Out of the 445,000 barrels of crude oil
allocated daily to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, the firm
sells about 35 per cent (155,750bpd) to meet its own needs, the
Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative has said.
According to NEITI, crude oil allocation
to the NNPC should be reduced since the country’s refineries are
performing far below expectation.
The agency’s out-going Executive
Secretary, who is a minister-designate of the Federal Government, Mrs.
Zainab Ahmed, disclosed this during the handing-over event at the
organisation’s headquarters in Abuja as yesterday.
Crude oil price on Tuesday, according to
the Central Bank of Nigeria, was $48.61 per barrel. If the NNPC exports
about 155,750bpd (35 per cent) of its crude allocation for its own
account, it means that the corporation may be spending about $7.56m or
N1.5bn daily to meet its private needs.
Ahmed said, “We need to address the
issue of domestic crude allocation. The domestic crude allocated to the
NNPC is supposed to be used for local refining in our four refineries.
But the refineries, over time, have been operating far below their
refining capacities. May be there is a little improvement now, but it is
very far below their total capacities; it is not yet up to 20 per cent.
“And the national oil company ends up
going into swap agreements, oil processing agreements, using our crude
oil and sending it to refineries outside our country so that the refined
products come to Nigeria. My advice is that we should reduce the amount
of crude oil that we allocate to the NNPC. Because when the crude oil
is allocated, 20, 28 or even 30 per cent is refined and about 30 to 35
per cent of it is exported for NNPC’s own account.
“So, if we reduce what we allocate to
the NNPC based on its refining capacity, you will encourage more
capacity development for the refineries themselves. In the past, the
revenue from the sale of domestic crude oil served as the major means of
financing the NNPC’s operations. So, if we reduce that, the NNPC will
have to look for some other ways to finance its operations and therefore
it will be forced to become more efficient.”
Ahmed stated that Nigeria also needed to
vigorously review and examine the management of fuel subsidy, stressing
that it was open knowledge that the scheme had been fraught with
corruption and was simply a drain on the economy.
Although she admitted that subsidy on
petrol was a kind of service, which the country should provide tothe
citizens, Ahmed was quick to state that the scheme had not served the
interest of the majority of Nigerians.
Punch
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