-''I was one of those who went out to queue at filling stations for fuel''
- ''I am very sensitive to the struggles of the Nigerian woman.''
- ''I removed 92 throughput marketers from the PPPRA, the amount of subsidy payments dropped by over 50%.''
- ''Haba, have you ever seen $100m in cash before? I have not''
'' In fact this is where the bane of my problems as a woman in government
began. I wonder why people seem to want to put a tag of corruption
against my name when all I have ever tried to do is to open the sector
up for more Nigerians and make it work better for the benefit of the
country. If I were corrupt would we have achieved the extent of reform
that has occurred in the sector to date? Ah my brother, I have worked
tirelessly to curtail the excesses while ensuring that the country
remains wet with products and the sector run more efficiently. I have
constantly ignored the viciousness and focused on my job.''
Honourable Minister, thank you for granting me a few minutes
of your time for this pressing discussion about the future of policy
evolution in Nigeria. But I want you to quickly talk about the fuel
scarcity that has come just weeks before the hand-over to the new
administration.
The time of my appointment as Minister of Petroleum Resources five
years ago was a time when the nation was in the throes of many years of
continuous fuel scarcity and the abandonment of our fuel facilities.
This was having such an adverse impact on the masses especially in terms
of livelihood and quality of life. This situation certainly affected me
and my household. I was one of those who went out to queue at filling
stations and what left an indelible mark on me was the plight of the
many, many women who were queuing for this essential commodity for their
families. We are looking at time when women where losing their lives as
a result of adulterated products as kerosene stoves were exploding all
over the country. So the problem was not just about getting access to
the product but also purchasing the right quality products to ensure the
safety of the households of my fellow women. It was a time when cars
were ‘knocking’ engines, generators that cost hundreds of thousands of
naira were also breaking down because of adulterated products. People
around the country were losing many millions of Naira as a result of
loss of business incomes and we are talking of taxi drivers,
face-me-I-face-you traders in the market, the lorry drivers transporting
food to the markets, the okada drivers – basically the engine room of
the economy was affected.
I am a mother and grandmother myself and I understand the pressure
that women go through in order to put food on the table for their
families. I am very sensitive to the struggles of the Nigerian woman.
So, when granted the opportunity to serve the country as Petroleum
Resources minister, I made this my first priority. Dealing with the fuel
scarcity was a key issue that I resolved to address as soon as I
stepped into office. Nigeria is a country that relies on access to
petroleum products for businesses to thrive, for families to survive and
for communities to evolve. For me it was a fundamental issue. I
immediately set to the task. Several inter-ministerial committees were
formed to get to the root of the matter including liaising with
marketers and the unions.
A few things were identified such as the process of payment to
marketers as well as the improvement of the distribution and monitoring
mechanisms. The Ministry of Finance is charged with addressing the
payment process while the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and its
parastatals tackle production, distribution and monitoring aspects.
So what did you do in terms of tackling the issue of access to products?
Firstly sectorial reforms were put in place, and an attempt was made
to establish a uniform pricing regime across the country, which still
requires task forces to be put in place to oversee its success.
Secondly, an aggressive strategy was completed to build as well as
refurbish over 23 Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) depots
across the country many of which had lain fallow for several years. This
is the result of the determined efforts of the Pipelines and Product
Marketing Company (PPMC), a subsidiary of the NNPC. The aggressive
establishment of the depots occurred from Aba to Benin, from Gusau to
Suleja, in an attempt to ensure a more robust delivery of products, to
not only those areas but also all contingent areas. Thirdly many
vandalized pipelines have been restored and expanded in addition, fuel
products are now transported by rail where possible to ensure that the
products get to the depots in good time to avert situations of
shortage. Furthermore, NNPC now holds and maintains a 30-day stock of
PMS, as part of the National Strategic Stock Reserve for products.
The Ministry has also increased the flash point for DPK (kerosene)
from 44 to 45 (curbing the incidences of kerosene cookers exploding) – I
cannot remember the last time a kerosene cooker has exploded;
implemented inspection of trucks at each NNPC Depot for cleanness
(preventing contamination) and lab testing of truck samples for quality
control. DPR also introduced colour coding for all trucks loading any
petroleum product this means the trucks cannot be used for any other
purpose apart from what it has been coded to load. Many Nigerians will
attest to the fact that before now, the country has been “wet” with
products with even filling stations in remote areas, able to dispense
products.
I also led the roll out of robust measures to identify and penalise
those behind the activities of fuel adulteration as well as pipeline
vandalism, in a joint effort between security agencies, the NNPC and the
Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR). The first joint meeting
between the key parastatals, the Service Chiefs and Inspector General of
Police took place at the Oriental Hotel. It was the first meeting of
its kind in the history of the sector.
So if all these measures have been put in place why has there been this crippling fuel crisis?
The fuel scarcity that we see today I can only describe as the ‘fear
of the unknown’ in these last few days before hand-over. It is also a
backlog following the attempts by the government to stamp-out the
subsidy fraud and clean the system in November 2011. Identifying and
cutting out up to 92 marketers who had been round-tripping reduced the
subsidy payments by about 50%. This also brought about a few delays in
payment, as the investigations to identify erring marketers were robust
and took time.
We are faced with a situation where the marketers want this
administration to pay them ALL the money they are owed before the tenure
runs out on May 29. This is a difficult situation more peculiarly
because this administration did not incur ALL the debt, which actually
goes back 40 years. It is a rolling obligation. There has never been a
time, when the debt obligations was reduced to zero it is cyclical. What
the marketers are asking for is not just the outstanding amount to be
paid but also for the exchange rate differential that they have
incurred. This is in the light of the many conversations that are on
going about deregulating the subsidy payments. The transition period is
allowing the marketers to try to forestall any losses as a result of a
change in regime, while this makes good business sense it is the polity
that suffer. The Ministry of Finance and the presidency are giving this
situation the priority it deserves.
The fuel scarcity was mingled with strikes by different unions (Major
Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN), Nigeria Union of
Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) etc.) what is going on?
The strike was about two things. First the union workers were
demanding for salary increases at a time when the NNPC’s running cost is
already extremely high. How are we going to increase salaries when we
are currently looking at ways to cap expenses and more especially keep
things in a consistent and clear state for the new regime that is coming
into effect.
Secondly, the strike by the NUPENG arm of NPDC has come about
following the decision to move NPDC from a sole operator model to a
joint operatorship model for some of its assets. This was done to
increase the production volumes from those assets, which had remained
consistently low for some time. The reason production has been low is as
a result of the sheer cost that NPDC has had to bear in operating the
assets. These joint venture partners that have been brought in to
alleviate the cost pressure are operating under extremely stringent
terms to ensure that the ownership of the assets remain with the
government. The companies have also had to take out huge loans with
moratoriums of up to 10 years in order to perform their activities to
successfully meet the production volume expectations. So in many ways
this situation can be regarded as a win-win for the government, NPDC and
the JV operators, which would begin to yield great benefits for the
generality of Nigerians, as the boost in volumes would inevitably lead
to a boost in the nations revenue from the sector.
I am sincerely pleased that the unions have come to this realization
and taken into consideration the sufferings of many millions of
Nigerians during the period of the fuel scarcity. It was truly a
heartbreaking time for me… heartbreaking as fuel scarcity is one issue I
consistently fought to avoid given its impact on women and their
families as well as businesses. Yes, I am very happy that life will
begin to return to normal across the country as we have the National
Strategic Stock Reserve ready to be distributed across the country.
Lets talk about some of the allegations that you face with
regards ensuring stability of supply across the country more
specifically about the debate on the subsidy. The memory of Occupy
Nigeria is still distant but we see this same situation by marketers
holding the country to ransom?
Let me start by making the distinction that the decision as to
whether subsidy payments are made or not is entirely economic and
outside my purview as Ministry of Petroleum Resources. What we are
responsible for is the production, distribution and marketing aspects.
What we also do is give a view as to the status in terms of these 3
areas and the decision becomes an economic one from the Presidency.
In terms of my direct actions in November 2011, following the high
incidence of subsidy claims, with a stroke of the pen, I removed 92
throughput marketers from the PPPRA scheme because we believed that
within the group were the round trippers who were causing problems for
the country in term of the burgeoning levels of subsidy payments. As a
consequence of this action, the amount of subsidy payments dropped by
over 50%.
A series of probes where kicked-off to investigate the transactions
of these marketers and to begin to bring in a level of accountability
and transparency into the system of subsidy payments. The lists of these
marketers were also published in the local press and a series of probes
ensued. The marketers had to justify their claims to the payments. This
was the first ever-major cleanup of the subsidy programmes and yet
again the ministry was vindicated and offending marketers are going
through the legal implications of their actions.
The Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) was also
restructured and the processes in place for the determination of subsidy
payments were comprehensively reviewed.
But these actions led to major push back by many with accusations of
corruption against the ministry and NNPC to get us to back down. I am
sure I stepped on the toes of the greedy cabals that have dominated the
sector for years, upset at the change in the system. The push back has
come from many other sources beyond the marketers. The funny thing is
these are the same people that shout corruption the loudest but yet are
unable to accept the reforms that are being put in place to make the
sector more accountable so we are almost caught between a rock and hard
place in the sector.
[The minister at this point puts her hands on her head and sighs]
In fact this is where the bane of my problems as a woman in government
began. I wonder why people seem to want to put a tag of corruption
against my name when all I have ever tried to do is to open the sector
up for more Nigerians and make it work better for the benefit of the
country. If I were corrupt would we have achieved the extent of reform
that has occurred in the sector to date? Ah my brother, I have worked
tirelessly to curtail the excesses while ensuring that the country
remains wet with products and the sector run more efficiently. I have
constantly ignored the viciousness and focused on my job.
The most important point to make in terms of stability of supply is
that today, marketers have a clear contract to deliver their products on
specified dates. Marketers are put under strict terms to deliver
products at dates specified if they miss the cut off date for delivery
then their cargo goes into demurrage which in itself acts as an
incentive to ensure supplies.
More recently, as part of the transition activity I have instructed
that all of the swap operators across the board provide detailed and
clear reports about their export and import activities so that a
reconciliation can be conducted and published for all Nigerians to see.
These swap transactions involve extremely high volumes and huge cost
obligations to banks. The contracts with these operators are very
stringent indeed and delivery specifications clear. There are serious
ramifications to the operators for non-delivery most especially by the
banks for non-delivery this is dependent generally on the lines of
credit arrangements.
This is being done as part of my commitment to accountability and
transparency to Nigerians. It will also put to bed the various claims in
the press about different alleged practices by the operators that are
being associated to me. The operators deal with the NNPC according to
tight contractual agreements.
All the swap operators were well vetted and passed as credible
Nigerian corporations capable of executing such major stringent
contracts with no room for any offences to the system. So when you have
strict contracts in place and bank obligations it is surprising that
mischief-makers can say that I am in league with some of these operators
in acts of corruption! It shows that they have no idea how the system
works and I would ask that they educate themselves before they speak. If
Aiteo, Talevaras or any other operator were cheating the NNPC it would
be made public as the system has been reorganized to do this
automatically. The publication of the reconciled transactions from the
time the contracts were assigned to them will also be a testament to
this commitment. Erring contractors will be made to face the legal
implications of any wrongdoings that are uncovered.
End of PART 1
In part 2 of this exclusive interview the Minister opens up about
the PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC) report and the allegations that trail
the debate over the controversial missing $20b. During the interview the
minister was overwhelmed by emotion and throwing her hands up in the
air she declared, “There have been threats against my life just because I
want to do the best for my country and open up the sector to more
Nigerians. Where is the crime? Haba, have you ever seen $100m in cash
before? I have not. So how can this or any other larger sum be missing
from my house?
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