The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has been identified as one of the 20 entities that the Tinubu administration could sell a stake in so as to raise funds and improve governance.
This is according to a recent Bloomberg report.
Armstrong Takang, Chief executive officer at Nigeria’s Ministry of Finance Incorporated (MOFI), confirmed this to Bloomberg on Tuesday, August 15.
According to him, the government is considering selling stakes in NNPCL and other entities in the country, as the ministry is considering options including strategic sales and initial public offerings and aims to implement the plan within 18 months.
Takang said:
- “Some of the entities to be sold need the private sector to take controlling shares. It is better for us to own 49% of a high-performing entity than 90% of an entity that is underperforming.”
The Backstory
In June 2023, Bloomberg reported that President Tinubu was advised to sell assets in the NNPCL and to raise funds. In the Energy and Natural Resources subcommittee of the Presidential policy advisory council report prepared for Tinubu at the time, it was said that NNPCL should sell off assets including stakes in oil blocks to raise billions of dollars.
The report also suggested that the NNPCL should become a minority shareholder in projects it currently controls, potentially generating more than $17 billion by the end of the decade. The report also made the following suggestions:
- NNPCL should sell down interests in joint ventures to a minority position and reduce its holdings in refineries.
- The new government should head-hunt competent, tested, reform-focused leaders, to run the company.
- Deregulation of the local pricing system and applying a tax holiday to undeveloped deposits.
- NNPCL should end contracts with international and local traders through which it swaps crude for fuel. Instead, private companies should enter the market, leaving the state firm to sell the daily allocation of 445,000 barrels of oil for much-needed foreign exchange. Note that this policy has long been adopted.
What you should know
In the past, President Tinubu has assured that his administration is committed to removing all forms of bottlenecks to ensure Nigeria becomes an attractive investment destination, urging Oil and gas investors of his administration’s willingness to maintain an open-door policy and address their concerns. He has also said that fresh investments in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector, are needed now to enable the government to meet its obligations.
- In the report cited earlier, it was stated that Nigeria’s oil and gas sector has lost $70 billion worth of investments in the petroleum industry since 2011; this is coupled with $10.7 billion lost annually to fuel subsidies.
MOFI was incorporated under the provisions of Sections 2 and 3 of the Ministry of Finance Incorporated (MOFI) Act of 1959 as an asset holding company under the Federal Ministry of Finance. Its mandate as the sole manager of all federal government investment interests, estates, easements, and rights, positions it as a strategic institution to support the Federal Government’s effort to address several economic challenges and spur a renewal of the economy.
Retain a percentage say like 20 perfent.each.for.retail investors across 774 LGAs. Do not.sell to only moneybags who will buy and hold perpetually.