10 Sep 2007 |
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The setting up of new
Oil and Gas and Power Sectors Reform Committees respectively, under the
auspices of the National Energy Council (NEC) and the inauguration of their respective
members by President Umaru Musa Yar Adua on Friday, August 7, 2007 are another
set of major landmark policy actions from the President within the first 100
days of his administration. It would be recalled that also, within the spate of
the first 100 days of his administration; President Yar Adua took some other very
important landmark policy actions and made some remarkable pronouncements
regarding the perilous state of
a) Reduced the price
of petrol or Premium Motor Sprit – (PMS) from N75 to N70, reversed the increases
in the price of kerosene and VAT rate
from 10 per cent back to the original 5 per cent respectively - all announced
by the outgoing administration of president Obasanjo announced on May 27, 2007
(two days to the handing over date of May 29, 2007);
b) Appointed of three Ministers of States for the Ministry
of Energy and Power; one each respectively, for Petroleum, Gas and Power and
with him as the Senior Minister in Charge of the Ministry itself;
c) Removed the Group Managing Director (GMD) of the
behemoth Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Mr Funsho Kupolukun;
d) Appointed an Acting Group Managing Director (GMD) for
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Alhaji Abubakar Lawal Yar
Adua (no relation to the President);
e) Reversed the last minute fire sales of the Port
Harcourt and Kaduna Refineries and Petrochemicals complexes to the Blue Star
Consortium that were done by the outgoing administration of former president
Obasanjo;
f) Unveiled the plan for restructuring of the NNPC into
five separate entities on August 29, 2007;
g) Established a National Council on Energy (NEC) on 30
August 2007 and inaugurated its member on 6 September 2007;
h) Last but by no means the least, set up new Oil and Gas
and Power Sector Reform Committees respectively on Friday, September 7, 2007
(see Tables 1 and 2 respectively).
Table 1: Oil and Gas Sectors Reform Committee Composition
Table 2: Power Sector Reform Committee
These are by no means,
very spectacular developments in the brief period of 100 days of the life of
the new administration. However, this latest policy initiative of setting up
two new committees emanating from the Presidency concerning the oil and gas and
power sectors reforms respectively, seems to indicate that the government has
abandoned the existing reports, that the present administration inherited from the previous administration of
former president Obasanjo (1999-2007), which formed the initial basis and
grounds, upon which the Federal Executive Council (FEC) anchored its August 29
2007 landmark policy pronouncement regarding implementation of the already
recommended reforms for the oil and gas sectors. If this were the case, then,
the President and the government deserve commendations for cleverly doing away
with those inherited convoluted reports from the previous administration of
former president Obasanjo. Least we forgot, even former president Obasanjo
seemed to have abandoned and refused to implement those very reports his
administration commissioned and approved during his time, probably for the same
reason(s) the present administration has just suddenly decided to ditch them
too.
There is every
indication that President Yar Adua decided to ditch those reports and begins
from a clean slate the whole process of energy (oil and gas) and power sectors
reforms, once again. Otherwise, how could the administration explain and or
rationalise the need for constituting these two new Oil and Gas and Power
Reform Committees once again! After all, the NEC is suppose to be using the
existing inherited Oil and Gas Sectors Reform Implementation Committee’s (OGIC)
reports as its working documents in order to come up with a master
plan/blueprint or roadmap that will herald the Presidential declaration of the
much awaited national emergency on energy and power.
Furthermore, the truth
again can be gleaned from the President’s statement while inaugurating the two
new Committees when he stated that “The Oil and Gas Committee is charged with
the responsibility of ensuring that the required legislative framework for oil
and gas reform is undertaken ahead of the administration’s planned
restructuring programme.” The President further stated that “The committee is
also expected to advice on the take-off of new bodies, institutions,
organisations and agencies that will constitute the institutional framework for
the restructuring of the oil industry.” From these statements, there are no
doubts left therefore, that President Yar Adua’s latest policy action in these
sectors point to the direction of returning to the drawing board for fresh
ideas as far as reforms in the oil and gas and power sectors are concerned
under the present administration.
Moreover, the inherited
OGIC reports are visionless and lack foresight and clarity to say the least.
Therefore, there is nothing wrong to worry about if they are discarded for new,
visionary and fresh ideas, except for the valuable time wasted and huge sums of
money spent in arriving at this point from year 2000. Nevertheless, what is
worth doing is worth doing very well. How well these newly constituted
Committees will perform depends on a number of factors, some of which are
examined in this write-up. But before doing that, here are some quick
observations regarding these two newly inaugurated Committees:
a) The first observation is whether there is any need to set
up these two Committees in the first place, given that, the NEC as presently
constituted can achieve the same objectives for which these two Committees were
set up to achieve. For example, without setting up these two Committees, but with
a strong professionally staffed and well equipped Technical-cum-administrative Secretariat
for the NEC, these same Nigerians (some of whom are already members of the NEC
by virtue of their respective callings) who were made members of these
Committees can be commissioned by the NEC to submit to it for consideration,
specific tasks to aid its workings. In addition, the NEC Secretariat can also
call for memoranda from the general public and strategic stakeholders in these
sectors as inputs to the workings of the NEC. By doing these, a lot of cost
savings can be made instead of the present arrangement that will consume a lot
of money and logistics. Remember, the Bureau for Public Enterprises (BPE), the
National Council on Privatisation (NCP), the National Economic Council (NEC)
and the National Planning Commission (NPC) still exists and have statutory
rights over some of the reform issues under consideration. The present arrangement
is too top heavy; bloated with too many bureaucratic layers for a simple and
straightforward national assignment.
b) The use of Commissioned Papers that address specific issues
and problem areas and calls for memoranda from the general public and strategic
stakeholders in these identified issues and problem areas of the sectors will
do a superior job than the present arrangement put in place. Least we forgot,
there are also a number of existing very expensively produced and very
important relevant public documents like the Vision 2010 Reports, the Nigerian
Economic Summit Group (NESG) Reports, the Nigerian Economic Society (NES)
Reports, etc that the Technical Secretariat of the NEC can draw from in order to
add value in facilitating the workings of the NEC without the existence of
these Committees.
c) A close look at the membership composition of the two
committees indicates that a number of the members are recycled individuals who
participated in the previous national oil and gas and power reform committees
and the processes that produced the now jettisoned OGIC final reports. Also,
some of the members of the two committees are recycled individuals who were
either Chief Executives or Senior-level officers in these sectors who, either
voluntarily retired from service having attained the mandatory retirement age
or length of public service years, and or were retired or dismissed from
holding those positions for reasons of incompetence, corrupt practices etc in
the previous years. Therefore, one wonders what these categories of individuals
are bringing to the solutions of the problems which, in one way or another,
were largely responsible in the first place.
d) They played very significant roles in creating the
existing problems in these sectors when they were at the helms of the management
of the affairs of these very sectors. The critical questions to ask are: what
value; innovations and foresight are they bringing now to make a difference? Are
they the Messiahs and God-sent-born-again African Oracles? But it seems the
government that is keen to solve the problems in these sectors looks like
repeating some of the mistakes that created the lingering problems in the first
place; by adopting the business as usual of recycling of political jobbers. I
hasten to add that, I am not against recycling of capable and competent hands
and brains irrespective of age, gender etc. What is paramount is capability,
competence and the zeal to do the right things and putting national interest
first, before any other parochial consideration.
e) Another pertinent observation which I kept making is the
absence of the nation’s apex energy policy making organisation - the Energy
Commission of Nigeria (ECN) [www.energy.gov.ng] in the scheme of President Yar
Adua’s reform efforts in the energy and power sectors. Least we forgot, the ECN
also is the apex public agency responsible for public policy development and
promotion of Research and Development (R&D) covering all forms of energy
sources – conventional non-renewable and renewable sources; nuclear, solar
photovoltaic, wind power, biomass, tidal, and agro/biofuels etc. The entire
nation’s Energy Research Centres located in the various Nigerian Universities
are under the direct supervision of the ECN. Therefore, its exclusion from the
schemes of things in the energy and power sector reforms processes is like
excluding the federal ministry of finance, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
and the National Planning Commission (NPC) from the nation’s economic policy
making process!
f) It is unimaginable and ridiculous to see a mundane and
laughable agency that the government should have by now scrapped, the PPPRA
represented on these reform Committees and the ECN ridiculously completely left
out! Other strategic public agencies in the energy and power sectors that ought
to be on the membership list of these Committees or the NEC Technical
Secretariat include the various statutory regulatory bodies such as: the
Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), the Nigerian Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NNRC), Nigerian Atomic Energy Commission (NAEC) and even, the oil
and gas institutional and human resources capacity building agency – the Petroleum
Technology Development Funds (PTDF) ought to be included. Another very important
omission is the complete blackout of the place of the Chief Economic Adviser of
the President in the scheme of the reform processes of the energy and power
sectors. Again, this gross omission is like planning a major war without using
a map! Wait a minute, is the academia stupid? What of the capable hands of the
local and foreign energy and power companies and investors who may likely be
invited to partner in implementing the minted master plans/blueprints soon? The
attentions of Mr. President and the Secreatry to the Government of the
Federataion (SGF) are drawn to these very serious lapses.
g) The complete absence of mainstreaming of renewable energy
and power sources create the impression that
h) It is not out of national pride, ego and or attempting to
copy the so-called elitist western environmental ethical living style that
i) This should not be so;
j) This development is taking place largely because the
tremendous improvements in the renewable energy technologies over the years
have similarly improved renewables economics. For example, wind power is the
fast growing renewable energy source in the
k) The Power Sector Committee also needs to realise that it
is the gas price that among others, sets the electricity price. Since the
principal source of our gas in Nigeria is associated gas produced in the
process of drilling for petroleum, there is the need for this Committee to work
jointly with the Oil and Gas Sectors Reform Committee in order to establish an
organic framework that links the oil and gas sectors with the power sector in
an efficient, seamless and mutually beneficial commercial relationship. For
example, shortage of gas supply continues to threat
regular electricity supply in the country. The gas shortage is largely the
result of supply insufficiency from production sites and deliberate sabotage of
the gas supply and distribution pipelines by local insurgents in the oil and
gas rich Niger Delta region. This further attest to the urgent need for the NEC
to links its activities with the Niger Delta development Master Plan in order
to avoid working at cross purposes and or duplicating efforts.
l) Also, just as it is very important and paramount that the
Power Sector Reform Committee mainstreams renewables like solar and wind power,
the Oil and Gas Sectors Reform Committee similarly, needs to mainstream
alternative liquid energy sources such as agro/biofuels (i.e., bioethanol and
biodiesel) in our national energy mix. This is in order to reduce our over
reliance and overdependence on non-renewable fossil fuels. For example, this
Committee needs to design from ground zero, a framework for mainstreaming these
agro/biofuels in
m) The British have joined this evolutionary and
revolutionary trend. For example, according to the Petroleum Review (August 2007, page 8), “there are currently some
1,400 producers of biofuels in the
n) Therefore since there is insatiable demand of bioethanol
and biodiesel from the developed world, Nigeria can do the same with its
abundant Neem tree plants found all
over the northern landscapes of Nigeria and crude palm oil (CPO), found all
over the southern Nigerian lands, given the right enabling environment. It is
against this backdrop that the Oil and Gas Sectors Reform Committee needs to
underscore the importance of development of both bioethanol and biodiesel
renewables in their recommendations to the NEC.
o) The sudden rise in the cost of wheat and price of bread
that triggered serious concerns about possible global food crisis are partially
linked to the recent upsurge in the conversion of corn (maize crop) for the
production of agro/biofuels mainly in the USA (see for example, The Economist Magazine, September 8th-14th
2007, page 91). For instance, the recent bread bakers strike in
In conclusion, the
messages that need to go out to the NEC and its various working committees are
that: Nigerians are expecting the basic necessities of energy and power
products and services within the shortest possible time frame and at affordable
prices and equally, on sustainable basis. However, the fear and concern are
that, it may take another X number of years to see the lights at the end of the
tunnel if and only if, the present arrangement put in place by the government
is the only way to go about achieving the reform objectives in these sectors.
Therefore, the conclusion is: there is the need to scale down drastically, the
bureaucratic layers, top-down and “pork barrel” approaches in the present institutional
arrangements and organisation of the implementation of the Presidential energy
and power sectors reforms agendas. After all, it is all about meeting the basic
needs of the Nigerian citizens under the broader sustainable socio-economic development
framework; energy security, employment, and poverty alleviation etc.
NOTES:
These were the Oil and
Gas Sector Reform Committee (OGRC) and Oil and Gas Sector Reform Implementation
Committee (OGIC) Reports, respectively. These were commissioned during the administration
of former president Obasanjo (1999 – 2007).
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