• Admits
approving loans, not contracts
• My memo
was misunderstood, says Kachikwu
Amid the
management crisis in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), it was
confusion yesterday as Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said he did not approve
contracts but loans for the the organisation.
His Senior
Special Assistant (Media and Publicity), Laolu Akande, had earlier yesterday in
his twitter page, @akandeoji, announced that Osinbajo admitted granting
approval to the NNPC for two oil contracts worth N640 billion while President
Muhammadu Buhari was away on medical leave.Akande said Osinbajo approved the
contracts in his capacity as Acting President in July.
“In response
to media inquiries on NNPC joint venture financing, VP Osinbajo, as acting
president approved recommendation after due diligence,” Akande stated. “Action
necessary to deal with huge backlog of unpaid cash calls which Buhari
administration inherited and also to incentivise much needed fresh investments
in the oil and gas sector,” he tweeted.
The Minister
of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, had alleged that NNPC’s Group
Managing Director, Dr. Maikanti Baru awarded the contracts without due
process.NNPC had stated in its response that two presidential approvals were
granted to the corporation for contracts with Shell Nigeria and Chevron at the
rate of $1 billion and $780 million.
But Osinbajo
later disowned the statement by his aide, saying the approvals he granted to
the NNPC while he was acting president were for financing arrangements for the
joint ventures between the corporation and International Oil Companies (IOCs)
and not contracts.
At Bonny
Island in Rivers State where he kicked off the Bodo-Bonny Road project
yesterday, Osinbajo insisted that he granted loans and not contracts.“These
were financing loans. Of course, you know what the joint ventures are, with the
lOCs like Chevron that have to procure.“In some cases, NNPC and their joint
venture partners have to secure loans and they needed authorisation to secure
those loans while the president was away. The law actually provides for those
authorisations.
“So, I did
grant two of them and those were presidential approvals, but they are
specifically for financing joint ventures, and they are loans not contracts,”
the vice president said.Also yesterday, Kachikwu said his recent memo to
President Buhari was not anchored on exposition of fraud in his ministry as
largely held.He explained that it had the thrust of proffering solutions to
moving the oil and gas sector forward, stressing that he had unalloyed
confidence in the president.
During the
third and last day of the three-day Nigerian content workshop sponsored, among
others, by the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) at the
Imo Trade and Investment Centre, Owerri, Kachikwu said his understanding of
Buhari was that of a ‘clean and meticulous’ leader, noting that his work would
better the lot of Nigerians.
The minister
wondered why his letter occupied conversations of Nigerians for many days,
stressing that people should disabuse their minds of the conception of fraud
and regard the memo as a correspondence to put the country on the path of good
governance.Kachikwu said that Buhari had directed that he should work cordially
with Baru to move the corporation forward.
To his
audience made of scores of experts in oil and gas industry, he said: “The
conversation has been largely misunderstood to border on fraud. It was not on
fraud, but on governance and suggested ways to go about it. I think a lot of
people got it wrong. People dwell much on issues of sensationalism and leave
the main substance. I think I and Baru are working together as Mr. President
has directed to move forward.”
Kachikwu
praised the leadership of the NCDMB led by its Executive Secretary, Simbi
Wakote, for a high performance in their activities anchored on promoting the
Nigerian content issues in the oil and gas sector of the nation’s
economy.Meanwhile, Anambra, Benue Trough, Benin, Sokoto and Bida may soon be
regarded as oil- producing areas as the Federal Government renewed its
commitment to hydrocarbon exploration in these places.
Meanwhile,
the NNPC has reinvigorated exploratory activities in some seven hydrocarbon
basins in the country outside the Niger Delta. These are Anambra, Benue Trough,
Benin, Sokoto and Bida.Baru disclosed this yesterday when he received the Governor
of Yobe State, Ibrahim Geidam at the NNPC Towers, Abuja.
Briefing the
governor on efforts to increase exploratory activities in the industry, Baru
stated that modalities were on to open up all the basins in the country to
prospective investors.“We are on target and we are looking at the prospectivity
of the whole basins of Niger Delta, Chad, Anambra, Benue Trough, Benin, Sokoto
and Bida. We are focused on delivering on these basins in line with our
mandate,” he affirmed.
The GMD said
preliminary exploratory activities had indicated some signs of hydrocarbon in
eastern Yobe of the Chad Basin, adding that once the corporation received
security clearance, the 3D seismic data acquisition in the area would continue
as scheduled.Geidam said his visit was informed by the commitment of President
Buhari’s government to increase Nigeria’s oil reserves through the exploration
of oil and gas in the Chad Basin, adding that the policy direction of the
Federal Government was of interest to the state because the basin covers a
large area including Yobe State.
In fact, in
its monthly financial report released yesterday, the NNPC/Chevron Nigeria
Limited (CNL) JV and NNPC/Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) JV project
to boost reserves and production in line with government’s aspiration.
The two
projects are expected to generate incremental revenues of about $16 billion
within the assets’ life cycle and would generate employment opportunities in
the industry, boost gas supply to power and rejuvenate Nigeria’s industrial
capacity utilisation.
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