Editorial
PIB And National Interest
There is no gain saying the fact that no bill has generated so much furore as the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) in the history of the nation’s Legislative Assembly.
A carry-over from the 6th Legislative Assembly, the PIB has remained in the legislative cooler for four years despite its acclaimed potentiality to revolutionise the Nigerian oil and gas industry. Though, a lot of theories have been offered on the reason why the extant bill has been in hibernation, a major glimpse was afforded into the reason for its non-passage on the last day of the year 2012 by the Chairman, Senate Committee on Housing, Senator Bukar Abba-Ibrahim.
Complementing the position of the chairman of Northern Governor’s Forum (NGF), Babangida Aliyu who had on August 12, 2012 hinted of plans by governors in the North to reject the proposed bill, Senator Abba – Ibrahim said the northern geo-political zone is opposed to the bill on the grounds of its alleged “lopsidedness” and would block the passage of the bill.
The northern zone’s grouse , Abba-Ibrahim revealed, has to do with a clause in the bill which makes provision for additional 10 per cent oil revenue to oil producing communities.
Insisting that the Niger Delta region should not be offered any additional advantage on a platter of gold via the PIB, the legislator said: “Derivation is only one out of seven sources of revenue for the oil-producing states” . He said the other six sources of additional revenue exclusively available to the Niger Delta zone, additional to the common federal government monthly allocations, included the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) with over N500 billion resources; the Niger Delta Ministry with over N400 billion federal government grants in the name of amnesty and oil companies doing Corporate Social Responsibility. Another 10 per cent to the already existing revenue generators for the zone would be unfair”, Abba-Ibrahim concluded.
The Tide receives with shame Senator Abba-Ibrahim’s denigrating remarks which clearly evince his warped perception that the Niger Delta region has already got more than enough share from the proverbial national cake and should, therefore, aspire no further. In fact, his rather awkward rationalisation that “nobody planted or farmed oil, it is God who put it there” merely orchestrates the dark side of Nigerian politicking, showing how we allow politics to corrupt our perception and appreciation of issues of national interest.
Indeed, Abba-Ibrahim’s remarks, like many of his kinsmen’s, coming at a time that various ethnic groups are being charged to work on templates of unity and national integration, suggest that the allegiance of many a northerner to their ethnic agenda over the overall interest of Nigeria has failed to abate
After billions of Naira have been budgeted to lobby members of the National Assembly on the PIB and prior assurance that it would be passed this year, comments like the ones being canvassed by some northern elements are condemnable.
With the North controlling about 90 per cent of the nation’s oil sector, especially at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Petroleum Development Trust Fund (PDTF), is it logically and morally correct to say that the Niger Delta has got more than enough and should be entitled to no more benefits? Do we need to restate the fact that several years of unconscionable exploitation of crude oil with no concomitant sustainability programme by the multi-national oil companies had left most parts of Niger Delta region ecologically degraded? Apart from the East-West Road which is yet to be fixed, can the meager handouts in the form of Niger Delta Ministry or NDDC atone for the environmental pollution, underdevelopment and infrastructural neglect of the area? Would the region not have got substantially far more than “additional 10 per cent” if we are practising genuine federalism where the regions claim their resources and only remit certain agreed percentage to the central? These questions beg for answers.
For the avoidance of doubt, the PIB is intended to correct the anomalies in the industry, reduce government control, boost activities at the down-stream sector and generally make for operational efficiency. Any sane person that kicks against this cannot claim to be patriotic.
Apart from the fact that the national budget continues to depend on the oil and gas from the Niger Delta, the need to operate the industry on international standards as stipulated in the PIB should interest every Nigerian. The bill is not about what goes to the Niger Delta, but how best to operate the industry for the optimum benefit of the country.
This clamour to take the lion share rather than contribute to the national cake must stop.
The Tide believes that the time has come for Nigerians to take the interest of the country seriously. It is time to support and act according to justice and good conscience. It is time to stop playing the ethnic card and join hands in nation building.
And as PIB is being considered, everything should also be done to make the solid minerals Act work and make its proceeds form part of the nation’s budget.
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