LEGISLATURE 22/09/2022
PIA Won’t Solve Oil Industry Challenges Without Addressing Crude Theft – Senate
The Senate has said the current massive oil theft in the country, if not immediately curbed could frustrate the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) passed in to law last year by the National Assembly.
The Chairman, Senate adhoc committee to investigate oil lifting, theft and the impact on petroleum production and oil revenues, Senator Akpan Bassey, stated this yesterday, at one-day investigative hearing on the issue.
He said, “The quota from the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries is about 1.8 million barrel per day but we are producing less than 1.2million per day, showing a shortfall of 600,000 bpd. How do we meet our fiscal challenges?
“It is clear that the PIA/Host Community law we put in place is not the solution. If stealing of crude has taken this worrisome dimension, what can the host communities do?
“We didn’t see any pipeline physically and nobody could ascertain the right of way.
“I still believe that PIB/Host Community law put in place is not the solution to oil theft. The law would not achieve its intendment if the current massive oil theft is not addressed.”
Bassey lamented the massive crude theft in the oil producing areas of the Niger Delta region and noted that the development was crippling the nation’s economy.
He told the stakeholders that the shortfall in the country’s oil revenues were not due to oil theft alone, but also caused by inability to have evacuation access, lack of effective metering and monitoring by operators as well as the unwillingness of security agencies to checkmate the incidents of oil theft close to where they are stationed.
He disclosed that shut in wells, oil theft and evacuation issues and lack of effective metering were the issues affecting petroleum production and national revenues. He said the country had incurred a loss of over $2.1 billion (about N872 billion) as a result of oil theft and sabotage.
He explained, “We’ve carried out on the spot assessment of the Niger Delta area where we spent over one week trying to find out what was actually going on.
“We spoke with necessary stakeholders and many of us returned to Abuja very sad because our investigations revealed that it was nothing but a national calamity.
“We are losing more than 900 barrels per day. a barrel is made up of 159 litres of crude. Most of the pipelines had been covered by bush, making it very unsafe for any security personnel to asses and secure the facilities.
“This is the worst form of economic sabotage which needed a strong political will to tackle but at the same time it required legislative input to address.
“Stakeholders are also complaining about the roles of regulatory agencies which they claimed was not good enough to guarantee ease of doing business.”
He said the Bonny Terminal, being operated by Shell, which hitherto produces 60,000 barrels per day (bpd) has not produced a single barrel for the past seven months.
The President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan, who declared the public hearing open, said the Senate was worried that the petroleum sector had been bedeviled by oil theft which he said was threatening the nation’s economy.
He added, “It is regrettable that the criminals are perpetrating the unfortunate crime with the active connivance of stakeholders including security personnel.
“The Senate will stop at nothing to unveil the criminals behind the crime and that is why we set an adhoc committee to unravel the thieves and come up with workable solutions to end the menace, before December this year.”
Representatives of Shell, Total LNG, Chevron, SPDC Nigeria, Ministry of Trade and Investment, Nigeria Upstream Regulatory Commission, Fiscal Responsibility Commission, Inspector General of Police, Federal Inland Revenue Service, National Security Adviser, and the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association (PENGASSAN) made presentations before the panel.