NNPC, DPR HEADING FOR A SHOWDOWN OVER PETROL CONSUMPTION, SUBSIDY FIGURES…As NNPC says Nigerians consume more petrol during scarcity…Corporation claims subsidy on supply not consumption…Collected N88.91bn as subsidy in May, as DPR doubts figures

The Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation and the Department of Petroleum Resources might be
heading for a showdown over the actual litres of refined petrol the nation
consumes daily.
In the middle of the disagreement was the Nigerian Governors’
Forum (NGF), which accused the NNPC of reporting excessive petrol consumption
figure to facilitate deduction of undue petrol cost (under-recovery) from
domestic crude cost.
This, the governors reckoned, explained the shortfall in what
NNPC remits to the Federation Account, noting that its allegation was based on
the disclosure made to it by the DPR.
But NNPC was unhappy that DPR provided information that
contradicted its position to a third party.
The DPR had told the NGF that petrol under-recovery was derived
from consumption or evacuation whereas NNPC claimed that PMS cost
under-recovery was derived from actual import volumes.
A governor, who was privy to some of the exchanges between the
NNPC, the DPR, the Minister for Finance, Kemi Adeosun, and the Presidency on
the issue, said like the DPR, the governors had evidence to prove that NNPC was
under-reporting.
For some weeks now, FAAC has not been able to conclusively hold
its meetings, because of claims by the NGF that the NNPC was shortchanging the
federation with exorbitant financial claims as subsidy over volumes of petrol
it imports into the country.
The governors had called for an audit of NNPC’s petrol
importation, claiming daily petrol consumption figures reported by the NNPC
were overblown by the corporation so it could keep more money away from FAAC.
In a letter by NNPC’s Group Managing Director, Dr. Maikanti
Baru, to Adeosun, which the governor allowed our correspondent to sight, the
corporation said: “The minister is kindly invited to note that PMS cost
under-recovery is derived from actual import volumes and not on consumption or
evacuations as presented to the NGF by the Department of Petroleum Resources.
“We would like to bring to the attention of the minister, the assertion
of the NGF that the NNPC is reporting excessive PMS consumption figures to
facilitate deduction of undue PMS cost under-recovery from domestic crude cost.
“The position was further exacerbated by the DPR’s claim that
there was never a time where PMS Truck Out (Evacuation) reached 60 million
litres per day and that evacuation was the basis in which PMS daily average
consumption is made.
“Additionally, the PPPRA evacuation data since January 2016
indicated average volume of 50 million litres per day.”
The letter was dated July 5th.
Hhowever, the letter appeared to be an effort by the corporation
to explain its position on the June 2018 revenue remittance to FAAC, which has
remained controversial till date, the letter suggested the DPR was suspicious
of the volumes of petrol the NNPC frequently claimed to have imported and based
its subsidy deductions on.
NNPC insisted that PMS cost under-recovery was based on supply
and not evacuation or consumption and therefore accused the DPR of bad faith.
Even though the NNPC chief admitted that the corporation did not
have an accurate data on the volume of petrol required by Nigeria on a daily
basis and may have been importing petrol with figures the PPPRA handed to it,
he was of the view that the DPR divulging such information to the NGF without
confirming with it was aimed at embarrassing the federal government.
He said: “NNPC observes that the submission by the DPR was not
well intentioned as they should have appropriately discussed and gotten
alignment or explanations from PPPRA and NNPC before divulging to third
parties. This should be guided upon to avoid embarrassing the government.”
Specifically, Baru insinuated it was probably the DPR that told
the NGF that the petrol importation figures frequently claimed by the NNPC were
not trustworthy.
But the NNPC, at a point, admitted that it did not know the
actual petrol the nation consumes daily.
He said: “Honourable minister would recall the ongoing
engagement by the inter-ministerial team composing Ministries of Petroleum and
Finance with the participation of the NNPC, DPR, PPPRA, PEF, OAGF and the CBN
to put in place a monitoring system for the entire fuel supply and distribution
system in the federation.
“Also, the Ministry of Petroleum Resources is engaging the
National Bureau of Statistics to establish actual consumption of petroleum
products in the country. The outcome of these exercises may establish the
actual fuel consumption in the country.”
NNPC said it had previously utilised 35 million litres per day
as basis for supplying its shares of the national consumption.
The corporation also faulted the data provided by the DPR saying
the figures might not be fully reflective of the actual evacuation figures from
the various depots.
Baru alleged that the DPR failed to confer with the NNPC and the
Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) on the importation volumes
before making a presentation to the NGF, adding that the NNPC charged subsidy
based on the actual volumes of petrol it imports and not on consumption or
evacuations from its depots.
It then added: “However, our evaluation of the PPPRA evacuation
data for all depots and terminals from January 2016 to December 2017 indicated
average load out of about 48 million and 50 million per day respectively.”
In the same letter, Baru disclosed that the corporation made
deductions worth N88.91 billion as subsidy claims for May 2018 and part of
outstanding subsidy claims for 2017.
Indicating the claims were based on the supplies figures, Baru
noted that N31.12 billion was for May 2018, while N57.79 billion was claims for
the 2017 outstanding.
“For the month of June 2018, NNPC proposed deductions of N88.91
billion as PMS cost under-recovery against domestic crude cost receivable in
May 2018. This comprises N31.12 billion for the month of May and N57.79 billion
as part of the outstanding for 2017.
“The 2017 under-recovery was not recovered due to low production
and prices, which would have had adverse impact on FAAC remittance in the
succeeding months.”
But to prove that NNPC was being economical with the truth, the
governor also allowed THISDAY to sight an earlier letter written to the
Vice-President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo by the same NNPC GMD.
In the letter dated May 9th, 2008, Baru asked Osinbajo to
prevail on the governors to accept what was remitted to the FAAC and to back
off the FAAC allocation crisis.
The governor said it was incredible for NNPC to tell the
Vice-President that Nigerians consumed 70 million litres per day between
November and December 2017, when the nation was battling with fuel shortage.
Excerpts from the letter to Osinbajo reads: “The corporation has
witnessed astronomical increase in the volume of PMS daily consumption, which
has averaged 50-55 million litres per day and even reached a peak of over 70
million litres per day during the festive period of November and December 2017,
and through the crises period.
“This necessitated Mr. President’s action of providing a $1.05
billion facility to NNPC to enable it import additional volumes through cash
purchases to augment DSDP (average of 35 million litres per day) to meet the
reserve depletion and the 50-55 million litres per day consumption.
“The corporation has, however, found succour in its ability to
recover the cost differential through a back-out from the monthly remittances
to FAAC based on actual volumes supplied,” the letter stated.
Rhetorically, the letter asked: “How can we be consuming 70
million litres, when there were long queue and when some people could not drive
because of shortage? It simply does not make sense!”
Last Thursday, the rescheduled meeting of FAAC, again, ended in
a deadlock.
The meeting was eventually suspended indefinitely.
Last Tuesday, the meeting, which was rescheduled after the
initial June 27 meeting ended in a stalemate and was also put off after members
failed to reconcile the records with the management of the NNPC.
Members could not agree to share the revenue brought for
distribution by the NNPC.
After the Thursday meeting, Chairman of Commissioners Forum of
FAAC, Mahmood Yunusa, said the meeting was postponed indefinitely and would
only be reconvened after “the process is strengthened.
“The next meeting is a function of when we finish the process..
What we are looking for is for the process to be strengthened. Once the process
is strengthened, there is no need for this fight.”
The commissioner said the decision of the 36 state governments
and other members of FAAC to reject NNPC’s paltry remittances, “is about the
system and the process we are working on. Once the process is strengthened, the
correct amount is supposed to go to federal revenue account.”
He said the practice of NNPC withholding revenues that should be
remitted to the FAAC for distribution to the three tiers of government was
being reviewed at the highest level of government.
“Mr. President will sit with all parties. He is highly
interested in this matter.. He is taking his time to ensure the right thing is
done,” Yunusa said.
As a result of the disagreement, civil servants across the
country are yet to be paid their last month’s salaries.
Already, some governors are negotiating to take loans at high
interest rates to pay their workers.
Members of the committee, consisting Commissioners for Finance
and Accountants General from the 36 states of the federation and Abuja, had
accused the NNPC of not remitting enough revenue for sharing.
But NNPC spokesperson, Ndu Ughamadu, said the N147 billion
revenue remitted to FAAC for sharing to the three tiers of government in June
was “in line with the terms of agreement it had with governors on the matter.”
Ughamadu said the agreement NNPC had with the governors was for
the corporation to make a monthly remittance of N112 billion only to FAAC.
He said the remittance was subject to sufficient funds from its
sales of domestic crude oil allocation for the corresponding month after
meeting certain operational obligations.
The spokesperson said NNPC was able to surpass the terms of
agreement with the governors on the monthly remittance for June by about N35
billion.
Since then, the committee has been meeting with the top
management of the NNPC, finance ministry officials, Accountant General of the
Federation and representatives of the commissioners of finance to reconcile the
accounts.
But on three occasions, the meetings failed to come to any
agreement on what should be the correct figure as the controversy continues.
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