A crucial meeting between key government offices concerning the Central
Bank of Nigeria declaration that the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC) has failed to remit to the Federation Account the sum
of $49.8 billion between 2012 and 2013 has concluded that only about
$10.8 billion appears to be unaccounted for.
That figure was referred to only as a “shortfall” in domestic crude oil receipts.
In
a “summary of findings” issued after the meeting, which lasted until
2a.m,” the group said the $10.8 billion “shortfall” was acknowledged by
NNPC but that the corporation at the same time disputed its magnitude.
“This
shortfall has been acknowledged by NNPC, but the magnitude of the
shortfall is still disputed by NNPC. The shortfall is explained to be
the result of subsidy claims, unrecovered crude/product losses, and cost
of strategic petroleum storage (which is currently not captured in the
PPPRA template for refunds). This figure is also well-known to all
stakeholders at the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC), and
is reported and updated on a monthly basis. However, all parties
concerned are working assiduously through the ongoing reconciliation
efforts to resolve this.”
A source at the meeting told Sahara
Reporters that the overriding reason the institutions resolved that not
to drag the issue further is because the NNPC and the Minister of
Petroleum Resources managed to“convince” those at the meeting that the
monies had somehow been remitted.
The NNPC, meanwhile, admitted
at the meeting that Nigeria’s earnings from crude oil exports over the
period in question were $67.12 billion: $1.79 billion higher than the
revenues reported by the CBN.
The discrepancies leaked through a
letter written to President Goodluck Jonathan by CBN Governor, Sanusi
Lamido, which was first published by Sahara Reporters. Since the letter
leaked to the media, Sanusi has been put under immense pressure by
President Goodluck Jonathan and the Minister of Petroleum Resources,
Diezani Allison-Madueke.
Our source said that despite the bogus
accounting undertaken by the NNPC, the agency could still not account
for as much as $12 billion from proceeds of crude oil lifted and sold on
behalf of Nigeria.
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