NNPC, DPR, PPPRA TO BE SCRAPPED
The Senate on Wednesday passed the much-awaited
Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB), with approval of five per cent levy
on fuel sold across the country.
This was sequel to unanimous adoption of the report
on the Bill presented by Chairman, Senate Committee on Petroleum (Upstream),
Sen. Tayo Alasoadura, by the lawmakers at plenary.
The Bill is the culmination of several years of
efforts at reforming the oil and gas industry.
The process began under former President Olusegun
Obasanjo in 2000, with the establishment of Oil and Gas Implementation
Committee (“OGIC”).
OGIC issued a report and policy document, which was
later approved by the late Musa Yar’ Adua’s administration and resulted in the
Petroleum Industry Bill being forwarded to the 6th National Assembly.
The Bill went through several redrafts, including a
wholesale amendment by the Executive arm of government, but it ultimately
failed to be passed during the 6th National Assembly.
In the aftermath of the fuel subsidy protests in
January, 2012, the then Minister of Petroleum, Mrs Deziani Alison-Madueke,
announced the establishment of a technical committee to harmonise the various
versions of the draft bill.
The PIGB as passed seeks to provide for the
governance and institutional framework for the petroleum industry.
Specifically, the PIGB seeks to unbundle the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), provide for the establishment
of Federal Ministry of Petroleum Incorporated and Nigerian Petroleum Regulatory
Commission.
Others are Nigerian Petroleum Assets Management
Company and National Petroleum Company and Petroleum Equalisation Fund.
The regulatory bill provides for the National
Petroleum Commission in the place of the NNPC.
It scraps the Department of Petroleum Resources
(DPR) and the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) and
establishes the Nigeria Petroleum Regulatory Commission which will take over
the functions of the three agencies.
It also empowers the body to issue licenses, permits
or authorisations for downstream gas, petroleum products, storage depots,
retail outlets, transportation and distribution facilities for the industry.
The five per cent fuel levy will be used to finance
the Petroleum Equalisation Fund (PEF) as established in the bill.
This followed consideration and adoption of the
conference committee report on the PIGB at plenary.
Section 36 (1) (a) of the Bill provides that “there
shall be established the Petroleum Equalisation Fund into which shall be paid
all monies payable to the Equalisation Fund by way of a five per cent fuel
levy.
“This is in respect of all fuel sold and distributed
within the Federation which shall be charged subject to the approval of the
Minister (of Petroleum)”.
Other sources of funding PEF, according to the Bill,
include subventions, fees and charges for services rendered as well as net
surplus revenue recovered from petroleum products marketing companies.
The Bill says Equalisation Fund shall collect all
revenues and levies charged, determine the net surplus revenue recoverable from
any oil marketing company.
“Determine the amount of reimbursement due to any
oil marketing company for purposes of equalisation of price of products among
others.”
Speaking after the bill was passed, President of the
Senate, Dr Bukola Saraki, urged President Muhammadu Buhari to sign the bill.
“I hope with this, we will get the assent of the
President and hopefully open a new page for the petroleum industry,” he said.
Comments