The House of
Representatives Committee on Oil and Gas, on Wednesday threatened to issue
warrant of arrest on Managing Directors of 10 oil firms, if they failed to
appear before it on Thursday to account for unremitted 250 million dollars to
the Federal Government’s purse.
Mr Jerigbe Agom, the
Chairman of the committee, issued the warning at its sitting in Lagos.
The Chairman berated
the companies, including, Aiteo Energy, Neconde Energy, Frontier Energy and
seven indigenous oil companies for allegedly not showing interest to remit the
fund.
Agom also ordered the
Managing Director of the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) to
appear before the committee in Abuja on Dec. 19 over Operating Mining Lease
(OML) 119, to explain why the block was producing 5,000 barrels in spite of its
capacity to deliver beyond.
He said the subsidiary
arm of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) failed to remit 10
million dollars accrued debt in line with the agreement it reached with the
Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR).
The Chairman said that
the NNPC had, on many occasions, shunned the committee’s invitations to explain
the infraction.
He wondered why the
NNPC, which efforts should be instrumental to government drive to block revenue
leakage in the oil and gas sector, turned down his committee’s sitting for no
reason.
He also spoke on
ExxonMobil Nigeria’s Gas-To-Liquid project, saying that same was illegal
because it had no licence from the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR).
Agom added that the
committee observed the infraction and would not allow the illegality to linger
without addressing the situation.
The committee, in the
meantime, gave the IOCS two weeks to tidy their grey arrears in the remittance
of fund to the Federal Government.
The Deputy Director,
Planning, DPR, Mrs Folashade Odunuga, said International Oil Companies (IOCs)
had shown deep interest to pay their debts to the government’s coffers but was
constrained by fiscal price disparity.
She also said though
the NPDC promised to remit 10 million dollars to narrow its debt, but it failed
to fulfill its pledge.
Odunuga said the
agency would play its watchdog roles very well in the industry as well as make
rigorous moves to block revenue leakages from the nation’s oil and gas sector.
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