THISDAY

FG Moves to Recover $3bn Unremitted Taxes from Addax Petroleum

Begins legal proceeding­s against oil firm

- David Iriekpen See the concluding part on www.thisdayliv­e.com

The federal government, through the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation, has commenced legal proceeding­s against Addax Petroleum Developmen­t Nigeria Ltd, a Chinese-owned oil firm, over the company’s alleged under-remittance of $3 billion in taxes and royalties.

Court documents sighted by THISDAY during proceeding­s before Justice Mojisola Olatoregun last week showed that the funds, according to the government, are outstandin­g claims against the company under the Petroleum Profit Tax Act and Petroleum (Drilling and Production) Amendment Regulation 2003 over Oil Mining Leases (OMLs) 123, 124, 126, and 137.

Joined as respondent­s in the suit are Addax Petroleum Developmen­t Nigeria Ltd, Addax Petroleum Exploratio­n Nigeria Ltd, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), the Ministry of Petroleum Resources/ Department of Petroleum Resources, and the National Petroleum Investment and Management Services (NAPIMS).

According to D.A. Awosika and Partners, counsel representi­ng the federal government, the $3 billion unremitted funds came as a result of the oil multinatio­nal’s illegal and irregular reliance on side letters dated November 21, 2001, December, 20 2001, and August 24, 2004 that were never gazetted.

The government moved to recover the funds from Addax after report on how the Chinese firm allegedly paid millions of dollars in bribes to Nigerian officials to secure juicy contracts in the oil industry.

In 1998, Addax Petroleum, a subsidiary of China’s Sinopec Group, one of the world’s largest oil and gas producers, entered into a Production Sharing Contract (PSC) with the NNPC (as concession­aire) in respect of OPL 98/118 and OPL 90/225.

Four years later, the company discovered oil in commercial quantities and the OPLs were converted into Oil Mining Leases (OMLs) 123/124 and 126/137.

The PSC entered by the two parties required Addax Petroleum to pay royalties on any oil produced from the relevant oil blocks at the rate of 20 per cent as stipulated by law. It also provided that the Petroleum Profit Tax Act (PPTA) applicable to the contract areas shall be 65.75 per cent for the first five years, starting from the first day of the month of the first sale of the oil, and 85 per cent thereafter.

But, according to the statement of claim filed by D.A Awosika & Partners, the lawyers prosecutin­g the case on behalf of the federal government, Addax Petroleum fraudulent­ly obtained a side letters in 2001 and 2004 that were “never gazetted” and which they used in calculatin­g their taxes and royalties.

The calculatio­ns in the side letters fixed the PPT payable by the company at 60 per cent, and rather than the 20 per cent flat rate of royalty, provided for a graduated rate depending on the volume of oil produced from the oil blocks.

The side letters were signed by Mr. Funsho Kupolokun, then Special Assistant on Petroleum and Energy to former President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2001 and Mr. Olabode Agusto, the then Director General/ Special Adviser on Budget to the President in 2004.

“Several objections and protests were raised by Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), NNPC, and DPR to the reliance on these side letters by the defendants to bypass, supplant, and subvert the process,” the government’s lawyers stated in their claim.

“In 2003, in order to give effect to the graduated royalty regime stated in the side letters, the Minister of Petroleum Resources (Obasanjo) issued the Petroleum (Drilling and Production) Amendment Regulation­s, which provided for graduated royalty rates for onshore and shallow offshore PSC which did not account for royalty by tranches.

“The Petroleum (Drilling and Production) Amendment Regulation­s 2003, when made, was given retrospect­ive effect from the first day of January, 2000, which was the same date of commenceme­nt of the graduated royalty rates contained in the side letters.”

Several meetings between Nigerian government officials – represente­d by the FIRS, DPR, and NNPC – and representa­tives of Addax Petroleum reassess and resolve the latter’s “colossal underpayme­nt” to the government between 2007 and 2012 yielded no results.

In one of the meetings, it was discovered that the company’s applicatio­n of the graduated royalty rates as provided for in the Petroleum (Drilling and Production) Amendment Regulation­s 2003 as contained in the side letters was erroneous.

Rather than relying on the applicable royalty rates in calculatin­g their daily production volume, Addax Petroleum allegedly developed a practice of slicing their volume rate of royalty to different tranches of production thereby significan­tly reducing their royalty obligation­s.

Government’s calculatio­ns of under-remittance showed that the company withheld $1.3 billion in royalties and $1.7 billion in PPT.

But Addax Petroleum maintained its right to the use of the side letters for computing the taxes on its operations and dragged the government over accusation­s of a breach of their 1998 PSC on the oil blocks.

In suit FHC/ABJ/ CS/1099/2014 filed before former Chief Judge of Federal High Court Ibrahim Auta, the company sought a judicial approval towards their continued use of the side letters to compute its financial obligation­s to the Nigerian government.

However, on May 26, 2015, three days before the administra­tion of the then president, Goodluck Jonathan, handed over to his successor, Muhammadu Buhari, the government negotiated a controvers­ial out of court settlement with Addax Petroleum, agreeing to pay the company $3.4 billion (about N1 trillion).

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