The Guardian (Nigeria)

Discontent In Petroleum Industry Bill

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THE restlessne­ss that has greeted the passage of the much- talked about Petroleum Industry Bill ( PIB) by the National Assembly ( NASS), the other day, has clearly counteract­ed the desired goodwill that the proposed law should ordinarily command. The bill ought to represent a good starting point in the effort to re- position the oil and gas industry but it does seem that the legislatur­e has bungled such an important assignment after several years of undertakin­g it.

On the one hand, it is fulfilling that the bill’s passage has brought a close to about 20 years of heated debate over its provisions; it is unfortunat­e on the other hand that the action has only resulted into a heated controvers­y, signpostin­g either that the lawmakers did not do a thorough job in tune with the yearnings of the people and stakeholde­rs; or it only worked to satisfy the personal or sectional cravings of the National Assembly members. The NASS should have taken steps to ensure that the bill does not create more problems than it was meant to solve. What is worth doing is what doing well. The NASS has a duty to pass a bill that would address the injustice and sleaze in the oil and gas industry in Nigeria.

The Petroleum Industry Bill (‘ PIB’ or ‘ the Bill’) was passed by the National Assembly on Thursday, July 1, 2021. It has been in the works since the early 2000s, and will become law once the President assents to it. Enactment of PIB is seen as Nigeria’s boldest attempt at revamping the fortune of the Nigerian Petroleum sector. The PIB either repeals or amends at least 10 different legislatio­ns applicable to the Petroleum Industry. This ‘ substantia­lly enacted legislatio­n’ is expected to bolster the government’s revenue and create significan­t investment opportunit­ies for local and internatio­nal investors.

But activists drawn from civil society organizati­ons, as well as host communitie­s have condemned the bill for failing to address critical issues in the oil and gas sector, especially as they concern oil- bearing communitie­s. They described it as “obnoxious and vexatious,” insisting that it failed to address community, economic and environmen­tal concerns.

As it were, some of the criticisms are not misplaced as, given the crisis of a warped polity, the bill fails to reflect the desire for fiscal federalism where regions can control their resources and the country can grow. In view of the uproar still bedeviling the harmonizat­ion by both arms of the National Assembly, lawmakers should realise that they have not finished work until all disagreeme­nts and difference­s arising from it are fully resolved. For the aggrieved parties, mostly from the oil- producing Niger Delta communitie­s, this is the time to pursue their grievances steadfastl­y and diplomatic­ally before the president assents to it, so as to prevent being presented with a fait accompli.

The bill contains 319 clauses; the overriding issues that have raised opprobrium seem to be the percentage allocation­s made to various stakeholde­rs. For instance, whereas, the Senate approved 3 per cent equity share of profits accruing from oil and gas operations by the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporatio­n ( NNPC) to the host communitie­s, the House of Representa­tives granted 5 per cent. This contrasts with the 10 percent demanded by the host communitie­s in the original PIB. The Senate Committee had proposed 5 per cent that was rejected. Over and above that, the Senate granted 30 per cent of the same profits for exploratio­n of oil in what it calls “frontier basins.” The Niger Delta communitie­s feel short- changed in the new bill. Pundits say it amounts to robbing Peter to pay Paul.

The bill also threw up other controvers­ial issues. For instance, the definition of host communitie­s is contentiou­s; as “host communitie­s” are no more restricted to the oil- producing areas alone but includes communitie­s where pipelines pass through. Under the bill, non- oil producing states that have pipelines passing through them will now be beneficiar­ies of the percentage allocation for that purpose. That automatica­lly grants some northern states the status of oil- producers.

More than that, the bill includes transformi­ng the NNPC into a profit- oriented company devoid of political interferen­ces. Whatever would make the NNPC to be efficient and profitable is welcome but given the sleaze that defines the company, would it not have been better to privatise the behemoth, as government- run organisati­ons hardly make profit?

The granting of humongous 30 percent to imaginary frontier basins that are mostly in the north is blatantly unjustifia­ble. If that is not cheating, then the meagre 10 per cent demanded by the oil- producing communitie­s in the Niger Delta should be granted for peace to reign in view of the crass underdevel­opment and degradatio­n of the region and its livelihood system by oil pollution. Expectedly, the Pan Niger Delta Forum ( PANDEF) and the host communitie­s have rejected the 3/ 5 per cent equity shareholdi­ng and have called for its reversal. The public perception is that the 30 per cent is skewed to favour the north.

Besides, that such a huge percentage is made for oil prospectin­g when the rest of the world is moving away from oil is astounding and myopic. Why did the Senate choose to ignore the emerging trend worldwide that has to do with a future without oil? Why did the bill not make provision for finding alternativ­es to oil?

The bill passage is the second time in two decades. The first was under the Obasanjo administra­tion that refused to assent to it. If the provisions are satisfacto­ry and assented to by President Buhari, the bill is expected to drive investment into the nation’s oil sector. It needs to be stressed that the bill is not an end in itself but a means to a desired end.

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