Nigeria plans to split state oil company NNPC into two to help ease a planned stake sale and wants to sell at least 40 percent of a newly created National Petroleum Co (NPC) in coming years, according to a draft of a long-awaited oil bill seen by Reuters.
The
bill envisages the sale of at least 10 percent of NPC over five years
and is targeting 40 percent or more over 10 years, as Africa's top oil
exporter seeks to fix a cash shortage that is hampering investment at NNPC and end graft.
Parliament is to start debating within days the amended Petroleum Industry Bill,
in the works for a decade and designed to change everything from taxes
to environmental rules and revenue sharing, as well as overhauling NNPC.
Lawmakers have not previously been able to agree on the 200-page bill, but President Muhammadu Buhari has made its passing a priority as he seeks to overhaul the oil and gas sector, which accounts for 70 percent of state income.
NNPC's
output has been stagnant at around 2 million barrels a day for years as
the company struggles with graft, bureaucracy and funding problems.
To
accelerate the reform process, the West African nation is breaking up
the bill, with the first part dealing with the reform of NNPC, a pet
project of Buhari.
"Divestment of shares ... may include the sale or transfer of shares to institutional or strategic investors," the draft said, without giving more details.
A
sale of at least a 10 percent stake in NPC is to take place within five
years, with the rest to happen within 10 years, the bill says. The
previous draft had called for a 30 percent sale within six years.
LARGER STAKE
It
gave no reason for the longer timeframe but a source involved in the
draft said selling a larger stake was intended to raise more funds and
help minimize the risk of corruption, because of the greater influence
of outside investors and private firms.
"Bidding is open to international investors," the source said.
Part
of Nigeria's output comes from joint ventures with foreign and local
companies in which NNPC holds the majority stake. However, NNPC is
always behind on covering its share of costs owing to the slow pace of
government approvals, explaining the need for outside funding.
The
act that created NNPC decades ago contained legal gray areas which
allowed mismanagement to go unchecked and billions of dollars in revenue
to go seemingly unaccounted for.
NPC will look
after joint ventures mainly with oil majors, while the second company to
be created from NNPC, dubbed NPAM, will manage all production-sharing
contracts and service agreements, a second source involved in drafting
the bill said.
The draft bill already lists 26 licences but the source said there would be many more.
The
second source involved in the drafting also said that the other bills
which would be part of the overall reform of the energy sector have not
yet been finalized.
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