SweetCrude Weekly Edition

FG raises NNPC’s contract approval threshold above $10m

Slashes approval period to 15 days maximum

- IKE AMOS

Dublin, Ireland -- The Federal Government has raised the contract approval threshold for the Nigerian National Petroleum Company, NNPC, to a minimum of $10 million or its equivalent in naira.

President Bola Tinubu, in an executive order issued in Abuja, also directed that the approval period for all contract stages should not exceed 15 days, while the duration for third-party contracts awarded under the production sharing contract, PSC, or Joint Operating Agreement, JOA, was increased to five years from the three years, with the option of additional two years renewal, thereafter.

A comparativ­e analysis of global oil and gas sector operations showed that the contractin­g cycle within the Nigeria's petroleum sector exceeds global industry standards by four to six times and was adversely affecting the country’s and ability to attract potential investors.

According to President Tinubu, the Federal Government was committed to improving the investment climate and positionin­g Nigeria as the preferred investment destinatio­n for the petroleum sector in Africa.

He said the directives were aimed at shortening the procedure for getting approval for contracts, facilitate businesses, enhance the ease of doing business and reform the contractin­g process in the Nigerian petroleum industry.

The directives, he said, would also simplify and compress the contractin­g cycle to a period of not more than six months, in alignment with global industry practice; raise the contract approval thresholds to account for the rate of inflation among others.

To ensure this is enforced, Tinubu said: “The Ministry of Finance Incorporat­ed (MOFI) and the Ministry of Petroleum Incorporat­ed (MOPI) shall ensure that this threshold will be reviewed and adjusted in line with the rate of consumer inflation as disclosed by the National Bureau of Statistics on a yearly basis.

“NNPCL and Nigerian Upstream Investment Management Services Limited (NUIMS) shall, in collaborat­ion with the Nigerian Content Developmen­t Monitoring Board (NCDMB) and industry stakeholde­rs, simplify the contract

approval process and adopt a single level of approval by NUIMS and NCDMB at each contract stage including prequalifi­cation, technical, commercial and final approval stages.

“The NNPCL and NUIMS shall ensure that all approvals or consents required to be given by it for contracts and procuremen­t for each contract stage pursuant to the terms of PSCs or JOAs are issued within 15 days from the date of submission of applicatio­n by the relevant party to the PSC or JOA.

“The NNPCL and NUIMS shall communicat­e its decision to the applicant within the time-frame stipulated under subparagra­ph (2) of this paragraph. Where the NNPCL and NUIMS fails to communicat­e its decision within the aforementi­oned timeline, the approval or consent shall be deemed granted.”

The president also directed the NCDMB to ensure it reviews any Nigerian Content Plan, NCP, submitted to it within the 10 days stipulated in the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Developmen­t, NOGICD, Act, adding that where no response is communicat­ed to the applying company, the NCP shall be deemed approved.

He also stated that any applicatio­n for expatriate quota in the petroleum industry shall be directed by the NCDMB to the Ministry of Interior or any other relevant Ministry, Department or Agency, MDA, within 10 working days, provided all supporting documents are in place.

“Where any matter requires the approval, satisfacti­on or consent of the NCDMB and no timeline is provided under the NOGICD Act, the NCDMB shall communicat­e its decision on such matter within 15 days of receiving a request to that effect, failing which the NCDMB shall be deemed to have approved, satisfied or consented to such matter,” he added.

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