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Govt Lost N191bn To Oil Theft In Q1 –NNPC
Nigeria lost N191bn ($1.23bn) to oil theft and vandalism in the first
quarter of the year as crude theft continued to threaten the country’s
revenue base.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, in a statement on
Wednesday, also said there had been a significant drop in crude oil
production for the first quarter of 2013.
The corporation said in the statement by the Acting Group General
Manager, Public Affairs Division, NNPC, Ms. Tumini Green, that
incessant crude oil theft and vandalism along the major pipelines within
the Niger Delta had been responsible for the drop in oil production.
The NNPC said daily crude oil production during the period fluctuated
between 2.1 million and 2.3 million barrels per day compared with the
projected estimate of 2.48mbpd.
“Expectedly, this fall between actual production and forecast in
first quarter 2013 has resulted in a drop in crude oil revenue of about
$1.23bn (N191bn) that should have accrued to the Federation Account,”
Green said.
She further explained that the NNPC/Shell Petroleum Development
Company Joint Venture recently declared a force majeure on Bonny Crude
due to incessant crude oil theft, which had resulted in the shutting in
of 150,000bpd.
She said, “Investigations showed that 53 break points were discovered
along the 97-kilometre Nembe Creek Trunkline. Repair work is expected
to last about six weeks.
“This will further reduce our April and May monthly average to about
2.2mbpd and further decrease crude oil revenue by about $554m
(equivalent to N83bn) that should have accrued to the Federation
Account.”
Green, however, assured that the maintenance work would have minimal effect on gas supply to the domestic market.
“We shall continue to work with relevant government agencies, both at
the federal and state levels, to end this incessant crude oil theft and
pipeline vandalism. We have the potential to meet the national target
of 2.48mbpd if this menace is eliminated,” she said.
The NNPC spokesperson maintained that crude theft and pipeline
vandalism would continue to degrade the environment, increase
operational costs, impact negatively on the image of the country and
reduce revenue accruable to the nation.
She appealed to all stakeholders to cooperate with the corporation as it strived to eliminate the menace.
Meanwhile, SPDC said it had since Monday, April 15, 2013, shut down
the NCTL to remove crude oil theft connections and investigate suspected
leaks.
The Managing Director, SPDC and Country Chair, Shell Nigeria, Mr.
Mutiu Sunmonu, said, “We’re concerned that the NCTL has been targeted by
crude oil thieves repeatedly since we installed the new line in 2010 at
a cost of $1.1bn.
“The current exercise aims to remove a significant number of oil
theft connections and repair any leaks on the pipeline. We recognise
efforts by the security forces to contain the crime, and SPDC will work
with them during the shutdown to clear illegal connections on the NCTL.”
The 97-kilometre NCTL has been closed several times as a result of
crude oil theft leaks and fires between December 2011 and May 2012.
“Crude theft continues to affect people, the environment and the
economy, and urgent action is needed by all stakeholders to tackle the
problem,” Sunmonu added.
The International Energy Agency had, last year, said that Nigeria was losing about $7bn annually to oil theft.
“Oil bunkering, or theft, costs the government an estimated $7bn in
lost revenue per year,” the agency had said, adding that theft and
sabotage often led to pipeline damage, causing oil firms to cut output.
The Federal Government had been said to be jittery over the
possibility of not meeting its N11.34tn revenue target for the 2013
fiscal year due to crude oil theft by pipeline vandals, failure of
revenue generating agencies to fully remit what they generate into the
Federation Account and inefficiency in tax collection.
The Director-General, Budget Office of the Federation, Dr. Bright
Okogu, confirmed the government’s anxiety about the likely revenue
shortfall.
Okogu, in a document entitled, ‘FGN 2013 budget: Fiscal consolidation
with inclusive growth,’ a copy of which was obtained by our
correspondent, highlighted the challenges as well as other
growth-promoting initiatives of the budget.
“Revenue challenges facing the budget are independent revenue
non-full remittance by revenue generating agencies; taxes collection
efficiency issues (Federal Inland Revenue Service, Nigerian Custom
Service); pipeline vandalism and oil theft,” he said.
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