Oil & Energy
NNPC’s Staff Receive N357bn As Salaries In One Year
																								
												
												
											Staff of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) received N357.098 billion as salaries, wages and other benefits in 2019, the corporation’s recently released audited financial statement has revealed.
The NNPC Group had disclosed that its staff strength, as at April 20, 2020, stood at 6,621, both at its headquarters and across all its subsidiaries, division and offices nationwide. The NNPC has 13 divisions and Strategic Business Units, SBU, nationwide.
Though the NNPC recruited 1,050 new employees, in February 2020, a number of senior management staff of the NNPC were also disengaged earlier in the year.
According to the NNPC, in its 2019 audited financial statement, the emoluments of the staff in 2019 was an increase of N14.74 billion or an appreciation of 4.3 per cent from N342.36 billion paid to the staff in 2018.
The N357.098 billion, if divided among the 6,621 staff of the NNPC, translates to an average salary of N53.93 million per employee in 2019.
This indicates that the N357.098 billion salary of NNPC staff is higher than the 2020 budgets of many states in the country, including Delta State’s N282 billion; Kano, Kaduna, Borno and Sokoto’s budgets of N206.27 billion, N259.25 billion, N108.8 billion and N153 billion respectively; and the 2020 budget of Edo, Rivers and Abia states which are N128.8 billion, N300.37 billion and N102.6 billion respectively.
The salary is also more than the 2020 budgets of three South-East states Enugu, Anambra and Imo states combined, which is N350.3 billion. Specifically, the 2020 budget of Enugu, Anambra and Imo states is N146.4 billion, N114.9 billion and N89 billion respectively.
The salary is also higher than the N127.36 billion, N131.74 billion and N152.77 billion earmarked for capital expenditure in the proposed 2021 budget for the Federal Ministry of Education, Federal Ministry of Health and Federal Ministry of Water Resources, respectively. It is also higher than the N256.89 billion, N198.28 billion, N89.97 billion N64.84 billion and N10.19 billion budgeted for capital expenditure in the proposed 2021 budget for the ministries of Transport, Power, Aviation, Science and Technology, and Mines and Steel Development, respectively.
Meanwhile, in the 2019 financials, the NNPC said it paid N91.336 billion to the government as income tax in 2019; and N74.177 billion as interest on loans in the same year.
The financial statement also revealed that staff of the NNPC alone not including employees of other subsidiaries received N103.7 billion as salaries, wages and other benefits in 2019,   an increase of 13.26 per cent compared with N91.56 billion recorded in 2018.
Oil & Energy
Supermajors Bet Big on Long-Term Oil Demand
														Oil & Energy
Stakeholders Lament Poor Crude Oil Supply To Indigenous Companies …..Urges President To Pressure NNPCL To Prioritise Local Refineries
														Oil & Energy
Investors Raise $500m For Solar Manufacturing – Adelabu
														- 
																	
										
																			News1 day agoStrike: FG to release N11.995bn arrears to doctors, others in 72 hours
 - 
																	
										
																			Oil & Energy1 day agoInvestors Raise $500m For Solar Manufacturing – Adelabu
 - 
																	
										
																			Opinion1 day agoTransgenderism: Reshaping Modern Society
 - 
																	
										
																			Oil & Energy1 day ago‘Redirect $2b REA Fund To Industrial Power’
 - 
																Sports1 day ago
DEPUTY PRESIDENT EXPRESSES COMMITMENT TO SUPPORT SPORTS DEV, SWAN
 - 
																	
										
																			Maritime1 day agoCustoms To Partner NAPTIP On Human Trafficking Menace
 - 
																	
										
																			News1 day agoRSG EXPRESSES CONCERN OVER FLOODING IMPACT, EROSION
 - 
																	
										
																			Oil & Energy1 day agoStakeholders Lament Poor Crude Oil Supply To Indigenous Companies …..Urges President To Pressure NNPCL To Prioritise Local Refineries
 
