The report by the Natural Resource Governance Institute, titled “NNPC  still holds blank check” said that within the first six months of the  Buhari administration, the NNPC withheld over $4.2 billion (about N824.7  billion) out of a total of $6.3 billion (N1.24 trillion) revenues  realised from crude oil sales in the second half of 2015.
The withheld revenues represented about 66 per cent of the total  revenue – $1.4 billion earnings from Nigeria’s regular crude oil exports  for the period; $3.4 billion from domestic crude oil sales, and $1.5  billion from oil sold from the corporation’s upstream subsidiary, the  Nigerian Petroleum Development Company, NPDC oil fields.
 The report said only $2.1 billion (about N413.7 billion) was transferred to the Federation Account.
 The group said the unremitted revenues for the six months was about  14 per cent more than the amount withheld by the corporation under the  Goodluck Jonathan administration in the first half of 2015, and about 12  per cent higher than the share withheld in 2013 and 2014.
 The report said the figure of unremitted oil revenues in 2015  contrasted sharply with 2005 figures, which showed the NNPC remitted  about 68 per cent of its total oil sale earnings to the Federation  Account and kept only 32 per cent that year.
 The report said while part of the withheld funds was used for  servicing Nigeria’s share of the joint venture operating obligations,  the NNPC did not fully explain what the other retained revenues from  domestic crude and NPDC oil sales were used for.
 In general, the report said despite the on-going reforms in the oil  sector, the NNPC under the present administration was still retaining a  major share of oil sale earnings and spending at will.
 Some of the reforms by the Buhari government, the report noted, have  cut the number of passive, well connected middlemen that pocketed  billions of oil revenues, while the administration has cancelled costly,  unbalanced NNPC swap contracts as well as seek more efficient  replacements.
 The report lamented that recent announcements on NNPC reforms and the  latest drafts of the Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB, by the Ministry of  Petroleum Resources, failed to adequately address how NNPC and the  government would share future oil revenues
 “Until government establishes a clear, legally enforceable rule  governing which revenues NNPC can keep and how they can be spent, oil  sector corruption and waste could return to their prior devastating  levels once the president (Buhari) leaves, or prices rise,” the report  noted.
 While encouraging government to push ahead with its reform plans for  the oil sector, NRGI stressed the need for NNPC to adopt new financial  controls and transparency measures for its subsidiaries, especially  bordering on the several billion revenues retained each year from NPDC  operations and its oil trading and marketing subsidiaries.
 The Institute also called for the immediate replacement of the  445,000 barrels per day crude oil allocation for domestic refining with a  fit-for-purpose mechanism for supplies to the country’s four  refineries.
 “The government should move to curb the corporation’s discretionary,  unaccountable use of much-needed public funds. Until the government  instates clear rules for NNPC financing, both the controversies and the  underlying revenue leakages will persist,” the report said.
 Describing the NPDC as one of the Nigerian petroleum sector’s “great  black boxes”, the report said some of the oil from the company’s fields  went to its strategic alliance partners, two of which were paid in oil  for purportedly shouldering the company’s financial obligations.
 From the production of an average of 30,000 barrels per day of Okono  grade crude during the period, the reportsaid some of the oil from the  company’s fields went to its strategic alliance partners, two of which  were paid in oil for purportedly shouldering the company’s financial  obligations.
 From the production of an average of 30,000 barrels per day of Okono  grade crude during the period, the report said NNPC retained all  earnings ( about $12.3 billion over the past decade) from the offshore  Oil Mining Lease (OML) 119 owned wholly by NPDC.
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Saturday, 31 December 2016
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Revealed! $4.2 Billion Reportedly Missing In NNPC Under Buhari
Revealed! $4.2 Billion Reportedly Missing In NNPC Under Buhari
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Ibrahim Firdaous Atilehin-Oluwa,(FRIZZY) is An Undergraduate From University Of Ilorin. Nigeria.. From Kwara State.

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