There is a financial mathematical inclination to believe that about N142
billion dollars (N28.4 trillion naira) have been missing under NNPC and
allied institutions since the inception of Jonathan administration in
2010 in the midst of national poverty. Who stole it and where is it
kept. Nigerians must demand to know those who
embezzled $142 billion dollars (N28 trillion naira) in five years or
else there is no hope for the future generations. This is far above the
S20 billion dollars revealed as missing under the former Governor of
Central Bank Sanusi Lamido who was fired exposing monumental corruption
in the high places.
I have released a report last year March where
using the benchmark of 45 months and excluding the stolen funds from
excess crude account, the probable missing fund is S90 and $115 billion
dollars. That time I deliberately chose to ignore some other corrupt
indices in the oil sector. This report is to update the report of 2014 .
Sanusi
Lamido, when he appeared before the Senate Committee on Finance in
February 2014, said that “as far as the Central Bank is concerned, the
most important point to establish is that there is a difference of $20
billion between what NNPC shipped and what it repatriated”. The
Government has hidden the details of the forensic audit report on issues
raised by Sanusi, releasing few doctored information.
Adams
Oshiomhole, Governor of Edo State and former Labor leader in Nigeria for
close to a decade who was involved in all petroleum related strikes,
negotiations and resolutions with the Federal Government said that $27
billion dollars that should be in excess crude account has been stolen.
Oshiomhole opined that “Nigeria’s budgets for the past three years have
been based on the average of $77 and $79, while the average price of the
country’s crude has been $108 per barrel, which gives an average
surplus of $30 per barrel.
“Ideally, we ought to be saving $36 per barrel on the 2.3 million barrel a day over the past three years and if you look at these numbers you will find that what we have in our excess crude oil account should be over $30billion but as we speak, we have barely $3 billon in our excess crude account,”
“Ideally, we ought to be saving $36 per barrel on the 2.3 million barrel a day over the past three years and if you look at these numbers you will find that what we have in our excess crude oil account should be over $30billion but as we speak, we have barely $3 billon in our excess crude account,”
The Managing Director of Shell Group, Mr Mutiu
Sumonu revealed that $ 5 billion dollars is stolen annually by oil
bunkerers. Speaking at the Joint Committee on Petroleum Resources
(Up-Stream) and Navy in 2012, Sumonu said that “The scale of crude oil
theft now is more than what the oil companies can handle. It is
extremely pervasive now. If you over-fly the whole of our operational
areas in the Niger Delta, you will see canoes, barges and illegal
refineries all over the place…”The country is losing about 150,000
barrels of crude oil per day, the equivalent of $5 billion per annum.
Imagine what that amount of money could do to our economy if we chose to
put it into the power sector”.
The Chairman House ad-hoc
Committee on Crude Oil Theft, Bashir Adamu, revealed that $5 billion
dollars is annually stolen by oil thieves. Speaking during the
inauguration of the Committee in 2013, Bashir disclosed that “The oil
and gas industry accounts for about two-thirds of government revenue and
more than 90 per cent of export earnings in Nigeria. “Illegal bunkering
has caused Nigeria to lose an estimated $5 billion (N780 billion)
yearly, amounting to $400 billion since Nigeria’s independence”
The
Group Managing Director of Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation
(NNPC), Mr Andrew Yakubu, said that Nigeria lost $11 billion dollars to
crude oil theft in 2013 alone. While disclosing this at the Nigeria Oil
and Gas Conference in Abuja in March 2014, Yakubu said that “in 2013
alone, the country lost 300,000 barrels of crude oil per day (bpd). By
implication, computing these figures at an average price of $100 per
barrel, it would result in a total loss of $10,950,000,000 (300,000 x
$100 per barrel x 365 days= $10,950,000,000) in 2013 alone”.
The
Comptroller General of Customs, Mr Dikko Inde, revealed that the nation
lost N603.8 billion naira ($4 billion dollars) to waivers in 9 months,
out of which N263 billion naira was for petroleum products. Speaking
when he appeared before the Joint Senate Committee on Finance and
Appropriation in 2013, The Customs boss said that “of the N603.8
billion, N263.8 billion was lost to waiver granted on importation of
petroleum products.”
A report by a Swiss based non-governmental
advocacy group titled “Swiss Traders Opaque Deals in Nigeria,” the Berne
Declaration’, outlined how the NNPC, in connivance with two Swiss oil
trading companies- Vitol and Trafigura, drained Nigeria of over $6.8
billion in subsidy payments through shady deals involving lifting of
crude oil at prices far below what obtained in the open market. This
revelation sparked off outrage in Nigeria’s Senate in November 2013 but
the lawmakers have probably forgiven the offenders .
In 2012,
following the exposition of another $ 1 billion dollars Malabu Oil Scam
where funds were wired into the private accounts of some friends of
government, the embarrassed Nigeria Senate mandated its Committee on
Upstream and Finance to investigate everything about the Malabu/ OPL 245
deal. The investigation have yielded nothing.
According to Hon
Farouk Lawan ad-hoc Committee on Subsidy report, N1.2 trillion ($ 6.8
billion dollars) was overpayments in subsidy which they asked the
indicted companies to refund to the government coffers. The Committee
had reported that contrary to earlier figures from various official
sources, subsidy payment of N2.59 trillion had been made as at 31st
December, 2011, an amount more than 900 percent over the appropriated
sum of N245 billion.” In addition, there are “outstanding claims by NNPC
and the marketers in excess of N270 billion as subsidy payments for
2011.” The Committee, in its report, established that “NNPC was found
not to be accountable to anybody or authority”. Based on these findings,
the committee recommended among others that, “ii. The freezing of the
accounts and recovery of all illegal payments made to the Petroleum
marketing firms, the NNPC, PPPRA and others which, according to the
House Committee, amount to N1.2 trn or $6.8bn”
In my earlier
report published in March, 2014, I used the benchmark of 45 month, which
is from the period Jonathan became President till when Sanusi spilled
in 2014. For the current computation, it will count from when Jonathan
became the substantive President till May 29th, when he would have
finished his first tenure which is sixty months, i.e., two months away.
Though
the NNPC had agreed that under their watch, $ 11 billion dollars was
stolen in 2013 alone, we shall still use the conservative figure of $ 5
billion dollars annually to calculate the oil theft. The use of least
average in cost computations is applied.
Going further, In
Jonathan’s 60 month period ending May 29, 2015, there is a probability
that the sums stated below might have totally missed if he fails to
tackle corruption within NNPC
(1) $20 billion dollars missing in 18 months =$1.1 billion monthly x 60 months =$ 66 billion dollars
(2) $ 30 dollars per barrel above budget benchmark of $ 79 dollars not accounted for meant for excess crude account = $27 billion dollars
(2) $ 30 dollars per barrel above budget benchmark of $ 79 dollars not accounted for meant for excess crude account = $27 billion dollars
(3 )$5 billion dollars lost annually to oil thieves =$0.41 billion monthly x 60 months=$ 25 billion dollars
(4) $1.5 billion dollars (N263 billion naira) lost to suspicious waiver on petroleum products in 9 months=$0.16 billion monthly x 60 months= $ 9.6billion dollars
(5) Subsidy Scam of 2011=$ 6.8 billion dollars
(6) Swiss-NNPC Oil Scam of 2013=$ 6.8 billion dollars
(7) Malabu Oil Scam of 2011=$1 billion dollars
(4) $1.5 billion dollars (N263 billion naira) lost to suspicious waiver on petroleum products in 9 months=$0.16 billion monthly x 60 months= $ 9.6billion dollars
(5) Subsidy Scam of 2011=$ 6.8 billion dollars
(6) Swiss-NNPC Oil Scam of 2013=$ 6.8 billion dollars
(7) Malabu Oil Scam of 2011=$1 billion dollars
Total probable missing/ stolen or unremitted Oil funds in 60 months = 142.2 billion dollars.
In
an earlier piece first published in April 2012 and titled, ‘How
Babangida, Abacha, Obasanjo shared Nigeria’s Oil Blocks’, and latest one
titled ‘30 Facts about Owners of Nigeria’s Richest Oil Blocks’ I had
opined that “Discretionary allocation of oil blocks entails that a
president can reward a mistress who performs wonderfully with an oil
block with capacity for cumulative yield of over $20 billion dollars
without recourse to any process outside of manhood attachments”.
I
also added in the report that” those in the petroleum industry dread
retirements as though it is tantamount to hell fire. No matter how
little your influence, something substantial must enter your hands
especially in hard currency. The nation loses billions of dollars in
diverted revenue whenever any round of auction occurs”. The Jonathan led
government seems too frightened to fight corruption.. Who is he afraid
of.
The volume of corruption as recently revealed by state
agencies had shown that what was contained in that report was a mere tip
of the iceberg. NNPC has proven worse than Boko Haram and this Economic
Boko Haram and their helpers in government are responsible for sending
lots of Nigerians to early grave through poverty, insecurity, diseases,
deplorable road conditions and other harsh living conditions. Nigeria
must insist on a full probe of the criminality that went on under NNPC
and their allied accomplices in government. Failure to institute an
independent probe and bring all the thieves to book, Nigeria risks a
violent revolution.
Obinna akukwe
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