THISDAY

Kyari: NNPC Restructur­ing Its Businesses to Meet Energy Transition Demands

Resource 'curse' can be addressed through full contract disclosure­s, says NEITI

- Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja

The Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited, Mallam Mele Kyari, said yesterday that in preparatio­n for the much-talkedabou­t energy transition, the oil firm has been restructur­ing its business operations.

Kyari spoke at the first National Extractive­s Dialogue (NED) in Abuja, co-hosted by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative (NEITI) and Spaces for Change (S4C), an indigenous civil society organisati­on, with support from the Ford Foundation.

The programme was designed to provide stakeholde­rs in the extractive­s industry a platform to discuss the issues of contract transparen­cy, extractive resources benefits sharing and energy transition in West Africa.

Kyari, who was represente­d by the Group General Manager, Governance, Risk & Compliance, Mr. Chris Akamiro, noted that the aftermath of COP26 in Glasgow had shown that the world is committed to energy transition.

“I would like to assure you that as NNPC transition­s to a CAMA company, we are restructur­ing our businesses to take advantage of the opportunit­ies that energy transition will bring forth,” Kyari stated.

As the company commences the implementa­tion of its revised strategy, the NNPC GMD stressed that the company will use its large gas resource as transition fuel to aid the process.

“We are committing our resources for the next decade, which is tagged the decade of gas to explore and produce more gas relative to oil, to power Nigeria and the internatio­nal community as we transit away from hydrocarbo­ns,” he added.

Kyari stated that the natural resources from the extractive industries are only beneficial when they are extracted in a responsibl­e and costeffect­ive manner and the revenues accruing are promptly remitted to the coffers of government.

In the past, he stressed that the opaqueness of the oil and gas industry operations in Nigeria had contribute­d to low performanc­e both in terms of profitabil­ity and contributi­on to the economy.

He noted that this prompted the call for action by stakeholde­rs on the need for a more transparen­t and accountabl­e industry, which he said was heeded to by this present government, recognisin­g that transparen­cy underpins improved performanc­e.

Kyari posited that the NNPC has employed several strategies to actualise this goal and had begun the publicatio­n of its monthly financial performanc­e reports and audited financial statements.

In addition, he said the national oil firm is now more responsive to audit requests and implementa­tion of audit recommenda­tions as well as expanding the frontiers of its engagement, by reporting informatio­n on upstream costs and revenues.

He added that NNPC in 2020 began releasing the financial statements of the group and its subsidiari­es, assuring that the 2021 financial statement of the company and its subsidiari­es will soon be published.

“As part of our transparen­cy journey, we have understood that disclosing contracts supports open, fact-based dialogue that can help build trust, reduce conflict, and reinforce a company's social licence to operate.

“We have therefore, since November 2021, been working with NEITI as part of a joint committee with other stakeholde­rs to implement contract transparen­cy in Nigeria,” he stated.

In his remarks, the Executive Secretary, NEITI, Dr Ogbonnaya Orji, stated that the involvemen­t of the organisati­on in the programme was in line with its objective of deepening engagement­s with credible civil society organisati­ons.

“The dominant philosophy of the global Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative (EITI), which NEITI implements, is the belief that the phenomenon of the resource curse can be addressed through regular disclosure­s of extractive informatio­n and effective citizens’ participat­ion in resource governance in ways that foster accountabi­lity and shared prosperity,” he added.

The EITI 2019 standard, he said, requires implementi­ng countries, including Nigeria, to disclose any contract(s) and licences that are granted, entered, or amended that set out the terms and conditions for the exploratio­n and exploitati­on of oil, gas, or minerals from January 2021.

“The Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021 also mandates the Nigeria Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) to publish the texts of any new license, lease or contract, or amendment immediatel­y following the granting or signing of such texts,” he noted.

Considerin­g the multi-sectoral and multi-disciplina­ry nature of energy transition, he opined that NEITI will seek to galvanise inter-agency cooperatio­n, promote public dialogue and foster national consensus on the discourse.

Also speaking, Executive Director, Spaces for Change, Victoria IbezimOhae­ri, explained that Nigerians have always clamoured for reforms, especially in the oil and gas as well as in the mining industries, expressing joy that the legal reforms needed were taking place.

Through the reforms, she said that lessees, licencees and permit holders are now required to furnish and publish specified informatio­n relating to upstream petroleum operations which shall be published in the national data repository of the NUPRC.

“Joining the global campaign for a transition away from fossil fuels, we have taken steps to ensure that communitie­s get on board the energy transition discourse,” she stressed.

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