President Muhammadu Buhari unveiled the Nigerian National
Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited Forty-four years after inaugurating the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) in 1977, saying the
transformation was to strengthen its capacity and market relevance.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited on Tuesday made it clear that it would no longer remit any money to the Federation Accounts Allocation Committee for sharing to the three tiers of government monthly.
It said this was based on its latest transition from a
public corporation to a limited liability company and that it currently owed no
money to FAAC, as all monetary arrears to the committee were owed by the old
corporation and not the new oil company.
This came as the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari
(retd.), officially unveiled the NNPC Limited on Tuesday and declared that the
new entity was henceforth free from institutional regulations.
Buhari, who made this public at the Presidential Villa,
Abuja, stated that the oil firm would from now on conduct itself under best
international business practice.
Before its official unveiling as a limited company, the NNPC
had failed to make any remittance to FAAC since this year. It had consistently
deducted the amount it spends on fuel subsidy monthly, a development that had
eroded the funds which it would have remitted to the committee.
Findings showed that between January and May this year, the
oil company had spent N1.274tn on petrol subsidy, being the sole importer of
the commodity into Nigeria. It, however, described its subsidy spending as
under-recovery of a Premium Motor Spirit/value shortfall.
Speaking to journalists on the sidelines of the unveiling of
the new oil company, the Chief Executive Officer, NNPC Limited, Mele Kyari,
stated that the firm was now a private outfit and had nothing to do with FAAC
anymore.
Responding to a question on what would happen to NNPC’s
monthly FAAC contributions, kyari replied, “We are now a private company; would
MTN go to FAAC?”
When probed further to tell if there would be no more FAAC
remittances from the company going forward, he said, “We will pay our taxes,
royalties and deliver dividends to our shareholders.”
Asked about the arrears to FAAC that were not delivered by the firm over the years, the CEO said, “Which arrears? That’s Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.”
The NNPC explained some of the changes that had taken place
or would happen based on the transition of the firm from a corporation to a
limited company.
Kyari said, “You now have a smarter, more responsive and
much more accountable company that must act within the premises of all
regulations that are in Nigeria for private companies.
“It must also meet the standards of best practice in every
industry in terms of governance, complying with regulations and beyond these,
eyes are on the ball that your shareholders are expecting you to deliver value
to them.
“That value must translate in two forms. One is that they
must see dividends and the second part is that you must deliver energy in this
country. This company is now in a position to do both of them because it is now
a nimble company, can act, borrow and return peoples money quickly.”
He said the firm would now make decisions very quickly, get
the best class of people anywhere in the world, inject them into the company
and get its Initial Public Offer ready by June 2023.
“I am sure Nigerians will see a very different company in
the coming days and months. And we are convinced that by the mid of next year
this company will be IPO ready,” Kyari stated.
Proving further explanation, he said, “IPO ready means that
you have systems and processes lined on the side of profitability and is a
company that is accountable to its shareholders and stakeholders.
“Simply that is what IPO processes look for; to see that you have the assets. Today government has transferred those assets to NNPC and we have very ample assets that nobody has in this country and, of course, not even in Africa.”
Asked to explain how the oil firm would handle subsidy on
petrol being a commercial entity, Kyari replied that fuel subsidy was not a
burden of NNPC.
He said, “Subsidy is not NNPC’s burden. Subsidy is the
decision of the state and in every jurisdiction anywhere in the world,
countries see them differently. In some countries, they put petroleum tax on
top of the market price of these products.
“So when decisions are to be made in some jurisdictions they
will reduce the level of taxation. That also is another form of subsidy. In
some countries, you have zero taxation but you will pay the market price for
the commodity. That also in a way, in fiscal system, looks at it from a subsidy
point of view.
“In very many countries, a leader can decide that I don’t
even want my countrymen to buy it at the market price. I’m ready to reduce that
price for them so that they can buy.”
Kyari added, “In either case, whichever way the decision and
the policy of the state decides, you know NNPC is there in the space to provide
the product to the state at commercial value and, of course, it is also our
duty to deliver to the customer at the price that the state wants.
“So it is no longer an NNPC issue. NNPC will have no issue
with this. NNPC will be happy to supply because we will now see the state as
our customer.”
He further explained that the new NNPC had no need for a
sovereign guarantee, as lenders would only ask for such when the company
seeking the loan lacked access to its assets.
“Today the assets are in our books and have been transferred
to us. That is what banks are looking for, and that is the reason why they ask
for a sovereign guarantee,” he stated.
The NNPC boss denied claims that the company’s workforce was bloated, as he stressed that “today our total population is just 7,000 and I believe that with the expansion we have in the plan we are going to get more people to work for us.
“The law has also provided that no one is going to leave this company. Everybody’s work is preserved, their benefits are preserved. So there is no matter of concern for the employees of this company.”
Speaking earlier during the event, before unveiling the new
company, Buhari declared that NNPC Limited was henceforth free from
institutional regulations.
He said, “The provisions of PIA (Petroleum Industry Act)
2021, have given the Nigerian petroleum industry a new impetus, with improved
fiscal framework, transparent governance, enhanced regulation and the creation
of a commercially-driven and independent national oil company that will operate
without relying on government funding and free from institutional regulations
such as the Treasury Single Account, Public Procurement and Fiscal
Responsibility Acts.
“It will, of course, conduct itself under the best
international business practice in transparency, governance and commercial
viability.”
The President said the government was transforming the
petroleum industry to strengthen its capacity and market relevance for the
present and future global energy priorities.
“By chance of history, I was privileged to lead the creation
of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation on the July 1, 1977. Forty-Four
years later, I was again privileged to sign the Petroleum Industry Act in 2021,
heralding the long-awaited reform of our petroleum sector,” he stated.
The President further noted that coincidentally, “I, on July
1, 2022 authorised transfer of assets from the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation to its successor company, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company
Limited, and steered the implementation leading to the unveiling of Africa’s
largest national oil company today.
“I therefore thank almighty God for choosing me to
consistently play an important role in shaping the destiny of our national oil
company from the good to the great.
“NNPC Limited will
operate as a commercial, independent and viable NOC at par with its peers
around the world, to sustainably deliver value to its over 200 million
shareholders and the global energy community, while adhering to its fundamental
corporate values of integrity, excellence and sustainability.”