The House of
Representatives, yesterday, passed the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill
(PIGB), which provides for the governance and institutional framework for the
petroleum industry and for other related matters.
petroleum industry and for other related matters.
The bill
which was passed by the Senate in May 2017, seeks to unbundle the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), provides for the establishment of
Federal Ministry of Petroleum Incorporated, Nigerian Petroleum Regulatory
Commission, Nigerian Petroleum Assets Management Company and National Petroleum
Company and Petroleum Equalisation Fund.
With the
passage of the bill, a new regulatory agency known as Nigeria Petroleum
Regulatory Commission, (NPRC) would take over the functions of Petroleum
Inspectorate (PI), the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and the
Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) when signed into law.
Deputy
Chairman, Ad-hoc Committee on Petroleum Industry Bills, Victor Nwokolo (PDP,
Delta), who led the debate on the report, explained that some subsidiaries of
the NNPC had also been merged into an entity to be known as the Nigeria
Petroleum Regulatory Commission. According to him, the House Committee adopted
the Senate’s version of the PIGB.
The Speaker
of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, yesterday enjoined President
Muhammadu Buhari to, as a matter of urgency, sign into law the PIGB.
The Speaker
assured that the bill will be transmitted to the President as soon as it is
harmonised with the Senate version passed last year.
He explained
that the House had to expedite action in the passage of it’s own version of the
bill following failure of the executive to present a draft bill to the National
Assembly.
Dogara, who
described the passage of the PIGB as
historic and landmark achievement by the 8th National Assembly after it was
first introduced to the parliament by late President Umaru Musa Yaradua in
2008, expressed optimism that once the long-awaited PIGB bill becomes
operational, the petroleum industry will witness drastic improvement.
He contended
that the enactment of the legislation would attract investors and open up the
sector as the NNPC would be unbundled with the creation of other bodies.
The Speaker,
however, noted that work would still continue on other aspects of the petroleum
in accordance with the 8th Assembly’s Legislative Agenda.
Meanwhile,
the Senate has directed its Joint-Committee on Petroleum and Gas Resources to
speedily conclude work on the segment of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) that
deals with the interests of oil producing communities otherwise known as Host
Community Bill.
The Senator
Kabiru Marafa-led joint committee was actually given four weeks ultimatum in
July last year to submit its report on the Bill but has since failed to do so.
President of
the Senate, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, gave the charge at the commencement of
Senate proceedings yesterday.
The
Host-Community Bill, which was endorsed and referred to the committee in July
2017 was structured to bring direct funding for the development of the
petroleum host-communities under the direction and control of the communities
themselves.
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