December 16, 2008. NESG Director General, Frank Nweke, argued that the uncertainty in the oil sector, which has caused investors to divest or withhold new investment, will worsen. He spoke at the weekend as the Conference of Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP), implored President Goodluck Jonathan to stop the privatisation programme and probe the futile exercise. The CNPP described privatisation as "the ‘Food is Ready’ economic policy adopted by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), a policy anchored on ‘share the money,’ which is antithetical to the Constitution." Nweke said in a statement that the non-passage of the PIB will constrain the implementation of power reform and the national gas master plan. "Gas flaring will continue with the attendant loss of revenues, adverse environmental and health impact on our people. Sustainable funding of joint venture (JV) operations will remain a challenge and so will government efforts to ensure accountability within the sector," he warned. He urged the NASS to pass the Bill "for the sake of God and country," adding that not doing so will mean that Nigerians "will not fully harness the benefits of the Local Content Act. It will further delay the much needed deregulation of the oil and gas sector. "The atmosphere of uncertainty which has pervaded the sector since government first proposed the reforms and caused investors to either divest or withhold new investment will worsen. Development of new oil and gas fields will certainly be jeopardised. "All of these will imperil the job creation efforts of government and endanger the amnesty programme. The aspiration of Nigerians to have a commercially viable, profitable, and well run national oil company will be dashed. "The implication is that we will continue to have in operation parastatals in the sector whose operations are subsidised by the government with poor accountability. We will continue to import refined petroleum products and award endless turn around maintenance contracts for petroleum refineries the operators have no real interests in fixing." Nweke said reversing the decay in the key sectors constitutes the thrust of the transformation agenda of Jonathan, and the non-passage of the PIB therefore has implications for his government and for Nigerians who elected him. According to him, the cost to tax payers and the implications of the current NASS not p |
Sunday, May 22, 2011
PIB stalemate hinders economic growth – NESG
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