Revenue generating agencies hide from FG — NEC
THE National Economic Council (NEC) was on Thursday
told that some federal revenue generating agencies were hiding revenue
or engaged in unauthorised spending of money that was supposed to be
remitted to the federation account.
Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, who raised the alarm at the
meeting of NEC presided over by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo at the
Presidential Villa, informed the council that such infraction has been
going on for a long time.
According to Governor Willy Obiano of Anambra State who briefed State
House corespondents on the outcome of the NEC meeting, the Finance
minister told NEC that the activities of the agencies amounted to
financial abuse.
He said: “The long term financial abuse by some revenue generating agencies was taken at the council.
“The finance ministry reported to the council certain activities of
some revenue generating agencies that amounted to financial abuse of
the revenue they generate.
“They include paying salaries above Revenue Mobilisation Financial
Accounts Committee specifications, converting official cars to
personal ownership, monitising medical allowances arbitrarily,
unapproved overseas travels, lavished training allowances, excessive
personal loan approval including unapproved mortgages.”
He assured that the ministry of finance and the Revenue
Mobilization, Allocation and Fiscal Accounts Commission (RMAFC) were
working together to “rein in these abuses as these revenue agencies
raise as much as N1.5trillion and spend almost 90 percent on its
recurrent expenditure.”
Obiano stated that NEC was told that even though the act has been
going on for a decade “but such financial abuses whereby the agencies
hide the revenues that ought to go to the federation accounts will now
be exposed and terminated.”
On Excess Crude Account, Obiano who briefed corespondents alongside his
Bauchi State counterpart, Abubakar Mohammed and the Minister of State
for Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, said that the balance of the
account presented by the Minister of Finance showed that it stood at
$2.4 billion as at November 2016.
He added that the sum of $1.1billion was disbursed in the month of
October to 35 states and a total of $6.3billion has now been disbursed
to each of the 35 states.
On Ecological fund, he said N2billion was said to have been paid to the states by the last administration.
“However, some states did complain that they did not have equal
share of the money or even got anything at all. The reason why that
occurred will be investigated and report made available to the
president,” he added.
In his remark, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources
revealed that NEC endorsed a new funding regime for the oil and gas
industry, eliminating Cash Call regime and thereby saving that country
at least $1billion from next year.
According to Kachikwu, beginning from 2017, the issue of Cash Call
era would would disappear and “the effect of what this is that
investments in excess close to $15billion are likely to be announced by
the oil companies bringing back most back most of the project within
couple of weeks.”
He stated that the current upstream Joint Venture arrangement in the
Nigeria’s oil and gas industry was unincorporated Joint Venture (UJV)
meaning that NNPC and the International Oil Companies (IOCs) partner in
each Joint Venture as unique and separate legal entities.
The Minister also noted that while the NNPC pays the entire Oil and
Gas revenues realized from the JV operations into the Federation
account, the production costs are appropriated, calendarized and paid
monthly as Cash Calls to the JV operations from the NNPC and IOCs.
He said January – November 2016 underfunding of the NNPC Cash Calls is estimated at US$2.3 billion, noting that This is in addition to the inherited arrears estimated at USD$6.8 billion for year ending 2015.
However, he disclosed that through negotiations the $6.8billion past due Cash Calls burden on the Federation has now been reduced to $5.1B, which would be paid based on an improved oil production output.
Under the new funding stream, h explained, the JVs would become incorporated and source for their own financing, freeing-up the federal government from the budgetary obligations of coming up with the Cash Calls already put at $2.3B so far this year alone.
He added: “For the first time the oil industry will take responsibility for arranging their own funding and being able to produce oil and save the federal government the whole nightmare of cash calls every year.
He said January – November 2016 underfunding of the NNPC Cash Calls is estimated at US$2.3 billion, noting that This is in addition to the inherited arrears estimated at USD$6.8 billion for year ending 2015.
However, he disclosed that through negotiations the $6.8billion past due Cash Calls burden on the Federation has now been reduced to $5.1B, which would be paid based on an improved oil production output.
Under the new funding stream, h explained, the JVs would become incorporated and source for their own financing, freeing-up the federal government from the budgetary obligations of coming up with the Cash Calls already put at $2.3B so far this year alone.
He added: “For the first time the oil industry will take responsibility for arranging their own funding and being able to produce oil and save the federal government the whole nightmare of cash calls every year.
“So, this is a very dramatic move in the oil industry we are still
going to make presentation to the National Assembly for them to
understand this.”
He also spoke of plan to reduce the cost of crude oil production in
Nigeria, saying: “We will be looking at reducing the cost of barrel per
production from the current $27 per barrel which is one of the highest
in the world to figure within the threshold of $18 per barrel over the
next two years and ultimately, to about $15 over the next four years.
“The barrel reserve production should increase to about 2.5 by 2019
and potentially to about 3million barrels by 2021. So, there will
dramatic effects.”
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