According to THISDAYNEWS, Following the carte blanche given by
President Muhammadu Buhari to clean up the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC) and plug the leakages in the state-run oil firm, its
new Group Managing Director, Dr. Emmanuel Kachikwu, will from this week
start inviting oil traders who were awarded crude oil swaps and offshore
processing contracts by NNPC during the administration of President
Goodluck Jonathan.
The goal, THISDAY learnt from top NNPC sources, is to reopen the
reconciliation process for the oil swaps and offshore processing
agreements (OPAs) to determine if the oil traders met the terms of the
contracts in terms of delivery of fuel product cargoes to NNPC’s
subsidiary the Pipelines and Products Marketing Company (PPMC).
THISDAY last June had exclusively reported that the Department of State
Services (DSS) had opened a probe into the crude oil swaps and OPAs
entered into by NNPC and oil traders.
But the traders claimed that the probe was a witch-hunt triggered by
one of their competitors in the industry and argued that swaps and OPAs
were covered by irrevocable standing letters of credit to the value of
the crude of lifted or petroleum products scheduled for delivery to
PPMC.
The traders also explained that a quarterly reconciliation process is
carried out by NNPC to ascertain under or over-deliveries of product
cargoes, following which refunds are made to the corporation and vice
versa.
However, the suspicion is that some of the traders lifted crude oil and
sold it, but under-delivered product
cargoes to NNPC, thus costing the
country several billions of dollars.
This was given fillip by a report released last week by New York-based
Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI) which claimed that Nigeria
lost over $32 billion oil revenue due to the mismanagement of domestic
crude allocations (DCA) by NNPC, as well as the opaque revenue retention
practices and oil-for-product swap agreements signed between the
corporation and some oil traders.
Accordingly, a top NNPC official informed THISDAY at the weekend that Kachikwu intends to start a probe this week by inviting the oil traders to account for the crude oil they lifted and products that were delivered in return.
Accordingly, a top NNPC official informed THISDAY at the weekend that Kachikwu intends to start a probe this week by inviting the oil traders to account for the crude oil they lifted and products that were delivered in return.
He said where it is established that they under-delivered fuel cargoes,
they would be asked to repay NNPC what they owe, failing which they
shall be handed over to the law enforcement agencies for prosecution.
He said: “The goal is to make them pay up once it is ascertained that
they under-delivered product cargoes and not to send them to jail.
Kachikwu is even willing to accept a payment plan that would ensure that
their companies do not go under because they are going concerns and he
recognises that they are employers of labour.
“So all he wants is for them to refund what they owe NNPC (or PPMC).
However, where they prove to be stubborn, he will not hesitate to call
in the law enforcement agencies to prosecute them for failing to deliver
the cargoes due to the corporation.”
Kachikwu, he explained, would also be investigating what became of the
funds meant to have been paid to or swapped on behalf of PPMC on
retained petroleum products such as low pour fuel oil (LPFO), naphtha,
bitumen and other heavy fuels that the oil traders were not required to
deliver.
“PPMC usually orders for just petrol and kerosene under the oil swaps
and offshore processing contracts, as there is high domestic demand for
these two products, while diesel which is completely deregulated is
imported independently by oil marketers.
“However in the refining process, other distillates are produced which
may not be required by PPMC. These distillates comprise the heavy
liquids, also known as retained products, which are either supposed to
be sold and the proceeds from the sale returned to PPMC or swapped for
more petrol and kerosene, failing which oil traders will remain indebted
to the corporation,” he explained.
Of Nigeria’s total oil output, NNPC is allocated 445,000 barrels of
crude oil per day (bpd), being the nameplate capacity of its four
refineries.
The rule of thumb is that NNPC is required to pay for the 445,000bpd at
the going price of crude oil in the international market and remit the
proceeds to Federation Account, but often failed to remit the funds to
the treasury.
Also, owing to Nigeria’s low refining output, NNPC has operated the crude swaps and offshore processing contracts for decades.
Also, owing to Nigeria’s low refining output, NNPC has operated the crude swaps and offshore processing contracts for decades.
Under the swaps, NNPC used to allocate about 50 per cent of its
445,000bpd to oil traders who in turn sold the crude oil and were
expected to import petroleum products or enter into contracts with
offshore refineries that produce the products for delivery to Nigeria.
By 2014, however, NNPC was allocating its entire 445,000bpd to traders
who were alleged to have sold the crude oil but under-delivered product
cargoes, thus increasing Nigeria’s losses.
Meanwhile, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has said it plans
to increase the value added tax (VAT) on goods and service from the five
per cent to 10 per cent.
The acting chairman of the FIRS, Mr. Sunday Ogungbesan, disclosed this
during an interactive session with journalists in Lagos at the weekend.
He said FIRS was consulting with the relevant agencies in government on the need to increase VAT in view of falling oil prices, which has adversely affected the economy.
He said FIRS was consulting with the relevant agencies in government on the need to increase VAT in view of falling oil prices, which has adversely affected the economy.
Nigeria has one of the lowest VAT regimes on the African continent.
Long before oil prices crashed, several economists had called on the
federal government to review its VAT levy in line with what obtains in
smaller economies on the continent such as South Africa, Egypt, Morocco
and Kenya, among others.
Also, FIRS said it might clamp down on recalcitrant companies that have been evading tax in the country.
Ogungbesan disclosed that of about 450,000 corporate entities in the
country, only about 125,000 pay taxes to the government coffers.
According to him, one of the greatest challenges facing the FIRS was
tax evasion by most companies and briefcase concerns that cannot be
traced.
He explained that the FIRS had resorted to engagement to get tax defaulters to change by paying their taxes as and when due.
The FIRS boss said the agency had tried different options in the past
to enforce compliance, including the option of sealing companies that
evade taxes, but discovered that it adversely affected man hours and
Nigeria’s gross domestic product.
He maintained that he would continue with the option of engagement
rather than clamping down on defaulters, pointing out that the former
was already yielding results.
He however declared that the FIRS would not hesitate to clamp down on
those who remain recalcitrant and refuse to comply with the law.
He said the desire of the FIRS was to meet set revenue targets, pointing out that it would help shore up Nigeria’s finances.
He said: “If we achieve our revenue targets, to a large extent government deficits will be reduced,”
“Our plan is to bring every business into the tax net, because this economy can survive outside oil."
Ogungbesan said the FIRS was doing everything possible to encourage
payment of taxes, including allowing companies to pay in installments
and more.
“I am ready to allow companies that are willing to pay up to 20 installments,” he declared.
“I am ready to allow companies that are willing to pay up to 20 installments,” he declared.
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