Oil blocks licence: Stick to bidding process, group urges FG

BudgIT, a civic technology organisation at the forefront of raising the standards of transparency and accountability in Nigeria, has called on the federal government to stick to the bidding process of awarding licenses for oil blocks in Nigeria instead of the discretionary award .

Managing Director of the organisation, Mr. Seun Ongibinde, said there is the need for government to critically look into the proposed Petroleum Industry Administrative Bill before it is finally passed into law.

Onigbinde said; “According to Section 8; Sub-section 2 of the Petroleum Industry Administration Bill; “all petroleum licenses shall be awarded through an open, transparent and competitive bidding process conducted by the Commission pursuant to this Act”.

He noted that; “this means that awarding of petroleum licenses will be free and fair enough for everybody. However, we are worried that the President can still award petroleum licenses discretionarily.

“Section 8, Sub-section 7 of the same bill stated that the President may direct the Commission to negotiate and award petroleum licenses to qualified investors outside of the bidding process. Any such awards may only be for strategic and bilateral purposes.”

The BudgIT boss said the opportunity to arbitrarily award petroleum licenses led to the infamous Malabu (OPL 245) scandal, adding that Mr. Dan Etete who was the Minister of Petroleum during Sani Abacha’s military regime, awarded the prospecting rights to the huge OPL 245 block to Malabu Oil and Gas, a shell company in which Mr. Etete secretly, allegedly,  held a significant
stake.

“Malabu paid only $2million of the required $20million signature bonus, and Abacha died five days after. The Department of Petroleum Resources, DPR has also admitted that no due diligence was carried out before the awarding of OPL 245 to Malabu Oil and Gas in 1998. This oil block which is considered to be the richest in Africa, is estimated to contain about 9 billion barrels of crude” he explained.

Commenting, BudgIT’s Principal Lead, Gabriel Okeowo, said why must the President be able to discretionarily award licenses outside the bidding process? 

“For us at BudgIT, we advise the government to remove from the PIAB the clause giving any sitting President the right to award licenses outside the established regulatory framework, this will go a long way in preventing the recurrence of the Malabu saga, ” Okeowo
said.