NNPC Strong Men To Be Sacked, Accounts Probed By Buhari
The incoming Muhammadu Buhari
administration will replace the top management of the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Reuters news agency reported.
It will also review the accounts of
the oil company to restore credibility, according to sources within Buhari’s
party, the All Progressives Congress (APC).
It said the new government will
submit a bill to break the NNPC into four entities, as already prescribed in
the latest PIB draft.
One APC source told Reuters that the
Bill “will also, crucially, remove the minister of petroleum from the NNPC’s
board of directors to curb political interference.”
Others said more generally that the
minister’s current powers would be heavily trimmed.
Oil and gas will have separate companies for upstream, with a third covering pipelines and refining, while a fourth will be an inspectorate.
Oil and gas will have separate companies for upstream, with a third covering pipelines and refining, while a fourth will be an inspectorate.
The NNPC Management is made up of
Group Managing Director Dr. Joseph T. Dawha; Group Executive Director, Finance
& Accounts Mr. Bernard O.N. Otti; Group Executive Director, Corporate
Services Dr. Dan Efebo, and Member, Alhaji Abdullahi Bukar, who make up the
Board.
The Board is chaired by petroleum
minister Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke and members are Mr. Danladi Wadzani, Prof.
Olusegun Okunnu; Mr. Danladi Kifasi, Mr. Steven Oronsaye, and Mr. Ikechukwu
Oguine, Coordinator, Legal Services/Secretary to the Corporation.
Reuters said oil firms keen to know
how the new government plans to tax them could be waiting for a long time as
the President-elect makes ending corruption and reforming the opaque national
oil company his most urgent sector priority.
Four party sources in the APC told
Reuters the issue of fiscal terms, seen as crucial by the industry, will have
to wait on current thinking about oil and gas policies in Nigeria.
Crude output has stagnated close to
2m barrels per day, owing partly to under-investment.
“We need to address the structural
issues and leave the fiscal for now,” Senator Bukola Saraki, told Reuters.
“A more transparent NNPC is needed
with reasonable accounting,” he added.
Buhari owes his March 28 victory against
Goodluck Jonathan partly to a perception that Jonathan allowed corruption to
get out of control – especially in the oil sector.
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