Last week, the Senate ad-hoc
committee investigating the activities and finances of the Subsidy
Re-investment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) raised an alarm that N500
billion, accruing to the project, has not been accounted for. The
committee, headed by Deputy Senate Leader, Abdul Ningi, stated that a total
amount of N834.33 billion accrued to SURE-P between January 2012 and September
2013.
N834.33
billion is the sum total of receipts from the 25 billion litres of petrol which
the partial withdrawal of subsidy yielded within the period. The unaccounted
sum is the difference between what the SURE-P committee, headed by Dr.
Christopher Kolade, claimed to have received during the period under review.
Kolade told the Committee that only N300 billion has been released to SURE-P
committee.
Nigeria’s
Petroleum Minister, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke was absent at the meeting, and
did not send any representative to clarify the gaps in receipts and disbursements
of fuel subsidy savings. The
Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, was also
absent at the Senate hearing. The continuing failure of the responsible
officials to explain the discrepancies in the administration and disbursement
of SURE-P funds provoked public outrage, fuelling widespread speculations that
the money may be missing. In addition, the disappearance of the SURE-P funds is
reminiscent of the unprecedented Multi-trillion Naira fuel subsidy fraud that
triggered a nationwide uprising in January 2012 just after the federal government
withdrew subsidy on premium motor spirit (PMS). Till this day, no one has been punished for
that malfesance.
Unsurprisingly,
the missing SURE-P funds generated heated debates among a broad spectrum of
Nigerians. Spaces for Change’s Discussion Forum hosted intense online exchanges
and deliberations among young Nigerian professionals around the world,
examining the implications of the missing funds on national growth and the
economy. ‘How much exactly has Nigeria
saved from partial withdrawal of fuel subsidy since January 2012, and what happened
to the money?”
Here
are excerpts from the discussion:
Temitope Adeyinka
I
think it's pretty much straightforward to determine how much we've spent on PMS
subsidy this year going by public statistics from NNPC, Petroleum ministry
& PPPRA.
Nigeria currently consumes an average of 39.66 million itres of petrol according to Petroleum Minister.
This is in agreement with the records NNPC submitted to the senate concerning petrol consumption in Nigeria between January 2012 and September 2013 which put total volume of petrol consumed in 21 months at about 25 billion litres (translating to an average daily consumption of 39.68 million litres).
On the pricing template on PPPRA website, monthly landing costs of petrol in Nigeria from January 2013 to date are stated.
http://www.pppra-nigeria.org/pms.html. If we use the figures from the petroleum minister & NNPC with the monthly subsidy calculations from PPPRA, total subsidy on petrol from January 2013 to October 2013 comes to about N624 billion.
Nigeria currently consumes an average of 39.66 million itres of petrol according to Petroleum Minister.
This is in agreement with the records NNPC submitted to the senate concerning petrol consumption in Nigeria between January 2012 and September 2013 which put total volume of petrol consumed in 21 months at about 25 billion litres (translating to an average daily consumption of 39.68 million litres).
On the pricing template on PPPRA website, monthly landing costs of petrol in Nigeria from January 2013 to date are stated.
http://www.pppra-nigeria.org/pms.html. If we use the figures from the petroleum minister & NNPC with the monthly subsidy calculations from PPPRA, total subsidy on petrol from January 2013 to October 2013 comes to about N624 billion.
Sunkanmi Adesina
We
don't even know how much oil we produce; how much we sell and how much is being
stolen. So, how can we be sure of how much we're paying for subsidy? By the way, have we all forgotten that N700b
was budgeted at the beginning of 2011, and we ended up paying N2 trillion? 2
years down the line, has anybody been punished? Is it not the same Minister that
is still overseeing the Ministry of Petroleum Resources?
Nigerians are actually paying 50%
while FG is paying 50%. Without that, FG would have spent N1.9 trillion on
subsidy? In 2011, when N2 trillion was spent, FG cried blue murder, and made a
strong case that subsidy must be removed because marketers just collected trillions
without supply. Now that we are spending N1.9 trillion, who is FG is holding
responsible for the reckless, unnecessary spending they diagnosed in 2011? Who
is FG holding responsible?
The Finance Minister, Dr. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala argued that if money being paid on subsidy is diverted to other
sectors, there will be significant improvement in infrastructural developments
and other kind of developments. But since they removed 50%, there's no added
advantage for Nigerians, who are now paying more for fuels. And if there's no
visible advantage, it can only mean that the money accrued, now being tagged
SURE P, has been re-looted! So why do you want me to care whether it's oil
marketers that commit fraud, or Government cronies in the name of SURE P?
You now see the reason why some of
us don't want to pay more for fuel. There is no accountability of whatever that
is gained. The ONLY difference between removal of subsidy and retention of full
subsidy is that the MASSES WILL PAY MORE FOR FUEL. That's all.
Wale Edun
Proper
auditing is needed. This figure is staggering.
Emeka Nwokeocha
The
fraud in the pms subsidy has grown worse than it was years ago. Going by the
senate hearing, we would have spent a whooping sum of 2.9 trillion Naira in 12
months if we are buying fuel at 65 Naira a liter. Nothing has changed. So the
rape continues.
Samuel Diminas
Subsidy payments are usually not in the
budget. Even when it is budgeted for, the final amount is usually a large
amount above projected amount, or it is simply inappropriate to put the amount
in the budget. The cost of subsidy is usually deducted as first line expense
before income from crude oil sales are remitted to the Consolidated Revenue
Account/Federation Account. So the amount spent on subsidy, would go to the
three tiers of government and first line funds if it didn't exist, in
accordance with the Revenue Sharing Formula
The current expenditure is N1.4T
after 10 months. That is not in the budget. Fuel Subsidy has never been
appropriately budgeted for. What you can get is that in 2014, there would be a
budget for the amounts unpaid for from cleared invoices carried over from the
past year. I am totally against petrol products consumption subsidy.
As long as Nigeria keeps insisting
on petroleum products consumption subsidy where there is incentive for
manipulation, where the marketers who sell this same fuel at their filling
station are expected to invoice the FG 90 days after the fuel has
been burnt up/cosumed in Lagos, Cotonou, Niger, Benin, Lagos, Port Harcourt,
the system would remain unmanageable and grow in exponential amounts, burning
scarce resources in a most reckless manner.
To manage the economy efficiently,
policies which target systemic and process checks are the appropriate means for
achieving goals. Governments have limits to which they can achieve goals: a bad
policy is a big delimiting factor in the fight against corruption, and promotes
inefficiency and abuse.
Victoria Ibezim-Ohaeri:
The main issue here is that millions saved from
subsidy were not spent on infrastructure as was advocated for. There are
concerns that the subsidy savings are also looted just the same way the fuel
subsidy is cornered by a few cabals. The difference is that one is official
corruption and the other is “cabalistic corruption”. So, what exactly is the
difference? If a few cabals steal and corner the fuel subsidies to
themselves, the nation comprising 170 million Nigerians are likely to benefit!
But in the reverse order, only a few officials “corner” the same subsidy
savings and yet, the people excruciatingly pay more for fuel.
It doesn’t make sense to advocate
for subsidy savings and reinvestment, and then the same savings end up being misappropriated
by the same gatekeepers of the treasury. Many Nigerians would be happy to pay
less on fuel, and have the cabal continue with their fuel subsidy windfall. This
is purely a devil and the deep blue sea situation where one bitter choice has
to be made. All those tempting arguments about reinvesting subsidy savings on
infrastructure are no longer convincing. It seems like a terrible case of RELOOTING
THE LOOT. This is a very terrible situation.
Nsikan-George Emana:
The SURE-P
programme is designed around certain core themes: youth, community and women
empowerment; infrastructural development and service provisioning. I was part
of the official team that facilitated the YES programme by SURE P in Calabar. I
was amazed at the revelations by state MDAs and the youth representatives who
constantly reminded SURE P officials that they were not willing to submit to
another NYSC-type programme neither were they happy to have their vulnerable
situations and joblessness exploited by politicians who played to the gallery
with SURE P programme. So much said in public, SURE P has been hijacked by
politicians.
I am not
sure Nigerians want Federal Govt to continue to pay for fuel subsidy. That line
of thought has long been overtaken by events. The string of argument now is
that almost two years after Nigerians grudgingly submitted to FGN's conditions for removing fuel subsidy, very unimpressive and unconvincing
results have been delivered by SURE-P with subsidy funds defeating the very reason
for that action. Today , it is the same tale of corruption served on a
different saucepan - official corruption.
Saya-Braide Ebi
Besides,
we have had many administrations increase fuel price without accounting for the
additional fund accruing to government, yet this administration has set up a
committee to manage the funds transparently. We just throw in words like
corruption to rubbish this very commendable thing.
Nsikan-George Emana
I wish to address 2 points from the last post
above:
(1) ".....several
administrations have increased fuel price without accounting for additional
funds" - meaning that the status quo of non-accountability should remain
and become a norm in Nigeria?
(2).
".....manage the funds TRANSPARENTLY and yet...." Can one honestly exonerate
SURE-P committee from misapplication or misappropriation of funds? I would not
want to put all the blame on Mr President but it is absolutely difficult when
he turns a blind eye and deaf ear to what is a known denominator in Nigeria.
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