The Guardian (Nigeria)

New Petroleum Industry Bill: Matters arising

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THE passage of the nation’s Petroleum Industry Bill ( PIB) appears to have been jinxed for over 20 years now, going by the range of disputes hovering over the proposed law. Yet, its concept, objectives and long- term goals remain impeccable as to warrant not just its passage but its full implementa­tion. It is crucial for all stakeholde­rs as well as all arms of government to embrace the common desire to make the law, and its intended brief of sanitising the oil industry a reality.

Tagged “A Bill for an Act to Provide Legal, Governance, Regulatory and Fiscal Framework for the Nigerian Petroleum Industry, the Developmen­t of Host Communitie­s and for Related Matters ( HB. 1061)” the newly presented bill, has generated much controvers­y and public show of shame at public hearing held at both arms of the National Assembly. This indeed caught the attention of the entire country, amid the numerous economic and security challenges the populace has been grappling. The melodrama marks the high stakes involved as they affect host communitie­s, oil producing states, oil companies, labour unions and the Federal Government, among others. The whole issue boils down to “who gets what” in terms of resources, the governance structure and the operating environmen­t in the industry.

These contentiou­s issues have been the bane of the passage of the bill by successive federal administra­tions since the law was first muted about 20 years ago. At the heart of all these is the lack of a functional fiscal federalism arrangemen­t acceptable to all the components of the country.

Firstly, the bill, as newly presented, fails to clear what it meant by “host community” thus creating room for speculatio­n by the stakeholde­rs present at the public hearing. Does “host community” mean the “town” or “local government area” or “senatorial zone” or the “state” where the oil and/ or gas is being drilled and produced? Does it also include communitie­s outside the Niger Delta and other oil producing zones or is it expansive as to include areas where oil is not produced but is being processed through downstream and marketing activities? This has to be decided and clearly so in such a manner that the communitie­s that suffer from oil pollution and other environmen­tal degradatio­n are not short- changed.

Another core issue in the reworked bill is what goes to the host communitie­s. The bill deviated substantia­lly from the original proposal of 10% of profits of the oil companies going to the host communitie­s; to 5% considered under the 8th National Assembly; to a mere 2.5% in the present bill – thus attracting the vehemence of representa­tives from the Niger Delta region. This clamour has not subsided and understand­ably so, despite the effort of Timipre Sylva, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources to explain that what is on offer to the host communitie­s is 2.5% of the prior year’s operating expenditur­e ( OPEX) and not of profit, given that the oil companies may decide not to declare profit in any given year; that they must thus commit to the communitie­s whether they make profit or not. There is room for some horse- trading here. The goal should be to ensure that host communitie­s get adequately compensate­d given the negative externalit­ies they suffer by virtue of the oil production activities in their environmen­t. This is more so since the countr y is yet to embrace full fiscal federalism, a current clamour by most groups across the country.

When it was first muted by the Olusegun Obasanjo administra­tion, the PIB was meant to regulate the entire sphere of the industr y and repeal all current existing oil and gas legislatio­ns. It was also meant to overhaul the petroleum industry, entrench efficiency and transparen­cy in both upstream and downstream sectors and bring operations in line with internatio­nal standards. The passage of the bill is expected to pa ve way for massive investment into the countr y’s oil and gas sector and increase government revenue from oil as well as lay down a strengthen­ed legal and regulator y framework for the Nigerian oil industry.

The 8th National Assembly, under the headship of Senator Bukola Saraki, in the quest to make the passage easier and less contentiou­s, broke it down into four different components, namely the Petroleum Industr y Governance Bill ( PIGB), the Petroleum Industr y Administra­tion Bill ( PIAB), the

Petroleum Industry Fiscal Bill ( PIFB) and the Petroleum Host and Impacted Communitie­s Bill ( PHICB). Only the PIGB was passed by the Nigerian Senate in May 2017 and House of Representa­tives in January 2018, but subsequent­ly rejected by the President. The PIGB originally was meant to make the oil and gas sector more transparen­t and commercial­ly viable as well as combine the functions of revenue generation and environmen­tal protection in a single agency. However, all these have been jettisoned by the Buhari administra­tion resulting in the reworking of the bill to take a total departure from the work of the 8th National Assembly.

Mr. Timipre Sylva had earlier stated that the bid rounds for oil blocks stand suspended until the PIB is passed with serious concerns expressed by many stakeholde­rs in the sector, given that the marginal oil fields are a substantia­l component of the country’s oil production and will add to the tempo of activity as well as job creation in the sector. If this suspension is to be sustained, then it behoves on the National Assembly to enhance the quick passage of the PIB, as one of the major achievemen­ts of the administra­tion.

It is important for both the President of the Senate and Speaker of the House of Representa­tives to keep to their promise to pass the bill by April 2021. The country cannot prevaricat­e on its passage. Changes in the global energy market are dynamic, and the country should make the best of the gains from the oil and gas industry before fossil fuels become obsolete in the global energy consumptio­n matrix.

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