The Senate, on Tuesday, ordered the Federal Ministry of
Petroleum Resources and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to
halt further action or planned concession of the Port Harcourt Refinery to AGIP
and OANDO.
In a motion sponsored by Senator Sabo Mohammed and tagged
‘Non Transparent Transaction relating to the planned concession of the Port
Harcourt Refinery to AGIP and OANDO by the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the
Senate questioned the rationale behindthe action.
Accordingly, the Senate has set up an ad-hoc committee to
carry a holistic investigation to determine how and why such a deal was sealed
and the criteria used to select AGIP and OANDO to maintain and operate the Port
Hacourt Refinery at what cost and time-frame.
Sen. Mohammed, in his motion, claimed that the Minister of
State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, had revealed that the agreement
was part of a broader government plan to increase capacity for local production
and consumption of petroleum products with the aim of ending fuel importation
in Nigeria by 2019.
The Jigawa State-born lawmaker further observed that the
planned concession of Port Harcourt was
without recourse to due process and described it as illegal and a clear attempt
at ridiculing Nigerians. He said the action would create a hole that will be
hard to fill in the anti-corruption crusade of the present administration.
He said the action by Kachikwu, goes contrary to claims he
made in late 2015, when he declared the three refineries in the country,
namely, Warri, Kaduna and Port Harcourt would be working at 90 per cent
capacity, thereby reducing importation and subsidy controversies. The senator
wondered why in 2017, the refineries were yet to be fixed and cannot produce 50
per cent.
Senators Dino Melaye and Kabiru Gaya, supported the motion
and called on the Senate to take a firm action. Melaye in his submissions, said
consession of government-owned companies, have always been mismanaged in the
past.
Gaya on his part, said in the absence of Kaduna and Warri
refineries which are currently dysfunctional, it will be unfair to sell off the
Port Harcourt refinery to investors.
But Kachikwu, in far away Vienna, Austria, said refineries
repair could not be done in an open bidding process. Speaking to newsmen,
Kachikwu said the refineries concession “is a highly technical area, what we
have done is to invite those who have experience in refining, but it is open,
anybody who feels he has the skills and has the money is welcome. It is not
just about the skills but the money too.
“Remember, we do not have the money, and what we call them
in is to rebuild, help us manage and recoup their money from the incremental
production and that is ongoing, it has not been decided, the entire three
refineries are up on the refurbishing scheme.”
Responding to the alleged bias in the selection process of
the AGIP and OANDO Plc as partners to operate the Port Harcourt Refinery and
Petrochemical Company, Kachikwu said final decision on the refineries has not been
reached.
He said the Federal Government has decided to concession all
four refineries in the country by August this year saying, “We hope to award
the contracts by July/August and hopefully between 12 to 18 months to be able
to get the refineries fully back, and the model is to bring investors, who will
repair the refineries and they recoup their money from the incremental
production.
“We are ready to offer all the three refineries for
investors who have money to repair and manage. People keep mentioning AGIP and
OANDO Plc but nobody has made the final decision on those, they are probably
the front runners because they put a lot of work on that but I am not in the
technical committee, I am the chair of the steering committee, when the
technical committee meet and finish their work, they will refer it to the
steering committee and then it goes to NNPC Board, so all the hullabaloo about
the transparency, there is no basis for that.”
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