Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Headquarters, Abuja FCT |
Nigeria outlined a plan
to overhaul state oil company NNPC and eventually list it on the stock exchange
in a bid to modernize and streamline an industry known for graft and
mismanagement.
Reuters
report continues:
The
ministry of petroleum released a draft late on Thursday to underpin industry
reform stalled for a decade amid disagreements and political infighting over
how best to manage the nation's energy resources.
The
ministry seeks, in the proposal, to end the OPEC member's reliance on oil
exports and shift to a "gas-based industrial economy," and said
Nigeria needs to reform the oil sector or risk output falling.
"Unless
there are additions to reserves and those reserves are brought into production,
Nigeria can expect to see absolute declines in production from around
2020," the plan said.
As
a key step to improve crude output of around 2 million barrels a day, Nigeria
wants to transform NNPC from an bureaucratic empire where little work gets done
into an entity functioning like the private sector.
"NNPC
will be made autonomous from the state, it will relinquish all its policy
making and regulatory activities, and it will be treated on an equal basis with
private sector operators for projects," the draft said.
The
West African nation has been mulling a sale of oil assets to raise hard
currency as a slump in vital oil revenues has eroded the budget.
The
proposal said a newly formed corporation could sell stakes "so long as the
government shareholder retains effective control and ownership." The
listing itself is unlikely to happen soon, as foreign investors worried about a
new currency devaluation have exited the Nigerian bourse.
The
ministry said it will consult with lawmakers over the reform, but it faces
serious challenges. Some members of parliament, including from the president's
All Progressives Congress (APC), have objected to government plans to sell oil
and other assets to raise hard currency.
"It's
commendable that they have actually tried to make a petroleum sector
policy," said Aaron Sayne, senior governance officer with the Natural
Resource Governance Institute.
But
he said the lack of details, specific targets and the backing of a broad
coalition would make it difficult to achieve many of the aims.
"Where
this is short on details is where the vested political interests are the
strongest," he said. "It's not clear that it has the political
support."
REFINERY
REVAMP
The
ministry's draft proposes a similar approach to spur investment in the nation's
sclerotic refineries, allowing the closure or privatization of them unless they
can become profitable. It would also eliminate any remaining fuel subsidies and
aim to deregulate fuel prices.
It
also included placing more responsibility for oil spills and pollution on the
companies operating them, including criminal "prosecutions of company
directors where necessary."
The
issue is sensitive for oil majors operating in the Niger Delta oil hub where
militants and villagers fight for a greater share of oil revenues and higher
compensation for oil spills.
Shell, one of the largest international companies operating in Nigeria, Chevron, and ExxonMobil declined to comment on the plan. ENI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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