Burning oil
flare. Gas flaring in the Niger Delta has caused tremendous damage the
environment. Image credit: IRIN
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Nigeria is losing between
US$500m and US$1bn revenue as a result of the falsification of gas flare data
by international oil companies, the Federal Government has said.
The
Punch report continues:
According
to the government, the IOCs falsify gas flare data in a bid to avoid or cut
down on the payment of the required penalties for flaring gas, adding that this
had deprived the country of huge revenue.
The
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, disclosed this in
Abuja on Tuesday at the Gas Competence Seminar, which had the theme: ‘Towards
ending gas flaring and unlocking gas potential in Nigeria’.
To
address the situation, the minister declared that by 2017, the Federal
Government would set up an independent tracking mechanism to ascertain the
actual volume of gas being flared in the country.
He
said, “There is an urgency of yesterday to drive the policy that will enable us
to get out of gas flaring. I hear you talking about 10 per cent non-compliance,
meaning that we have achieved a 90 per cent factor. My gut feeling is that
these numbers are mistaken.
“Beginning
next year, we will be putting up an independent tracking mechanism, not relying
on figures from the IOCs and from the DPR (Department of Petroleum Resources),
to find out really what is the flare volume. My feeling is that there is a lot
of management of those figures to suit the cap of the penalties being charged.”
Kachikwu
added, “My take is that we lose over half a billion dollars to US$1bn of
government revenue looking at the basis of the present penalty position. Nobody
is effectively monitoring the volume; so, when you actually go for the real
effect of what is flared, in terms of statistics, it is much higher than those
figures.
“However,
we must appreciate the efforts that have been done in the past; efforts to
increase penalties, among others.”
The minister also noted that the marginal rise in the price of crude oil in the past few days was not an indication of an imminent boom in the cost of the commodity in the nearest future.
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