THISDAY

Bedeviling PIB with Obnoxious Provisions

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an amendment to Section 240 of the bill on the sources of funding for the fund, slashing the percentage to 3 per cent.

Senators from the Niger Delta did not take this lying down as they immediatel­y rose against the amendment.

Proposing an amendment for the retention of the provision of Àve per cent in the report, Senator James Manager (PDP, Delta), said, “This particular thing that is before us is something that is very bitter for us to swallow, a very bitter pill for us to swallow.”

While Manager’s appeal was rejected, Senator George Sekibo (PDP, Rivers) called for a division to challenge the ruling of Lawan; after the Senate President ruled on the 3 per cent.

Senate Leader, Yahaya Abdullahi, intervened and prevailed on Sekibo to withdraw his motion, pleading that if it allowed division to happen, the Senate would be heading to the state of Armageddon.

Conceding that calling for division is the right of every lawmaker, he pleaded with Sekibo to allow the Senate progress with the bill.

Evidently overwhelme­d, Sekibo agreed, but appealed that the percentage should be increased. Another contentiou­s aspect of the bill is the joint committee’s recommenda­tion on Frontier Basins.

In recognitio­n of the need for Nigeria to explore and develop the Nigeria’s frontier exploratio­n, the joint committee’s move was designed to take advantage of foreseeabl­e threats to the funding of fossil fuel projects across the world; due to speedy shift to alternativ­e energy sources.

This frontier basins funding idea, is as unattracti­ve as the 3 or 5 per cent host communitie­s fund is put o΀sh to the Niger Delta region representa­tives, who believe this passed PIB is an unacceptab­le rape of the rights of the real oil producing communitie­s in Nigeria.

To them, this move is reminiscen­t of the dreaded ranching or Rural Grazing Areas (RUGA) policy the federal government is creating to protect and pamper the herdsmen, who are predominan­tly Northerner­s of the Fulani extraction.

Necessitat­ing a reassertio­n of the anti- open grazing Law in the Southern part of Nigeria, the Southern governors converged on Lagos, towards the end of last week, to respond to President Muhammadu Buhari’s directive to Ànd grazing routes for cow herders, in his now historic Arise Television interview.

Their rationale is anchored, logically, on the fact that herding of cows is a personal business; just as any other trade and should be treated as such.

In other words, the Southern governors reckoned that open grazing of cows is done at the expense of other people’s sweat.

Allowing the herders to roam the streets and farms, unhinged, will impact negatively on people’s farms and eventually lead to hunger.

Claims by some members of the Northern intelligen­tsia, alluding to the fact that the North owns all the land space across the South for their cattle to graze on, were false.

Asking helpless farmers to surrender their land to intrusive, disruptive and destructiv­e herders, (‘since only the living can argue about Land,’ as a Presidenti­al Aide once said) is interprete­d by Southern governors, as a joke taken too far.

So, seeking to allow 30 per cent of industry proÀts to prospect for oil in places that show no possible oil is similar to demanding for the building of RUGA settlement across the South.

While the redeÀnitio­n of host communitie­s, to include communitie­s that have oil and gas infrastruc­ture like pipes etc. running through their land, reÁects the assertion in President Buhari‘s recent cow grazing route directive.

For the Southern governors and their people, Buhari’s insistence on turning the South into a grazing route for herders who are largely Northerner­s of Fulani extraction, is seen in the light of the President’s penchant for using his powers to twist the law just to favour his own kinsmen; in this case, giving the itinerant herdsmen same right as indigenes across territorie­s in Southern part of Nigeria.

The growing insecurity, occasioned for the most part by invading criminal herdsmen, who kill farmers, rape their wives while their cows destroy farms is the cause of the resistance by the Southern governors against perceived forceful takeover of Lands in the South by the Fulanis.

But what is the rationale behind setting up such a huge chunk of proÀt made in the business by other people only to possibly waste it looking for oil where it is not likely to Ànd a drop. In practical terms, it means that if after spending over $10 billion for industry operations for the year and generate a proÀt of, say, $20 billion, it means $6 billion will be dedicated to Ànance oil exploratio­ns in Frontier Basins. Meanwhile, non-oil producing communitie­s will share a negligible 3 per cent with oil communitie­s because both are impacted ab initio.

The resistance by Niger Delta lawmakers against the obviously defective part of the bill is a reÁection of the Niger Delta people’s sentiment against these critical clauses in the bill.

As the two chambers prepare to transmit the bill to Buhari for his assent this week, opposition to the bill has begun to mount as Niger Delta youths and groups have started expressing their rejection of the bill.

Speaking at a media brieÀng in Abuja on Monday, National Leader of the Pan-Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF), Chief Edwin Clark, rejected the recently passed PIB, describing its provisions as unjust, satanic and provocativ­e.

Clark said the bill as passed was part of a larger plot to continue the subjugatio­n of the people of the Niger Delta by internatio­nal oil companies (IOCs) and their northern collaborat­ors.

SpeciÀcall­y noting the provision of 30 per cent of proÀts for further frontier oil exploratio­n in the North, Clark called to question claims by the current regime that it was working towards an economy away from oil.

Represente­d at the press conference by PANDEF’s National Publicity Secretary, Ken Robinson, Clark said the IOCs faced a di΀cult operationa­l environmen­t if the bill was not revisited and the concerns of the people of the region properly addressed.

Also rejecting the bill is a coalition of Rivers State oil and gas host communitie­s, in a statement, the group said the bill fails to address the aspiration­s of the communitie­s; adding that the PIB, which oͿers the host communitie­s three per cent equity participat­ion, was unacceptab­le and described it as a mischievou­s piece of legislatio­n.

Rather than the PIB to stand alone, the host communitie­s advocated that the bill should be merged with the Solid Minerals Act to better tackle their plights as they were denied the right to their natural resources.

In a statement issued in Port Harcourt, the Chairman of the coalition, Barituka Loanyie, said the PIB would end up compoundin­g them rather than solving the problems in the oil and gas sector.

“Having critically studied the Petroleum Industry Bill, 2021 recently passed into law by the National Assembly, we, the Coalition of Rivers Oil and Gas Host Communitie­s reject it for the reason that it fails to address the lingering issues of the oil and gas host communitie­s.

“The bill, rather than solve germane issues in the oil and gas sector, ends up compoundin­g them.

“We want to state without equivocati­on that the law is a mischievou­s piece of legislatio­n and a far cry from the yearnings of oil and gas host communitie­s, which only ends up providing a legal framework for corruption and portends a sinister ploy to continue with the unhealthy practice of denying host communitie­s the right to their God-given resources,” he said

He added that the provisions of the PIB were surreptiti­ously making every community that had a pipeline underneath them, oil and gas host community, stressing that the Solid Minerals Act, which governs the solid minerals sector, had better protection for the communitie­s in extraction sites, hence would better serve the oil producing communitie­s.

For the Ijaw nation, no less than 10 per cent, which the oil-bearing communitie­s demanded during the public hearings on the PIB, would be acceptable.

Rejecting the three and Àve per cent allocated to the host communitie­s in the PIB, the President, Ijaw National Congress, Prof Benjamin Okaba, described the proposed three and Àve per cent as a Greek gift, stressing that the slashing of host communitie­s’ percentage was ridiculous­ly painful.

Making the position of the Ijaw people known on Monday during a press conference in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, he contended that the Ijaw nation deserved fair treatment as it had suͿered long years of environmen­tal pollution and injustice despite producing the wealth that had sustained the health of Nigeria.

He also posited that increasing the percentage for more petroleum reserves in the “frontier basin” to 30 per cent as well as redeÀning the meaning of host communitie­s to include communitie­s where oil pipelines pass through were disgusting and provocativ­e.

“We reject in its entirety the three per cent and Àve per cent provisions as compensati­on; the redeÀnitio­n of host communitie­s and other provisions, including the allocation of 30 per cent of our oil resources to grope in the dark in the name of exploitati­on, a paradox of extreme kind that is not in symphony with common sense, equity and good conscience,” Okaba said.

He urged President Buhari to refrain from appending his signature to the PIB until the National Assembly prescribed 10 per cent.

Unlike the 13 per cent, which was constituti­onally committed to the oil states as derivation royalties, this three per cent will be deducted from the annual operationa­l expenses, OP-EX, of the oil companies and allocated to the Host Communitie­s Developmen­t Trust, (HCDT).

The passage of this bill by the 9th National Assembly, makes it the second time in 20 years, the PIB has been passed by the Nigerian federal legislatur­e.

Passed as the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill ( PIG-B), in 2018, President Buhari refused to sign it into law citing constituti­onal issues. Political and sectional interests have been the major reasons for the long tenure of the Bill at the NASS.

For decades, Nigeria has been denied billions of dollars in new investment­s and income coming to Africa annually; due to the absence of an enabling law that meets the contempora­ry needs of the oil industry in a competitiv­e world market.

If this bill becomes law, it is hoped that many of these issues will be addressed; including the unbundling of NNPC, and the protocols laid out to tackle gas Áaring and other environmen­tal consequenc­es of production.

If faithfully implemente­d, this long awaited legal framework, for the Nigerian oil and gas industry, will prove revolution­ary.

Before it proceeds on its July 25 recess, the legislator­s are determined to transmit the bill to Buhari. Preparator­y to that, the usual conference committee was constitute­d last week to harmonise the diͿerent versions and they are likely to submit their report early this week.

Spokesman for the Senate, Dr. Ajibola Basiru, said, “The National Assembly will carry out necessary legislativ­e actions on the bill.”

The Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters (Senate), Senator Babajide Omoworare, commended the Senate for passing the much-delayed PIB.

In a statement, Omoworare said that passing the bill after several eͿorts by the previous assemblies was a testament that the executive and the legislatur­e could really work together without compromisi­ng party position and individual perspectiv­e, in the most positive manner with a view to actualisin­g the common goal and communal good for Nigerians.

Speaking after the adoption of the clauses, House of Representa­tives Speaker, Femi Gbajabiami­la, commended his colleagues, saying, “Even with this feat of landmark legislatio­n, we are going on a high note.”

In his remarks, Senate President Ahmad Lawan said the 9th Assembly had achieved one of its fundamenta­l legislativ­e agenda, emphasisin­g that, “The demons (of PIB) have been defeated in this chamber. We have passed the bill.”

Given the growing opposition by the Niger Delta people against the passage of the PIB, which he presided over, the demons he defeated in the chambers may wear the agitation regalia and return to NASS with a renewed vigour, if the concerns raised are not decisively tackled before Buhari appends his signature to the bill.

 ??  ?? Gbajabiami­la
Gbajabiami­la
 ??  ?? Ahmed
Ahmed
 ??  ?? Buhari
Buhari
 ??  ?? Sylva
Sylva

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