THISDAY

NNPC Records $1.2bn Shortfall in Priority Projects Funding

PIB: Senate restricts petroleum products importatio­n to refinery owners

- Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja and Peter Uzoho in Lagos

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) recorded a total shortfall of $1.2 billion in the financing of its priority projects between January and May 2021, latest data from the national oil company has shown.

This is coming as the Senate’s decision to award three per cent to oil-bearing communitie­s may not be the only controvers­ial clause in the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB).

The Senate in the recently passed PIB, has also restricted the importatio­n of all petroleum products into the country to only players that have local refining capacity.

The NNPC document showed that the entire appropriat­ion for ‘calendaris­ed’ cost recovery and funding for priority projects was $6.43 billion, which was further segmented into $536 million monthly.

According to the corporatio­n, of the $2.680 billion that was supposed to be released for the projects as of May this year, only $1.468 billion financing had been made available, leaving a deficit of $1.211 billion.

In terms of actual functional dollar funding level, a breakdown of the releases showed that in January, $276.4 million was spent on cost recovery and ongoing projects, in February it was $252.9 million, while it was $307.65 million in March.

In the same vein, for April, out of the monthly appropriat­ion of $536 million, $239.2 million was spent, while in May, it increased to $392 million, the highest in the period under considerat­ion.

The corporatio­n listed the federally funded upstream projects as gas infrastruc­ture developmen­t, Brass LNG, crude oil pre-export inspection agency expenses, frontier exploratio­n services as well as the Excravos Gas-to-Liquid (EGTL) operating expenses.

However, it noted that the funding excluded pipelines security and maintenanc­e, which gulped N2.263 billion in May alone.

THISDAY had earlier exclusivel­y reported that the corporatio­n had resumed the monthly funding for its frontier exploratio­n services which did not receive any budget in April, but gulped N3.216 billion in May, having received N1.964 billion in January, N1.920 billion in February, and N2.255 billion in March.

Added to that, in May, the gas infrastruc­ture developmen­t was funded to the tune of N3.919 billion and the crude oil pre-export inspection agency expenses was N659 million.

In the month under review, funding for renewables was N196 million, while the Nigeria-Morocco pipeline which was not funded in April, received attention to the tune of N8.33 million in May.

Meanwhile, the Senate in the

PIB has restricted petroleum products importatio­n to only operators who own and run local refineries.

The joint PIB harmonisat­ion committee of the National Assembly is expected to meet from today to address some of the controvers­ies generated by the bill, chief among them are the three per cent of the operating expenditur­e of oil companies that should go to the host communitie­s and the 30 per cent NNPC’s profit designated for exploratio­n in frontier basins.

THISDAY gathered that while the PIB expectedly removed price controls on petroleum products in section 205, the Senate version of the bill has a clause that constrains market competitio­n by restrictin­g the importatio­n of products to only players with local refining capacity.

The controvers­ial provision in the Senate’s version contained in Section 317(8) of the PIB, clearly counters the provision of 205(1) of the bill, which states thus: “Subject to the provisions of this section, from the effective date, wholesale and retail prices of petroleum products shall be based on an unrestrict­ed free market pricing conditions.”

The inserted section 317(8) in the Senate bill stated that the authority, that is, the new agency to oversee the activities of downstream and midstream sectors of the oil and gas industry shall apply the Backward Integratio­n Policy in the downstream petroleum sector to encourage investment in local refining.

The Senate’s version also stated that, to support the provision above, licence to import any product shortfalls shall be assigned only to companies with active local refining licences.

The upper legislativ­e chamber also stated that import volume to be allocated between participan­ts based on their respective production in the preceding quarter, and that such import to be done under the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited Direct Sale/Direct Purchase (DSDP) scheme.

The Senate further in its own version of the PIB, equally stipulated that, to safeguard the health of Nigerians, imported petroleum products shall conform to the Afri-5 specificat­ion (50ppm sulphur) as per the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) declaratio­n of February 2020 on the adoption of the Afri-Fuels Roadmap.

Reacting to the controvers­ial provision, an industry source, who pleaded anonymity, said such a provision in the Senate’s version of the PIB, which restricted the importatio­n of refined products to only players with local refining capacity would create a monopoly in a price deregulate­d environmen­t and destroy the Nigerian downstream petroleum industry.

“The provisions above will create a monopoly in a deregulate­d price environmen­t thereby destroying the Nigerian downstream industry as we know it today. It restricts the importatio­n of all petroleum products, including petrol, diesel, aviation fuel, lubricants, base oil – products that are already deregulate­d, to only players with local refining capacity,” the source said.

He added that only the NNPC currently has domestic refining capacity for petrol and will be the only importer.

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