According to the Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs
Division of the NNPC, Ohi Alegbe, the audit report absolved the
Corporation of culpability over the allegation of non- remittance of
$20bn.
The Corporation noted that the release of the forensic audit report
has finally laid to rest the controversy surrounding allegations of
‘missing oil revenue’ or non-remittance to the Federation Account.
The corporation explained that the claimed $1.48bn was never in
dispute as it is made up of statutory payments such as signature bonus,
taxes and royalties which are statutory
payments that come with assets acquisition.
payments that come with assets acquisition.
It stated that the delay in payment was due to the reconciliation
processes between the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and the
NNPC.
Similarly, it said the $1.48bn the audit firm recommended the
Corporation to remit to the Federation Account was not part of the
alleged unremitted revenues from crude lifting.
Following the conclusion of the report, the Minister of Petroleum
Resources has subsequently directed the NNPC to defray the signature
bonuses, taxes and royalties in line with the recommendation of the
forensic audit report.
The Corporation stated that the forensic audit report and the
Senate Committee on Finance report on the unremitted revenue all alluded
to the fact that NPDC reported crude oil revenues of $5.11bn. (NPDC is
an upstream subsidiary of NNPC).
It further explained that the forensic audit acknowledged that the
total cash remitted into the Federation Accounts in relation to the
crude lifting in the period under review was $50.81bn and not $47bn and
that subsidy on premium motor spirit and dual purpose kerosene stood at
$8.7bn.
Expatiating further on the kerosene subsidy issue, the Corporation
stated that the Forensic Audit Report also clarified that subsidy on DPK
is still in force as the presidential directive of 19th October, 2009,
was not gazetted in line with provisions of section 6 sub section 1 of
the Petroleum Act of 1969.
The Forensic Audit Report also acknowledged that section 7
subsections 4 of NNPC Act empowers the Corporation to defray its costs
and expenses including the costs of its subsidiaries from crude oil
revenues, though it also recommended that the laws be reviewed to make
the Corporation meet its costs and expenses entirely from the value it
creates.
Meanwhile, the Federal Ministry of Finance last year hired the
PriceWaterHouseCoopers, to investigate the veracity of the allegation by
the former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Lamido Sanusi, that
$48.9bn and later $20bn was not remitted to the Federation Account by
the NNPC.
Comments
Post a Comment