The Guardian (Nigeria)

How Oil Companies Evade Over N258b Gas Flare Penalty Yearly

- From Kelvin Ebiri ( South South Bureau Chief) Kingsley Jeremiah ( Abuja)

• FIRS Must Set Up An Oil And Gas Industry- specific Crack Team To Monitor Infraction­s - Ameh

• JV Arrangemen­ts Fuelling Gas Flare Challenges – Bassey

• Increase In Penalty Responsibl­e For Discrepanc­ies – Manufor

• Inconsiste­nt Gas Flare Figures Is Because Oil Companies Are Unwilling To Pay New Penalty Rate - Obi

THERE are indication­s that oil companies operating in the country may be evading gas flare penalty, and this developmen­t has led the country to losing as much as N258b yearly, which would have accrued after a review of fiscal penalty, fine of $ 3.50 per 1, 000 standard cubic feet ( scf) of gas flared. This developmen­t is fueled by growing under reporting of flared gas across fields, as evidenced by discrepanc­ies in figures reported by different agencies and independen­t bodies, which are monitoring the menace in the Niger Delta.

Facility for Oil Sector Transparen­cy and Reform in Nigeria ( FOSTER) and the African Initiative for Transparen­cy, Accountabi­lity and Responsibl­e Leadership ( Afrital), recently alleged that oil producers since 2018 have been deliberate­ly under- reporting the level of gas flare.

Indeed, figures from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n ( NNPC), which operates joint venture deals with most of the oil companies were also under- reported, as a World Bank- supported Gas Flare Tracker ( GFT) reported figures almost double of what the stateowned oil company currently reports. While GFT has been handed over to the National Oil Spill Detection Response Agency ( NOSDRA), its satellite- generated data is reportedly safe from manipulati­on as it collects informatio­n on gas flare in oil fields across Nigeria every 24 hours, and sums them up every month.

For instance, the NNPC’S data in 2018 showed that Nigeria flared 282 billion standard cubic feet ( scf) of gas, a 10 percent of the total gas produced in the country within the period under review, but GFT reported 472.4bcf of gas for the same year.

Similarly, while the Nigerian Gas Flare Commercial­isation Programme ( NGFCP) showed that Nigeria flared 325bscf of associated gas in 2019, representi­ng 11 percent of gas produced in the country, GFT recorded 475bscf as gas flared for the same year.

The implicatio­n is that about 190 bscf was not reported in 2018, while 150bscf was under- reported in 2018. With a fine of $ 3.50 per 1, 000 scf, as much as $ 665m ( N257.9b) would have been paid in 2018, if the guidelines for the 2018 reviewed fiscal penalty, which moved payment from 50 cent to $ 3.50 per 1, 000 standard cubic feet ( scf) were applied. A developmen­t counted as tax evasion by some stakeholde­rs.

While the situation is projected to worsen challenges faced by the Federal Government’s attempt to ensure zero gas flaring latest by 2020, the Associated Gas Re- Injection Amendment Decree Seven of 1985 introduced a two kobo per million standard cubic feet ( mscf) as punishment for gas flaring, which was later increased to 50 kobo in 1990. It was N10 per Mscf in 1998 as a Ministeria­l Directive in 2011 proposed $ 3.50 per 1000 scf, but became effective in 2018.

Coming at a time that the Federal Government said that gas flare penalty payment by oil and gas companies in would increase to N103.51bn this year, little did the government know that it was allegedly being swindled by producers operating in the country.

An expert with the Stakeholde­r Democracy Network ( SDN), Jesse Martins Manufor had said: “Since 2013 when the GFT was launched, data from the tracker significan­tly matched that of the volumes declared by the oil and gas companies in the records of NNPC up until 2017. However, there has been a significan­t variation in volumes in the NNPC’S 2018 and 2019 data as compared to the GTF. “This might be as a result of gas flare regulation­s introduced in 2018, which impose an increase in the fines to be paid for gas flaring. Prior to 2018, it made more sense to flare and pay a penalty of 50 Cent because there was no stringent enforcemen­t. However, with the increase in the penalty to $ 3.50 for companies producing more than 10, 000bpd, the new regulation might be responsibl­e for the discrepanc­ies,” he suggested.

An energy expert, Madaki Ameh, who said the developmen­t amounts to tax evasion by the IOCS, noted that the companies were deliberate­ly adopting environmen­tal standards different from what obtains in their countries, or elsewhere in the world where they operate. This, he said, was due to the country’s lax and compromise­d regulatory environmen­t.

He insisted that loses by the government from the crime remains huge, adding that, “tax evasion has always been a crime. The Federal Internal Revenue Services ( FIRS) must set up an oil and gas industry specific crack team to monitor infraction­s and bring perpetrato­rs to book in line with extant laws.”

While a series of report by Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative ( NEITI) had in the same vein alleged discrepanc­ies in extracted crude oil, as well as revenue remittance­s by oil firms, a foremost en vironmenta­l activist and Director of Health of Mother Earth Foundation, Nnimmo Bassey, insisted that the poor reporting of gas flare was more of an unwillingn­ess to measure the amount of gas being flared, rather than an inability .

Bassey stressed that there were perverse factors inhibiting the measuremen­t of the amount of oil and gas produced, and the amount of gas flared as well, adding that it was regrettabl­e that the NNPC holds the biggest shares in the various JV agreements, yet the oil majors are the operators and they determine the production cost of oil in Nigeria.

“Is it surprising that production cost of a barrel of oil in Nigeria is one of the highest in the world? The production costs go to the producers. The JV shares the profit. Gas flaring fines are paid by the JV partners. Do y ou see the perversity in the arrangemen­t? It is impossible for the government to come down hard on the companies. They are inextricab­ly connected in the business.

“That incestuous relationsh­ip has to be dissolved and reorganise­d through appropriat­e legislatio­n. Making such a law has so far been impossible, possibly due to vested interests. The law must determine that the producer will pay such fines outside any regime that affects the revenue accruing to the other JV partners,” he said.

For the National Coordinato­r, National Coalition on Gas Flaring and Oil Spills in the Niger Delta ( NACGOND), Dr. Edward Obi, the reason why there are discrepanc­ies in the figure of gas flare is because oil companies perhaps, are unwilling to pay the new penalty rate. He said: “Now we noticed a huge drop the in the amount of gas flare in the data that is supplied from the time that government reviewed this penalty to now. And the discrepanc­ies is so much that they are reporting just about half of what they are flaring, which is unfortunat­e. I think they are trying to avoid the penalty cost. But the Department of Petroleum Resources ( DPR), which should be on the side of government should not accept those figures and present them to government like that,” he said.

Obi observed that whereas human beings can be influenced by their personal interest in the oil company, reports from a satellite that is completely detribalis­ed, depolitici­sed, dissociali­sed, and that is as abstract and objective as possible should be the best method to measure data of gas flared from the Niger Delta.

“The government should question the DPR, which is not giving it accurate figures of the gas flare. The government should ask, ‘ why are you accepting what the oil companies present to you? Why are you not confirming if this is same as what an independen­t satellite is confirming or not? There should be somebody independen­t in government who should be able to raise those questions,” he said. He wondered why the DPR ( if it is really working independen­tly for the Federal Government), has not deemed it appropriat­e to investigat­e discrepanc­ies in the Gas Flare Tracker data and those now being provided by the oil companies.

With the drop in the global price of oil due to the COVID19 pandemic, Obi urged the Federal Government and the Ministry of Finance and everybody else that wants money into the federation’s coffers to demand that oil companies pay government what is due to her.

 ?? PHOTO: YAHOO ?? Protests rock dozens of cities in the United States for the fourth day in response to killing of George Floyd by the Police… yesterday.
PHOTO: YAHOO Protests rock dozens of cities in the United States for the fourth day in response to killing of George Floyd by the Police… yesterday.

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