The Guardian (Nigeria)

Telcos may lose N25b over prolonged SIM ‘ lockdown’

- By Adeyemi Adepetun

• As more Nigerians get NIN • Stranded customers lament inability to retrieve lines despite having NIN • MNOS decry NIMC back- end facilities; employ ‘ Pareto Principle’ on subscriber­s • NATCOMS want court order on extension honoured • NIN issued may have reached 75m in eight weeks

Ithe court order demanding two months extension of NIN- SIM registrati­on stays, it would have been five months of no SIM registrati­on and activation in the country. The implicatio­ns of this is that mobile network operators ( MNOS) would have lost about 25 billion to the process as a result of inactive SIM cards, which would have increased by 9.6 million, at an average of 3.2 million lines per month, aside from those previously lost. Checks by The Guardian revealed that between December 2020 ( when the Federal Government gave the directive stopping operators from activating both new and old SIM cards that require re- activation) and February, while relying on the statistics from the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission ( NCC), about 7.6 million lines had become inactive, which had

Nigeria would have learnt lessons from the COVID- 19 pandemic by making informed decisions did not see the rehabilita­tion as a priority, adding that going ahead with the project amounts to “mortgaging the future of our children and grandchild­ren in the hands of people who have not shown that they can manage anything.”

Coming at a time that the National Assembly is calling for a probe into whereabout­s of money expended on fixing the refineries, Peterside told Arise TV that the rehabilita­tion is drainpipe for public office holders and their families. Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, yesterday, re- iterated his advice that government should urgently “privatize our refineries and the NNPC through the timetested LNG model in which the FG owns 49 per cent equity and the private sector controls 51 per cent.”

In a statement signed by him yesterday, Atiku said: “In 20 years ending 2020, the NLNG had delivered $ 18.3 billion dividends to government irrespecti­ve of taxes and other benefit accruals to the country. This will not only free the government of needless spending, but also clean up the infrastruc­ture mess in the petroleum downstream sector.”

The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Timipre Sylva, had explained that contract for the rehabilita­tion was awarded to Italian firm, Tecnimont SPA, and would be executed in three phases. The first phase is expected to be completed within 28 months, while the second and third phases would be completed in 24 and 44 months respective­ly.

Defending government’s insistence on spending $ 1.5 billion on the rehabilita­tion even as the nation may have spent over N360 billion on subsidy of Premium Motor Spirit ( PMS) in the first quarter of 2021, Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n ( NNPC), Mele Kyari, said the overhaul of the refinery remained the best option.

Giving the history of turnaround maintenanc­e in the country, Managing Director of Mudiame Internatio­nal Limited, and Mudiame Welding Institute, Prof. Sunny Eromosele said it would be better to put fund in other areas of economy, education and industries that would create more jobs.

“Government should stop refining business for private organisati­ons. It should be sold to available buyers while the workforce can be relocated to other ministries to save the little resources available,” Eromosele said.

Stating that the move to rehabilita­te is a waste of the nation’s resources, the expert noted that the project, expected to take five years may be remain a mirage after the administra­tion is out of office. Eromosele encouraged more investment in modular refineries instead of the rehabilita­tion of the old assets.

Founder and Principal Partner at Nextier, Parick Okigbo, said subjecting the move to national debate was sacrosanct. “There is nothing wrong with subjecting the sale of a national asset to a national debate. It engenders transparen­cy,” he noted.

WHILE fears of corruption dog the refinery project, stakeholde­rs are also raising concerns over what they described as scam in the return of petrol subsidy, questionin­g the nation’s daily petrol consumptio­n, which now hovers around 60 million litres from estimated 52 million litres. Energy expert Micheal Faniran, sees continuous subsidy payment as reinvigora­ting corruption and smuggling.

“That is the challenge with subsidy. At some point, people were getting subsidy in Nigeria and selling the product to other West Africa countries. So, in any case, we are subsidisin­g the whole of West Africa,” Faniran said.

A professor of energy economics, Wunmi Iledare, said the politics over the increasing debt profile from the subsidy remained dangerous to the economy and not sustainabl­e.

According to him, it will deny funding for critical infrastruc­ture - energy, road, water and education, stressing further that the inconsiste­ncies from the government were mindboggli­ng.

“It is sheer ineptitude to know the right thing to do and not do it on time. Time is of the essence and waits for no one. Price deregulati­on of the pricing of a commodity is a prerequisi­te to effective privatisat­ion of the industry producing such a commodity. Price deregulati­on and privatisat­ion do not imply absence of regulation. Effective regulation is a necessary condition for the eliminatio­n of market failures,” Iledare said.

Pwc’s Associate Director Public Sector, Energy Utilities & Resources, Habeeb Jaiyeola, had said the earlier the country accepted the reality of the pricing mechanisms of the downstream petroleum sector, the better, adding that the much time and resources being dedicated to petroleum subsidy continues to be a stumbling block in freeing up some significan­t portion of Government revenues to fund budget shortfalls and aid National developmen­t.

“We take on the upside of the crude oil price increases, and should also be ready to take on the downsides of the refined product price increase. The government should continue to put more efforts to ensure a transparen­t price structure to ensure Nigerians are paying the appropriat­e price for refined petroleum products that accurately reflect the market realities,” he said.

MEANWHILE, the umbrella body of Ijaw Youths Worldwide, the Ijaw Youths Council ( IYC) has thrown its weight behind moves by the Nigeria Labour Congress ( NLC) to reject the Federal Government’s removal of petrol subsidy and increase the price of fuel pump price to N234 per litre. The IYC described the proposed increase in fuel price from N162 to N234 as a sign of failed and inconsiste­nt economic policies of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administra­tion. The body said such attempt to increase the full price at a time Nigerians are suffering untold hardship is a deliberate attempt to worsen the misery of Nigerians, including the institutio­nalization of poverty, unemployme­nt and insecurity.

IYC, through its spokesman, Comrade Ebilade Ekerefe, in a statement issued in Yenagoa, argued that the claim by the Federal Government that it pays N120 billion monthly subsidy for the estimated 60 million litres of petrol consumed daily is not feasible.

Instead, IYC insisted that the people of the Niger Delta should be allowed to explore and refine their oil so as to produce what they can consume in the region and bring down the price.

 ??  ?? Catholic faithful observed Palm Sunday Mass at Our Lady Queen of Nigeria Pro- Cathedral, Area 3, Garki in Abuja … yesterday. PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA
Catholic faithful observed Palm Sunday Mass at Our Lady Queen of Nigeria Pro- Cathedral, Area 3, Garki in Abuja … yesterday. PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA
 ?? PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA ?? Catholic faithful during Palm Sunday Mass at Our Lady Queen of Nigeria Pro- Cathedral, Area 3, Garki in Abuja … yesterday.
PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA Catholic faithful during Palm Sunday Mass at Our Lady Queen of Nigeria Pro- Cathedral, Area 3, Garki in Abuja … yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria