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Civic Groups Ask Presidency, National Assembly To Investigate Nigerian Transparency Agency, NEITI For Reportedly Denying Its Oil And Gas Audit Report

FILE
November 20, 2023

In a statement jointly issued by the National Coordinator of PWYP, Taiwo Otitolaye and Adebayo Titus of CODWA, the groups said that the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) and Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) in a separate statement confirmed that NEITI discredited and disowned its own 2021 oil and gas audit report.

Civil societies, The Publish What You Pay (PWYP), Nigeria and the Community Outreach for Development and Welfare Advocacy (CODWA), have raised the alarm over the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) denial of its own 2021 oil and gas audit report.

In a statement jointly issued by the National Coordinator of PWYP, Taiwo Otitolaye and Adebayo Titus of CODWA, the groups said that the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) and Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) in a separate statement confirmed that NEITI discredited and disowned its own 2021 oil and gas audit report.

According to the groups, NNPCL issued a statement, saying that NEITI had dismissed the findings of its 2021 oil and gas audit report, particularly the finding on NNPCL indebtedness to the Nigerian government.
“The statement by NNPCL followed a decision by a Non-governmental organisation (NGO) to sue President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, on the basis of NEITI's audit disclosure, requesting the President to compel NNPCL to pay the debt it owes the Federation.”
The groups further stated that the NUPRC issued a statement claiming that NEITI has dismissed the content of its 2021 oil and gas report which indicts the Commission for abusing its own regulation and process in the award of marginal oil fields 2020.
“This development is worrisome, an indication of discordant tune by NEITI on its own report which passed through all the stakeholders' inputs and validation before it was published.
“It is on record that the Draft Copy of the NEITI 2021 Oil and Gas Report which is now being mutilated and disowned by NEITI itself were sent to all the EITI Constituencies, all covered entities by the audit exercise, including NUPRC; NNPCL; Civil society community; and the Extractive Industry Transparency Initiatives (EITI) which is the Global body and clearing house for all EITI implementing countries.
“The NUPRC and the NNPCL that are now raising dusts on the content of the report did not only sign-off on the report before it was published, but were present at the public presentation and launch of the report.”
According to the groups, two of the issues where NEITI  in discordant tune with its own 2021 Oil and Gas Report are in Chapter 2.7 (item 3) under observations and findings:
"According to the Commission's regulation, all successful applicants whose names are in the notice of Preferred Bidder Status ought to have made payment of signature bonus, prior to award, however, the list of awardees contained names of companies that had not made payment of signature bonus. Four companies whose names were not on the list of awardees also made payment of signature bonus for 2020/2021 marginal field award."
The groups stated that the report in item 2 under implications states that "Award of marginal fields prior to payment of signature bonus as well as payment of signature bonus by companies that did not participate in the process by NUPRC indicates that the Commission did not adhere to its own regulations."
The report went ahead to advise that "The NUPRC should adhere strictly to all its regulations."
PWYP and CODWA stated “The statement credited to NEITI in the media report that the NUPRC took over the bidding process for the 57 Marginal Oil fields from the defunct Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) is inconsequential and incongruous considering the principle of continuity in government.
“These developments raise some fundamental questions needing answers: Does it mean that the NUPRC when constituted started on a fresh note without reviewing the activities of the defunct DPR including the 57 Marginal Oil fields?
 “Are Nigerians being asked to believe that the defunct DPR did not leave any records behind on these issues? Does it mean NEITI and its Consultant did not conduct reconciliation and validation meetings with the NUPRC and NNPCL before publishing the report?
“Could it be that NEITI and the Consultant hired for the audit reports failed the test of competencies required for this important national assignments or that there are conspiracies and compromise somewhere?”
The groups further stated that “As stakeholders in the Nigerian EITI process, we are worried and taken aback that this ugly development and incidents are now part of EITI implementation in our country.
“This development paints gory pictures for the credibility of transparency and accountability roles the EITI PROCESS is supposed to play; and more importantly, ensuring that the nation's natural resource is beneficial to the citizenry today, tomorrow and for all time.
“We hereby call on the Presidency, the National Assembly and other agencies with oversights functions to quickly rise to these damaging trends in the affairs of Nigeria's EITI before the country becomes a laughing stock among the global community of EITI implementing countries.”