Oil firms keen to know how Muhammadu Buhari, President-elect,
plans to tax them could wait a long time as he makes ending corruption and
reforming Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, his most urgent sector
priorities.
Four party sources from Buhari’s All Progressives Congress,
APC, told Reuters the issue of fiscal terms, seen as crucial by the industry,
will have to wait on current thinking about oil and gas policies.
Crude output has stagnated close to
two million barrels per day over the past few years, owing partly to
under-investment.
“We need to address the structural
issues and leave the fiscal for now,” Senator Bukola Saraki told Reuters.
“A more transparent Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, is needed with reasonable accounting,” he
said.
Buhari owes his March 28 victory
against incumbent Goodluck Jonathan partly to a perception that Jonathan
allowed corruption to get out of control— especially in the oil sector.
A string of multi-billion dollar oil
corruption scandals tainted NNPC and other bodies that handle energy.
By contrast, Buhari was seen as one
of the few Nigerian leaders to have cracked down on corruption during his
military rule in 1983-1985. Many Nigerians hope he will again.
A Nigerian investment banker focused
on upstream oil and gas projects, who declined to be named, said: “The worry is
that there’s going to be a lot of time wasted in witch-hunting. That could take
a year in which nothing else will happen.”
APC leader, Bola Tinubu, whose
support was instrumental in Buhari’s victory and wields huge influence, told
Reuters a transitional committee would be set up.
“No way will we discuss that now,”
he said.
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