THISDAY

Industry, Trade Ministry Raises the Alarm over PIB

Says strange sections negate accountabi­lity, transparen­cy

- Iyobosa Uwugiaren in Abuja

The Federal Ministry of Industries, Trade and Investment has raised the alarm over what it called strange sections proposed in the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), which if passed will compound the culture of secrecy and lack of transparen­cy in the oil sector.

This, it said, would negate global best practices.

In a submission made to the National Assembly, the ministry said it has discovered that strange sections, which were not part of the original bill that was discussed during the Senate Public Hearing, have found their way into the bill, saying they are capable of eroding the constituti­onal functions of the Weights and Measures Department of the Ministry of Industries, Trade and Investment.

In the memorandum, which was made available to THISDAY, the ministry argued that the Weights and Measures Act and the PreShipmen­t Inspection for Export Act evidently recognise the department as an ‘’indispensa­ble economic activity’’ of the federal government towards attaining its fiscal goal and implementa­tion of the attendant fiscal policies.

‘’The PIB, therefore, intends to take over the functions of Weights and Measures thus: Verificati­on/fiscalizat­ion, calibratio­n and certificat­ion of all measuring instrument­s used at both upstream and downstream sectors of the petroleum industry in line with internatio­nal practices and procedures; quantity determinat­ion of petroleum and gas products for trade purpose,’’ the ministry stated.

The ministry argued that for the purpose of accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and checks/ balances, issuance of a pattern of approval certificat­ion for measuring instrument used in the petroleum, and introducti­on of modern measuring instrument­s that will guarantee accurate measuremen­t in the oil sector are better handled by trained profession­als in the ministry.

The Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment continued, ‘’It should also be noted that if the proposed Bill is passed into law as it is, the Weights and Measures activities of the government of the Federal shall become extinct as far as the petroleum industry is concerned.

‘’The obvious negative implicatio­n of such an act on the fiscal policies of Nigeria and the attendant huge losses of revenue resulting from the failure of calibratio­n of the relevant equipment for ensuring the accuracy of the quantum of crude oil exported from Nigeria would be catastroph­ic.

‘’Allowing the offending sections will create two parallel legal metrology institutio­ns in Nigeria which is against the principle of legislativ­e drafting to give the same powers twice to two different institutio­ns. Also, the offending sections will only legalize the Department of Petroleum Resources under the proposed Nigerian upstream Regulatory Commission, encroachme­nt on Weights and Measures functions.’’

Warning against the passage of the bill in its present form, the ministry explained that the survival of the Nigerian economy depends largely on the oil sector and concentrat­ion of powers to supervise such a sensitive sector in the hands of one agency is not recommende­d in deference to demand checks and balances, accountabi­lity, and transparen­cy.

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