Group
Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mr. Ibe
Kachikwu, Tuesday, stated that the NNPC should not be blamed for all the
problems in the petroleum industry, declaring, instead that the cause of the
industry’s woes had been the lack of political will.
“The reform of the petroleum industry is key
and it is an area where we are going to put a lot of focus. Transparency is
key. Restructuring is key. Sometimes people do not realise that the problem has
not been NNPC, it is a problem of political will to go forward and implement
the outcome of researches and reports that had been done.
“Fortunately
for us this time around, that is what the President has brought to the table.
He has strong political will to see this through,” Kachikwu stated, at the
ongoing 55th Annual General Conference of the Nigerian Bar Association in
Abuja.
Kachikwu
who chaired a special session at the conference called for extensive
engagements with all stakeholders to iron out all grey areas in the Petroleum
Industry Bill, PIB, which has been pending before the National Assembly in the
last seven years.
According
to Mr. kachukwu, the bill is an essential legislation which must be approached
with all the seriousness and thoroughness it deserves.
He said,
“PIB is a serious affair, it is an essential piece of legislation but as we all
know a lot of engagement is required to address all the issues because the oil
and gas environment has changed. There are issues of cost, with oil going down
to $40 per barrel; the PIB cannot be the same.”
However,
he stated that while waiting for the wide consultations and passage of the PIB,
it is only natural to kick start the reforms in the petroleum industry with the
existing laws.
Commenting on what the Federal Government intends to do with the draft legislation, Kachikwu disclosed that the PIB has come to stay though it would take a bit of time to perfect the draft.
Commenting on what the Federal Government intends to do with the draft legislation, Kachikwu disclosed that the PIB has come to stay though it would take a bit of time to perfect the draft.
“PIB is
important, but we need to x-ray the issues. We need at least one year to get it
back on track. The reality is that we cannot afford to wait any longer for
change in the petroleum sector because of the delay in the passage of PIB,
things have got to start happening and that’s exactly what we are doing,’’ he
noted.
Also
speaking on the issue, Comrade Peter Esele, former President of the Trade Union
Congress, TUC, and who was also President of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior
Staff Association of Nigeria, PENGASSAN, noted that though PIB is key, the
industry can make do with existing laws to activate essential reforms in the
sector.
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