The Nigerian Navy has accused the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited of spinning out inflated numbers in order to preserve face rather than disclosing the real reason(s) for crude oil theft in the nation.
Rear Admiral Solomon Agada, the Navy’s chief of training and operations, revealed this information to the Senate Committee on Economic and Financial Crimes at a National Assembly interactive briefing on the implementation of the Proceeds of Crime (Recovery and Management) Act, 2022. Only our correspondent watched what was going on.
Agada claimed that during multiple encounters with the NNPC, the Navy had informed the business of the reasons for gasoline shortages and had assured them that no one would take 100,000 barrels of oil in a single day. However, the NNPC ignored this information.
When the committee’s chairman, Senator Suleiman Kwari, questioned him about why there were still incidences of oil theft in the nation despite the waterways being secured as Agada suggested, he revealed the information.
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“The oil theft issue has been a very worrisome one to every Nigerian and more importantly, it has negatively impacted our economy. How come the Navy hasn’t been able to solve the issue of oil theft and if the Navy is claiming that the waterways are secured, why are there still cases of oil theft?”
“The challenge is that because of the criminal activity inshore by the illegal refiners in tapping into the export lines, those export lines have not been in operation since early this year.
“The major terminals have not been able to process fuel for export since around February/March and instead of the NNPC telling the Federal Government that this product is not brought out to be able to process as export, they say the oil was stolen.”
He clarified that the Navy had argued that the NNPC should inform the public of the distinction between oil that is being stolen and oil that is being sealed in but not taken out.
“The stolen produce that we have been dealing with among illegal refineries is nothing compared to what the NNPC is declaring as being stolen.
“If you’re talking about stealing 100,000 barrels a day, you need about five-tonne batches 20 times a day from the creek to the high sea, which is very unrealistic. I told them at the NNPC that if that were to be the case, even a blind man would observe that something was happening in Nigeria’s waters and we are there on patrol and not seeing this.
“The only reasonable explanation why the fuels are not coming out is because the Shell platform on Bonny Island is not exporting and the Chevron terminal in Escravos is also not exporting. All these things are very clear, but because it is easier to say these things are stolen, then they just come up with that.
“Let’s get someone who can do proper analysis of these figures and we’ll find out that these claims are just bogus; there is nothing substantive about them. We have communicated appropriately with the NNPC; even at our last interface with them, they agreed with us; but when they come to the public, they say oil theft, hiding the fact from the public.”
At an oversight event, the NNPC claimed that crude pipes were being tapped from the pressure pipe under the sea, and that crude oil was typically moved from there into vessels. This, the senator Yusuf Yusuf noted, had been occurring for nine years.
“Is the Navy aware or not of the taping going on under the sea?” Yusuf asked.
Agada responded, “On the tapping of the vessel, I also visited that location with the Chief of Defence Staff and there is a directive by the President from the office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation to set up a committee on that particular incident.
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“We are not indicting the NNPCL; we are just saying that let matters be presented correctly so that people can make informed decisions. The Navy has no hand in any stealing of oil in this country. I have no ship or vessel, nor do I know anyone who has; you can investigate me.”
The head of the Navy went on to say that the effort to remove illicit bunkering on the waterways was what caused the surge in diesel prices.
He stated: “People who have been doing this illegal business will confirm to you that since we started this special task force operation in April, their business has gone sour.
“This is also responsible for the increase in diesel price in the country. Since we stopped the illegal diesel from coming to the market, the price has gone up, because once there is high demand and the supply is low, the price will go up.
“People who ought to import will cut corners and buy the illegal products, but now that they can’t import and the illegal ones are not coming, this has reduced the quantity in the country. But somehow, nobody is coming to share this information with the people.”
Maritime Domain Awareness Infrastructure, which helped the Navy find and apprehend illegal refiners and vessels that were often turned over to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission for punishment, was an infrastructure investment made by the Federal Government, he continued.
“And right from Abuja here, we have the capacity to see the entire Nigeria Exclusive Economic Zone. We have 24 hours watch on the exclusive economic zone. Any vessel that enters Nigerian waters that is not permitted to be is immediately arrested because we see their movement.
“Any vessel in the international waters is expected to have their automatic identification system on and that shows that you’re transparently operating; so, any vessel that switches off its identification system automatically becomes a vessel for the Nigeria Navy and we will immediately arrest them and thereafter investigate.
“So, as of today, there is no tanker that can enter Nigerian waters to carry anything without being noticed. All these things that happened now have sent a very strong signal to the international communities that Nigeria is now a place where illegal activities can’t take place anymore.”