Oil sector accounts for 80% Nigeria’s corruption —IPMAN
Nigeria’s oil and gas sector accounts
for about 80 per cent of the total corruption-related issues across the
country, the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria has
said.
According to IPMAN, although some cases
of corruption may not be seen as involving the oil sector at the surface
level, in-depth analysis of most of such cases normally have direct or
indirect links to the oil and gas industry.
The association’s National President,
Mr. Chinedu Okoronkwo, told our correspondent in Abuja that the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation was largely involved in most of the
corruption-related issues in the country.
Okoronkwo, while commenting on the
restructuring at the NNPC, stated that if the Federal Government could
stop corruption in the oil and gas sector, then it would have been able
to reduce corruption in Nigeria by about 80 per cent.
He, however, stated that with the
recruitment of private sector players into the national oil firm, the
NNPC would be transformed.
The IPMAN president said, “By the time
that area (oil sector) is rid of all forms of corruption, Nigeria would
have got 70 to 80 per cent of its problems solved. If corruption in the
oil sector is addressed and halted, 80 per cent of our problems as a
country would have been solved.
“I say this because all the corruption
that we are talking about wouldn’t have been a big issue without the
NNPC. We cannot shy away from it. But with the coming on board of people
from the private sector, we will see a miracle.
“I have no doubt about what they can do
there. If with the likes of Ibe Kachikwu, Exxon Mobil is doing well, he
will also bring that experience to bear in managing our national oil
corporation, and of course this will be in partnership with the private
sector players that have been recruited to work with him.”
President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday
evening fired the managing directors of the subsidiaries of the NNPC and
retired 38 top management staff of the firm, trimming down their number
from 122 to 83.
Buhari further allowed the firm to
recruit 12 private sector players to its management cadre to help it
jump-start a new business outlook to enhance its operational environment
as a profit-driven business and wean the firm from its present civil
service orientation.
The IPMAN president told our
correspondent that the restructuring at the corporation was not a
surprise because the oil sector accounts for about 80 per cent of
Nigeria’s earnings.
Okoronkwo said, “The restructuring at
the NNPC is expected because you cannot move this country forward
without first looking at the oil industry and getting activities in that
sector right. Oil accounts for over 80 per cent of our earnings. We can
even call it a mono economy because virtually everybody depends on
oil.”
He therefore called on the Federal
Government to fix the country’s pipelines, stressing that the facilities
were currently a major constraint impeding the smooth distribution of
petroleum products produced at the rehabilitated refineries.
Although he admitted that he was not
aware of the quantity of refined products at the various refineries and
if they were enough to be sold in commercial quantity, he maintained
that the refineries had started working.
“But if the refineries work and the
pipelines to convey the refined products are not there, then, it is
still a big problem,” Okoronkwo added.


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