The Nigerian Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative on Wednesday said the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation failed to disclose $22.8bn in its alternative
funding arrangements with its Joint Venture Partners between 2009 and
2011.
It also accused the corporation of causing the nation to lose N98.3bn to foreign exchange rate differentials in the period.
NEITI told the House of Representatives
Committee on Petroleum Resources (Upstream) that the findings came out
of its audit report on the finances of the corporation from 2009 to
2011.
The committee, which is headed by Mr.
Ajibola Muraina, is investigating the alleged connivance of the NNPC
with Swiss oil trading companies to defraud Nigeria of billions of
dollars in crude oil revenue.
The N98.3bn loss, according to NEITI, is
because the NNPC used exchange rates different from that of the Central
Bank of Nigeria in its transactions.
The country reportedly lost about $6.8bn
as of 2013 to the alleged connivance between the NNPC and the traders,
which the Bernes Declaration said involved the sale of Nigeria’s crude
oil below international prices.
On Tuesday, the Group Managing Director,
NNPC, Mr. Andrew Yakubu, had appeared before the committee to deny the
claim by the Bernes Declaration.
But, on Wednesday, when it was the turn
of NEITI to testify, the Executive Secretary, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, said
the agency did not only agree with the allegation by the Bernes
Declaration, but said that its audit report also indicted the NNPC.
Ahmed faulted Yakubu’s denial. She
noted, for example, that the NNPC used an exchange rate different from
that of the CBN in its transactions, resulting in the loss of N98.3bn to
the country between 2009 and 2011.
She promised to furnish the committee
with a comprehensive analysis of the link between the NEITI audit report
and the Bernes Declaration, both confirming the connivance with foreign
oil trading companies to short-change Nigeria.
Ahmed added, “There is similarity in NEITI’s audit report and the Bernes Declaration report.
“The report (Bernes Declaration) has a
lot of substance in it. NEITI will go back and link the Bernes
Declaration report with the NEITI audit report.”
She also told the committee that NEITI
strongly opposed the daily allocation of 445,000 barrels of crude to the
NNPC on the ground that the corporation did not have the capacity to
utilise the allocation.
She explained that the refineries in the
country lack the capacity to refine the crude, and called on the
Federal Government to review the policy.
Ahmed, who urged the government to
urgently privatise the refineries, said, “The 445,000 barrels per day
allocation should be reviewed to the actual refining capacity of the
refineries.”
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