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Babalola - Nnpc Is Insolvent by Beaf: 2:43am On Jul 14, 2010
[size=14pt]NNPC is insolvent - Babalola [/size]
Wednesday, 14 July 2010 01:21 Reuters
•Current liabilities now exceed assets

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) does not have enough money to fund its operations and is technically insolvent because of unpaid subsidies it is demanding from government, Remi Babalola, minister of state for finance said on Tuesday. The state owned oil behemoth, which oversees Nigeria’s vast oil industry, is locked in a standoff with the Federal Government, saying it is owed more than N1 trillion in subsidies.

The Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC), which manages the distribution of Nigeria’s oil revenues to the three tiers of government, says however that NNPC owes it a shortfall of N450 billion in unremitted crude oil receipts. “NNPC is insolvent as current liabilities exceed current assets,” Babalola told a FAAC meeting in Abuja.
Remi Babalola

“NNPC is incapable of repaying the N450 billion owed to the Federation Account unless it is reimbursed the N1.156 trillion (in subsidies) it has requested from the federal ministry of finance,” he said.

Despite being Africa’s biggest oil and gas producer, Nigeria is reliant on imports to meet its energy needs. Its four refineries are in disrepair, but even at full capacity they would only meet around a quarter of domestic energy demand.

Most people in Africa’s most populous nation see subsidised fuel as the only tangible benefit of their nation being a major world oil producer. The government has said it wants to remove the subsidies, which cost upwards of $4 billion a year, but such a move is likely to meet with popular resistance.

NNPC buys crude oil at the prevailing international market rate but sells petroleum products to local marketers at a discount in order to keep pump prices artificially low. The government is supposed to subsidise the difference.

NNPC’s financial woes highlight the need for urgent reforms to Nigeria’s mainstay oil industry, where the state-run firm’s funding shortfalls have been an ongoing hindrance to the OPEC member country meeting its full production potential. Foreign oil firms including Royal Dutch Shell, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Total and Agip, operate onshore in Nigeria through joint ventures in which NNPC holds significant stakes.

NNPC has consistently struggled to meet its share of cash calls to fund the joint ventures, leaving some struggling to maintain existing operations or invest in future projects.

Parliament is currently considering wide-ranging legislation to reform the industry, part of which aims to solve the funding problems by splitting NNPC up and making the joint ventures independent, allowing them to tap capital markets. Nigeria has struggled to pump much above two million barrels of oil per day (bpd), just two thirds of its installed capacity, partly because of insecurity in its restive Niger Delta oil heartland, but also because of the funding problems.

Babalola said NNPC was spending increasing amounts of money repairing vandalised infrastructure in the Niger Delta, where an amnesty last year has brought a period of stability, and was also suffering. President Goodluck Jonathan has ordered the finance ministry to audit the accounts of NNPC, which has been plagued by mismanagement and corruption over a number of years.


http://www.businessdayonline.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=12706:nnpc-is-insolvent-babalola&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=18

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