By Joe Udo
YENAGOA (CONVERSEER) – The South South Governors Forum (SSGF) has described President Bola Tinubu’s Executive Order mandating the direct remittance of all oil and gas revenues to the Federation Account as a historic and landmark decision.
The SSGF Chairman and Governor of Bayelsa State, Senator Douye Diri, in a statement on Wednesday, said the region’s governors welcomed the decision as a critical shift towards the restoration of constitutional integrity in Nigeria’s petroleum sector.
The Forum said the Executive Order was comprehensive, unambiguous and heartwarming, and that it raised hope that after many years of opaque and complex deduction structures, the federal, state, and local governments would begin to receive their rightful entitlements from the Federation Account.
The statement reads: “The South-South region particularly welcomes the key provisions of the Executive Order, which would eliminate opaque deductions and effectively strip the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) of the nebulous 30 per cent Frontier Exploration Fund. This fund often led to large idle cash balances.
“Mandating all operators and contractors under Production Sharing Contracts to remit Royalty Oil, Tax Oil, and Profit Oil directly to the Federation Account will significantly block revenue leakages.
“This decision is a positive step towards fiscal justice for sub-nationals, particularly the oil-producing states, just as it would potentially increase available funds for critical infrastructure, healthcare, education and other sectors across the three tiers of government.”
The Forum also expressed delight with President Tinubu’s move to undertake a comprehensive review of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), saying it is an affirmation that he is a leader who listens and places the interest of the people above other considerations.
It said that the states, particularly Bayelsa, had persistently advocated a review of the PIA as the extant Act was a ticking time bomb.
“The Federal Government cut off states and local government councils to deal directly with communities. It is our submission that the percentage due to oil communities that was reduced from 10 per cent, as proposed by the majority of states in the region, to three per cent, should be revisited and reviewed.
“We also urge the Federal Government to immediately review the aspect where states and local governments were excluded from administering what is due to the communities. The states and councils are closer to the communities and it was wrong to have excluded them from the administration of these communities. The current Act is a recipe for crisis and we urge Mr President to review it,” the statement concluded.
