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Nigeria Made $742bn Revenue From Oil & Gas, Lost $46.16bn To Theft, Sabotage—NEITI Report

overlay-cleverWithin a period of 21 years covering 1999 to 2020, Nigeria earned $741.5bn and N635.3bn from the oil/gas and solid minerals sectors respectively.

The figure was released by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative Executive Secretary, Ogbonnaya Orji.

Orji spoke at a stakeholders’ roundtable organised by the agency in Abuja for the review and approval of NEITI 2021 Audit Reports for the oil, gas and solid minerals sectors.

The latest audit reports were submitted to the agency by the independent administrators – Messrs Taju Audu & Co, and Amedu Onekpe & Co.

Orji in the NEITI reports disclosed that Nigeria lost over 619.7 million barrels of crude oil valued at $46.16bn or N16.25tn from 2009 to 2020 from theft and sabotage.

This amounts to losing over 140,000 barrels of crude valued at $10.7m daily.

Furthermore, NEITI has reported on subsidy payments from the years 2005 to 2021 and its huge negative consequences to the nation.

“These earnings were between the years 1999-2020 (oil and gas) and 2006-2020 (solid minerals sector earnings). In addition, NEITI reports have disclosed that Nigeria lost over 619.7 million barrels of crude oil valued at $46.16bn or N16.25tn from 2009 to 2020 from theft and sabotage.

“This amounts to losing over 140,000 barrels of crude valued at $10.7m daily. Furthermore, NEITI has reported on subsidy payments from the years 2005 to 2021 and its huge negative consequences to the nation.”

Orji stated that in these reports, it was revealed that Nigeria had spent $74.39bn, which translates to N13.7tn.

“By the above figures, Nigeria spent an average of N805.7bn annually, N67.1bn monthly or N2.2bn daily, ” he added.

Commenting on the the 2021 NEITI Industry Reports of the oil, gas and mining industries, Orji said they covered a total of 69 companies and 12 government agencies, with one state-owned enterprise for the oil and gas report.

He said a total of 1,214 companies with three government agencies were covered in the report of the solid minerals sector.

Orjis said, “The objectives of the reports were to establish the quantities of minerals produced and utilised in the country. The reports also sought to establish the revenue paid by oil, gas and mining companies and how much of such revenues were actually received into government coffers.”

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