abductors at the entrance of the National Assembly in Abuja. NAN

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