These are perilous times for President Muhammadu Buhari and the country’s 36 state governors.
In fact, some will argue that this is not a good time to be president or governor in Nigeria.
Already, about 27 of the states are said to be so insolvent that the governors are unable to pay civil servants their monthly emoluments without assistance from the Federal Government.
The burden is even more severe on the seven active crude oil producing state governors who are now facing the risk of having oil installations in their domain vandalised by Niger Delta Avengers- an apparent offshoot of the dreaded MEND and such other environmental rights or criminal elements now holding sway in the Niger Delta.
For the sake of the clarity of the issues at hand, let us use Delta State, and Governor lfeanyi Okowa, in whose domain, the militants recently attacked oil installations as an example. .
With the resurgent militants destroying oil production and transport facilities -Forcados crude oil pipeline linking export terminal operated by Shell and a rig owned by Chevron- twice in two weeks, Delta State is now groaning in pains and the governor is practically traumatised.
This is because owing to the substantial loss of an estimated 300,000 barrels of oil per day, due to the damaged oil infrastructure, the state will suffer reduced monthly revenue allocation from the Federation Account.
Essentially, the amount of money received as Delta State’s portion of the 13 per cent Derivation Fund is determined by the volume of oil pumped into the central reserve for export from the facilities located in the domain of the various oil producing states.
Although Delta State is populated by about five million people, it has a huge wage bill of about N8bn.
l’m told that since the oil price slump, the state government has been receiving a little more or less than N6bn from the Federation Account which is a shortfall of about N2bn needed to settle workers’ salaries monthly.
What that means is that, workers’ emoluments are augmented with Internally Generated Revenue which is also a paltry N2bn-3bn due to slow down in business activities.
With two major oil facilities damaged and volume of oil which Delta State contributes into the national pool is now shorter by at least 300,000 mpd, so the amount received from FAAC will drop further and that implies more financial headaches.
In Okowa’s world, workers’ salaries are considered a priority, because as a grassroots politician, who anchors his political power on workers and the masses, the government takes workers’ welfare seriously.
Invariably, after paying workers, there is little or nothing left to fund development initiatives, hence those close to Okowa say he is usually moody towards the end of the month, as he loathes to fail in meeting workers’ expectations.
The scenario in Delta State described above applies particularly to all the oil/gas producing states and generally to all the states in Nigeria -from Abia to Zamfara because they are all practically sustained by oil revenue which accounts for about 70 per cent of national income and 90 per cent of nation’s forex income.
The ugly situation in Delta State has even been further compounded by news from Shell -the biggest oil exploration firm in Nigeria-which has also just declared force majeure in one of her facilities, citing vandalism as reason for shutting in another 200,000bpd.
According to statistics from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, it recorded a scandalous 3,153 punctured points on its oil pipelines in 12 months, ending March.
As a result of losses sustained from such vandalism, the NNPC suffered operating deficits in excess of N24bn in February and over N18bn in March.
Consequently, Nigeria is unable to meet her OPEC allotted quota of 2.2mbpd.
In fact, right now, Nigeria is struggling to export less than 1.6mbpd largely due to forced shut downs etc.
This is about seven million barrels short of the badly needed crude export to generate income in order to replenish our fast depleting forex reserves.
In a recent interview with the chief executive officer of Shell Petroleum and Development Company, in Nigeria, Osagie Osunbor, he revealed that in 2014, theft of crude oil from SPDC pipelines was 37,000 barrel per day. It dropped to 25,000 in 2015, in part due to sale of some of the facilities to indigenous investors. The SPDC boss further disclosed that the number of attacks also dropped from 139 in 2014 to 93 in 2015, but nonetheless, theft and sabotage still constitute about 85 per cent of spills from SPDC pipelines.
The Monister of State for Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, who also doubles as the GMD of the NNPC, reckons that the losses are more as he insists that Nigeria’s oil production is down by about 40 per cent due to renewed militancy in the Niger Delta.
When you add the debilitating effects of such horrendous vandalism induced losses to the tumbling crude oil price in the international market, then you can vividly see the reason there is palpable apprehension about the looming insurgency of militants that could further exacerbate an already complex and precarious situation in the Niger Delta in particular and which is bad news for Nigerians, as a whole.
What the scenario above illustrates is that starting from governors who are assumed to be enjoying in mansions to the ordinary man who is hamstrung by dearth of infrastructure like roads, hospitals, pipe borne water, and schools, the threat or actual vandalism of oil assets results in more heartache.
Worse still, similar types of losses in the oil/gas sector apply to electricity, telephone and water/dam infrastructure which were being consistently damaged or under threat at the peak of Boko haram terrorist attacks in northeastern parts of Nigeria.
The destruction of communication and electricity infrastructure by terrorists was ostensibly to prevent remote communities under attack from calling security agencies for help, but thank God the terrorists did not turn their gaze to water reservoirs and dams as targets for poisoning.
Considering the recent attempt in Kenya to poison a water reservoir by using anthrax by the terrorist group, Al Shabab, the need to protect public water installations in Nigeria, which are core parts of critical national assets, can’t be over-emphasised.
Viewed from the prism of the colossal amount of money and lives lost to vandalism related activities catalogued above, it goes without saying that government should seek for enduring ways and means of protecting critical national assets such as the ones identified as being under threat.
I needed to project how very important the safety of our critical national assets are to every Nigerian by highlighting the adverse effects that damage on them are having, and would continue to have, on revenue generation for the benefit of all Nigerians, so that everybody would be on the same page about the dire need for the establishment of assets protection corps, being proposed in this article.
Already, President Buhari and Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, in the course of their campaign for office last year, promised that the Federal Government would recruit 500,000 unemployed graduates into the teaching profession to create employment and also boost education, which is good.
Another opportunity to create one million jobs for youths through the establishment of critical national asset protection corps is knocking on the door now.
Here is the deal:
Currently, there are a plethora of youth-centric outfits such as the National Youth Service Corps set up way back in 1978, as a national integration forum for Nigerian youths.
There is also the National Security and Civil Defence Corps, which is a paramilitary agency set up to ensure public order, just as there is the Federal Road Safety Corps focused on safety on Nigerian roads.
So, there already exists, a blueprint for setting up such a youth-focused organisation and the requisite experience abounds for its operation.
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