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Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners - Politics - Nairaland

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Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Odingo1(op): 8:34am On Jun 17, 2020
Trouble in the Senate Yesterday as Senator Ita Enang Reveal that Northerners own 80% of oil blocks

Supporters of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) pushed their case further yesterday at the Senate, with startling facts on the sector.

Senator Ita Enang (Akwa Ibom North East) described the opposition to the 10 per cent host community fund by mostly northern senators as “misplaced”.

Enang, who is also the Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules and Business, said that those opposed to the fund should know that over 83 per cent of oil blocks are owned by northerners.

But he did not give the number of oil blocks Nigeria has.

Senator David Mark, who seemed to have been shocked by what Enang said, said the Akwa Ibom lawmaker should not be distracted (some senators were grumbling) because he was making an important point.Mark asked Enang whether he could substantiate his claim.

Enang promptly pulled out a document from his folder and reeled out oil blocs and their owners.

He said he did not intend to divide the country but to guide those who wanted to contribute to the debate to be truly informed.

He listed northerners who own oil blocks to include Alhaji Mai Deribe, Borno State and owner of Cavendish Petroleum, which operates OML 110 with an average of about N4billion monthly.

He also listed Seplat/Platform Petroleum, operators of the ASUOKPU/UMUTU Marginal Field with Mallam (Prince) Sanusi Lamido, Kano , as a major shareholder and director.

South Atlantic Petroleum Limited (SAPETRO) established by General T. Y. Danjuma, Taraba State , who is also chairman of Eni Nigeria Limited.

SAPETRO partnered with Total Upstream Nigeria Limited (TUPNI) and Brasoil Oil Services Company Nigeria Limited to become operators of the OPL 246.

AMNI International Petroleum and Development Company is owned by Alhaji (Colonel) Sani Bello of Kontangora , Niger State.

“They are operators of OML 112 and OML 117,” he said.

He said that a former Petroleum Minister and former OPEC Chairman, Rilwanu Lukman, another northerner manages AMNI oil blocks “with very key interest in the NNPC/Vitol trading deal.”

He said that Oriental Energy Resources Limited, a company owned by Alhaji Indimi, runs three oil blocks – OML 115, the Oldwok field and the Ebok field.

He said that Alhaji Aminu Dantata’s Express Petroleum and Gas Limited, operates OML 108.

Enang said that OML 113 allocated to Yinka Folawiyo Petroleum Limited is owned by Alhaji W.I. Folawiyo. Alhaji Saleh Mohammed Gambo, North East Petroleum Limited, is the holder of the OPL 215 Licence.

North East Petroleum was awarded blocs OPL 276 and OPL 283 and closing thereupon a Joint Venture Agreement with Centrica Resources Nigeria Limited and CCC Oil and Gas.

He said that INTEL is owned by former Vice President Atiku, the late Gen. Shehu Musa Yar’Adua and Ado Bayero. It has substantial stakes in Nigeria ’s oil exploration industry both in Nigeria and Sao Tome and Principe .

He said that Mike Adenuga’s Conoil is the oldest indigenous oil exploration company with six blocks. OPL 291 was awarded to Starcrest Energy Nigeria Limited, owned by Emeka Offor, which was sold to Addax Petroleum.

Enang urged the Senate to cause the immediate revocation of all oil blocks licences and their redistribution, in accordance with the Federal Character Principle.

He said: “My submission is that when you look at the distribution of those who own oil blocks and the amount of money that comes from the different oil blocks to the Federation Account and you see the owners of these oil blocks, you will agree with me that there is inequity in the distribution of oil blocks.

“The oil is produced in the Niger Delta yet it is the people of the Northeast and the Northwest and a little of the Northcentral, almost nothing of the Southwest and the Southeast, that are the persons owning and controlling these oil blocks.

“Almost nothing for the Southsouth, Niger Delta oil producing areas.

“They are quarreling with the area that takes just 13 per cent when you are producing the entire 100 per cent, you give some to the Federation Account and they give only 13 per cent of what you give and, of course, it is whatever you declared that you have produced. It is actually produced by you.

“I did not want to introduce something that is divisive.

“It is not intended to divide the country, it is intended to say ‘look, let us be realistic’.

“What some of the oil wells and the owners of the oil wells produce in a month and take as profit is sometimes more than what two or three states receive from the Federation Account.”

Enang noted that “when a group of people are richer than a state and then it is produced by you, then there is so much opposition that even the people who suffer the effect of the oil production should not be give host communities’ fund; and we have explained that the host communities fund is not only for the oil producing; it is for any of the communities that hosts oil infrastructure, which includes oil pipelines, refineries, gas pipelines and anything that is capable of causing danger.”

“If we had the host communities fund, the danger that we have been having in Arepo in Ogun State, the area would have benefited from the host communities fund.”

Enag said that other areas, such as Kaduna and some other states, will benefit from it.

He went on: “If you are producing and declaring only what you like and only the 10 per cent now being provided for the host communities and the 13 per cent which is after deducting everything, that cannot be in the interest of the country.

“What I am asking now is that oil blocs in the whole country should be revoked and redistributed according to Federal Character Principle.

“We are not saying that we in the Southsouth should have all or the Southeast should have all or the Southwest should have all.

“In fact, if there are 18 oil blocs or 36 oil blocks, we don’t mind that you give us at least four, Northeast four, Southeast four, Northwest four.

“At least, let there be equity, but then there should be the principle of who owns it and then you give us more.

“But at this time, we don’t even have it. The 13 per cent is what we are even suffering to sustain.”

Senator Olufemi Lanlehin (Oyo South) praised the maturity of Senators in considering the bill.

He urged the Senate to look at the “absolute and sweeping powers” granted the President in Section 191 of the bill.

The Section, he said, gives the President absolute and unqualified powers to grant petroleum licences to whoever he pleases.

Lanlehin prayed the Senate to use the opportunity of the bill to design a template that would grow the economy.

Senator Adegbenga Kaka (Ogun East) said he was supporting the bill with mixed feelings.

He noted that the trend of the debate seemed to indicate that senators were more concerned about how to share the cake and not how to bake it.

Kaka said the power granted the minister of petroleum in the bill should be reconsidered “so that we don’t give too much power to the minister.”

The lawmaker who insisted that the bill should be finetuned, said certain percentage of earnings should be set aside to fix electricity, agriculture and other infrastructure.

Senator Mohammed Goje (Gombe Central) said before the debate, he was completely against the bill.

He said the trend of the debate showed that the Senate was poised to do justice to the bill by removing offensive sections.

To him, it seems a consensus is being built around certain sections of the bill.

He noted that most contributors agreed that the power of the minister should be reduced, such that the minister will just be like any other minister.

Goje said: “We should not create a super minister.”

He said that definite provision should be made for frontier exploration, especially adequate funding.

He opposed 10 per cent host community fund.

Senator Barnabas Gemade (Benue North East) described the bill as very important and long overdue.

Gemade said an adage says: “Wherever you find oil, corruption creeps in and wherever you find diamond war emerges.”

He said the adage had been proved to be true.

Gemade said the bill contained good and bad provisions. He listed the good sections to include development of the gas sector, increase in promotion of local content and the unbundling of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

The bad sections, he said, include the minister’s economic power.

On the host community fund, Gemade said efforts should be made to ensure that it does not degenerate to very poor management of resources as it is, according to him, in the Niger Delta Development Commission, 13 per cent derivation and others.

On the frontier exploration, he said more effort should be geared towards discovering oil in other places.

Senator Akin Odunsi ( Ogun West) described the bill as the most important legislation before the National Assembly.

Odunsi noted that the bill becomes even more important when it is recognised that the country runs a mono economy based on oil.

The lawmaker cautioned against undue sentiment in the consideration of the bill.

He agreed that the bill was not perfect but posited that it could be fine-tuned to engender development.

Senator Abdulahi Adamu (Nasarawa West) said he was giving the bill “a reserved support”.

Adamu expressed worry about the absence of transparency and accountability in the oil sector.

He said the bill appears to contradict the Constitution (as amended), especially when it is recognised that oil and gas as well as other minerals are in the Exclusive List and under the control of the Federal Government.

The lawmaker cautioned about the unbundling of the NNPC in order not to put up the corporation for outright purchase by wealthy Nigerians.

On the host community fund, Adamu said the provision would create the fourth tier of government.

To Senator Gbenga Ashafa (Lagos East), the bill will be counter productive in its present form. He demanded the definition of host community.

Ashafa said pipelines burst at times not because of vandalisation but because of the integrity of the pipes.

Senator Ayogu Eze said his support for the bill stemmed from the realization that the oil sector should be reformed.

Eze highlighted issues of details in the bill, which, he said, should be addressed at the committee and public hearing levels.

It was obvious that most northern Senators were not comfortable with what Enang said.


But the main question at hand is why should the ownership of some of the sources of the country's revenue and wealth be allotted to private individuals? I've never seen this practiced in other countries. This is unbelievable and unfair to ordinary Nigerians.
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Johnjanrt: 8:41am On Jun 17, 2020
First things First. Source?
That being said, how's it that Northerners own majority shares of oil wells in the country even when it's no where close to their region. What would have happened if the wells are in their region?
All the same who's to blame? And whose fault is it?
Southerners should learn to own up to their misdeeds rather than continuously blaming the North for their Woes.
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by RuddyFusion(m): 8:48am On Jun 17, 2020
Hmmmmmmmmmm
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by AdaoraNK(f): 9:01am On Jun 17, 2020
Johnjanrt:
First things First. Source?
That being said, how's it that Northerners own majority shares of oil wells in the country even when it's no where close to their region. What would have happened if the wells are in their region?
All the same who's to blame? And whose fault is it?
Southerners should learn to own up to their misdeeds rather than continuously blaming the North for their Woes.
I regret reading the piece when I senator Ayogu Eze was mentioned because he is no longer in the senate.
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Peterobi90: 9:02am On Jun 17, 2020
Gemade said an adage says: “Wherever you find oil, corruption creeps in and wherever you find diamond war emerges.”
Words of wisdom... king Solomon "Dont leave me"..
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by moriss33(m): 9:02am On Jun 17, 2020
I just laugh in Latin
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Nobody: 9:04am On Jun 17, 2020
After the debate what next ?
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by sapientia(m): 9:04am On Jun 17, 2020
Source?
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by helinues: 9:06am On Jun 17, 2020
If the owner of the oil are not interested in the oil well, let those who are interested take it up now.

So
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Justiceleague1: 9:07am On Jun 17, 2020
City Beggar grin
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Blackking98(m): 9:22am On Jun 17, 2020
AdaoraNK:
I regret reading the piece when I senator Ayogu Eze was mentioned because he is no longer in the senate.
Ita enang is no longer in the Senate too, it must be an old news.
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by sesameq: 9:41am On Jun 17, 2020
Monkey dey work.baboon dey chop. Have you eaten this morning? Rich man don't shout only the poor does.


Keep making noises on the media, rich dudes are receiving their alert as we are speaking. Nigeria doesn't exist anymore, its just me alone and me alone.
#MayGodSaveUs!
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by AdaoraNK(f): 9:45am On Jun 17, 2020
Blackking98:
Ita enang is no longer in the Senate too, it must be an old news.
I guess so
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Throwback: 9:48am On Jun 17, 2020
Old news of many years ago that has been thoroughly debunked as baseless.
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by BlowYourMind: 10:06am On Jun 17, 2020
it was quiet unfortunate nothing was done afterwards
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Fantasticcc: 10:35am On Jun 17, 2020
No wonder they can never restructure the country..
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by ruggedtimi(m): 11:09am On Jun 17, 2020
Though an old news...but is suprising to see how the north controls our resources.
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Commonsense99: 11:14am On Jun 17, 2020
grin
Where are the "we the Niger delta crew"? grin
Senator Enang should be man enough to ask for outright referendum, afterall we are not gonna be first country to split, and we won't be the last.

As it stands now, No fulani will give up any oil well without a serious fight.

This is the basis of the fake one Nigeria, ironically some people still pretends they don't care.
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Cantonese: 11:29am On Jun 17, 2020
Well said by Enang. But changing the status quo may be very difficult. Those companies are the politicians we hear and powers behind the present crop of political office holders.
Re: Northerners Own 83% Of Oil Well-Senator Ita Enang List Names Of Owners by Caseless: 11:54am On Jun 17, 2020
old and useless story.
1 Reply

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