A coalition of Civil Society Organisations, in a report published yesterday, lamented that a number of critical contracts in the Nigerian oil and gas industry are shrouded in secrecy and risk endangering the Nigerian economy and the welfare of citizens.
The CSOs, in the report presented at a roundtable on contract transparency in the extractive industries, organized by Centre for Transparency Advocacy, CTA, and Media Initiative for Transparency in the Extractive Industries, MITEI, and Contract Transparency Network, stated that most of these contracts determine a significant amount of revenue accruable to the country from the extractive industries.
The report, which was presented on behalf of the CSOs by Mr. Leo Ugboaja, noted that these contracts deal with various matters in the oil and gas industry, such as environmental protection, the fiscal terms, tax exemptions, if any, and royalties and production shares, which have significant consequences on the politics and economic development of the country.
The report explained that the concept of contract transparency involved the public disclosure of all the terms and conditions of a contract to the general public in such a manner as would enable parties outside a contract.
It added that the aim is to help the general public to understand the substance and essence of the contract; and monitor the performance of the contract by the contracting parties based on the terms and conditions of the contract.
The report noted that the standards set by global extractive watchdog, the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, EITI, require that contracts to be published included licenses granted by or contracts entered into by the countries or its agencies and state-owned companies, and contracts and licenses that involve the exploitation of oil, gas and minerals.
It, however, noted that the main challenge would be in ensuring full compliance, not from international oil companies, who are already bound by laws in their home countries, but by indigenous oil and gas exploration and servicing companies, who are mainly owned by politicians and politically exposed persons, who would want their operations to remain in secrecy.
The report added: “This approach will include contracts awarded to various service companies for the production of oil and gas from various mineral assets held by the various joint venture arrangements to which the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company, NPDC, or Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, are joint venture partners, or various public private partnership agreements to which a government in Nigeria, or its agency or enterprise, is a party relating to the production or processing of minerals.
“And it is indeed the terms of these non-license type contracts, which largely determine the actual revenue accruable to the Nigerian State from its extractive industries.
Therefore, these service contracts – and not the license-type contracts – determine the amount of revenue, other than royalty and license fees, due to the State from extractive industries activities.”
Commenting on the report, Executive Director of CTA, Faith Nwadishi, affirmed that contract transparency was critical to eliminating sharp practices in the extractive industries and ensuring the growth and development of the Nigerian economy.
She advised that the provisions of contract transparency be retained and strengthened in the Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB, currently before the National Assembly, while the NNPC, international and indigenous oil firms commit to contract transparency in every areas of their operations.
(vanguardngr)