Monday, June 29, 2015

USA Africa Dialogue Series - STAR INFORMATION: Excess Crude (Domestic and Foreign) and Sure-P Account monies paid to the FGN, States and Local Governments from January 2011 to May 2015


June 30, 2015


My People:
 
According to official records published on Office of the Accountant General of the Federation website http://oagf.gov.ng, and duly collated below (see Table 1),  Excess Crude (Domestic and Foreign) and Sure-P Account monies paid to the FGN, States and Local Governments from January 2011 to May 2015 amounted to N4,956,631,685,120.36, that is essentially N5 trillion, in amounts of N1.644 trillion in 2011, N1.232 trillion in 2012, N1.672 trillion in 2013. N392 billion in 2014 and only N15.631 billion between January and May 2015.   the amount shared in 2014 was invariably in monthly tranches of N35.5 billion, and at N165 to the US$, the total amounted to approximately equal to $2.38 billion.  The highest single-month disbursement was in November 2011: N501.672 billion.

From November 2014 to May 2015 inclusive, a sum of N123,602,992,936.84 (N123.6 billion) was paid out under this Excess Crude category.  That amounts to approximately $0.75 billion.

We are talking of a lot of money distributed....but there is still more accounting to do as now being requested by the PMB administration - see news item below..

And there you have it.


Bolaji Aluko

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________


TABLE 1:  FAAC ALLOCATIONS OF EXCESS CRUDE (DOMESTIC & FOREIGN) PLUS SURE-P PAYMENTS TO FGN, TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS

 

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

TOTAL

 

2011

            16,050,928,440.09

        11,304,529,393.90

                    8,008,917,617.28

               7,500,854,866.29

      103,088,142,944.40

      162,901,438,385.71

            596,649,749,491.20

              16,452,715,457.40

                                              -  

              76,750,000,000.00

     501,672,697,778.37

     143,677,431,206.80

         1,644,057,405,581.44

2011

2012

          178,574,904,001.35

     187,089,655,125.41

               307,805,169,619.59

                                             -  

        57,014,541,706.53

        35,549,235,691.43

              35,549,235,691.43

            190,349,235,691.43

              61,763,564,490.94

              48,557,137,959.33

       35,549,235,691.43

       94,687,774,285.38

         1,232,489,689,954.25

2012

2013

          347,040,471,382.86

     195,855,289,751.57

               209,054,815,442.56

          158,857,014,315.90

      282,735,470,383.49

      110,549,235,691.43

              35,549,235,691.43

              35,549,235,691.43

              35,549,235,691.43

              35,549,235,691.43

     190,249,235,691.43

       35,549,235,691.43

         1,672,087,711,116.39

2013

2014

            35,549,235,691.43

        35,549,235,691.43

                 35,549,235,691.43

             35,549,235,691.43

        35,549,235,691.43

        35,549,235,691.43

              35,549,235,691.43

              35,549,235,691.43

                                              -  

                                              -  

       35,549,235,691.43

       72,422,542,525.84

            392,365,663,748.71

2014

2015 (January to May)

15,631,214,719.57

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

               15,631,214,719.57

2015 (January to May)

TOTALS

          592,846,754,235.30

     429,798,709,962.31

               560,418,138,370.86

  •             201,907,104,873.62

      478,387,390,725.85

      344,549,145,460.00

            703,297,456,565.49

            277,900,422,531.69

              97,312,800,182.37

           160,856,373,650.76

     763,020,404,852.66

     346,336,983,709.45

         4,956,631,685,120.36

TOTALS

 



_________________________________________________________________________________________________________



PUNCH


Okonjo-Iweala spent $2.1bn without approval, says FG

JUNE 30, 2015 : OLALEKAN ADETAYO 


The National Economic Council, chaired by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, on Monday accused a former Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy under ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, of spending $2.1bn from the Excess Crude Account without authorisation.

"We looked at the numbers for the Excess Crude Account. The last time the former Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mrs Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, reported to the council, and it is in the minutes, she reported by November 2014 that we had $4.1 bn.

"Today, the Accountant-General Office reported we have $2.0bn. Which means the honourable minister spent $2.1bn without authority of the NEC and that money was not distributed to states, it was not paid to the three tiers of government," Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole told State House correspondents after the NEC's 58th meeting in Abuja.

The 'unauthorised' spending, according to the economic council, is among the several anomalies discovered in the management of the nation's economy between 2012 and May 2015.

Within the period, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation was said to have earned a total of N8.1 tn but remitted only N4.3tn.

Consequently, the Federal Government has constituted Oshiomhole, Kaduna State Governor, Nasir el-Rufai; Akwa Ibom State Governor, Udom Emmanuel; and Gombe State Governor, Ibrahim Dankwambo, into a panel to probe the NNPC and the ECA between 2012 and May, 2015.

Oshiomhole, el-Rufai, Emmanuel and the Zamfara State Governor, Abdulazeez Yari, jointly briefed journalists at the end of the meeting.

Yari told the journalists, through the Director of Funds, Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation, Mr. M.K. Dikwa, that council members received the report of the ECA and unremitted funds by the NNPC.

He said, "On that line, a four-man committee consisting of the governors of Edo, Gombe, Kaduna and Akwa Ibom states was constituted to go through the books of the NNPC and Excess Crude as well as the Federation Account.

"The four-man committee will check the books of the NNPC, most especially the issue of excess crude and what is not remitted into the Federation Account.

"The Federal Government, in conjunction with the Central Bank of Nigeria, will look inwards to see how to support and how much they will give to states, especially on the issue of outstanding salaries owed by the states and even the Federal Government."

Shedding new light on what transpired at the NEC meeting, Oshiomhole said the NNPC and the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation were compelled for the first time to provide information on the total sales of Nigeria's crude from 2012 to May 2015.

The Edo governor said, "We are talking about transparency; we are talking about change. And what we saw from those numbers, which I believe that Nigerians are entitled to know, is that whereas the NNPC claimed to have earned N8.1tn, what NNPC paid into the Federation Account from 2012 to May 2015 was N4.3tn.

"What it means is that the NNPC withheld and spent N3.8 tn.

"The major revelation here is that the entire federation, that is the Federal Government, the states and all the 774 local governments, the amount the NNPC paid into the Federation Account for distribution to these three tiers of government came to N4.3 tn and the NNPC alone took and spent N3.8tn.

"This means that the cost of running the NNPC is much more than the cost of running the Federal Government. That tells you how much is missing, what is mismanaged and what is stolen. There are huge figures."

Oshiomhole said the only lawful way decreed by the Constitution was that if the NNPC needed to spend money, it needed to prepare its budget like every other business enterprise, get it scrutinised by the executive and then forward same to the National Assembly for appropriation.

He added, "If the Federal Government cannot spend without appropriation, why should any agency spend without appropriation.

"This is what the Constitution provided for and this is what President Muhammadu Buhari has promised to do; henceforth all money must go to the Federation Account.

"If you were doing that, you would not have a situation where the NNPC alone will spend N3.8trn and remit to the federal, states and local governments N4.3trn, which means NNPC is taking about 47 per cent and that explains all the leakages you are talking about."

El-Rufai recalled that he was part of the decision to put in place the ECA during the tenure of former President Olusegun Obasanjo between 2004 and 2005 as an administrative arrangement to save for a rainy day.

He said the account was set up in order to be accountable such that every state and local government would know what they had in the account though they could not spend it.

He said, "The Excess Crude Account is 52 per cent owned by the Federal Government and 48 per cent owned by the states and the local governments.

"So the decision of the NEC is to set up this committee of four to look at the operations of the Excess Crude Account and make recommendations to council on its future.

"The other thing the committee will do is to look at the operations of the Federation Account, particularly the shortfall and again come back to council with very clear recommendations as to what to do.

"We have not been given a time frame but as you can imagine state governments are under pressure, many of our state governments are unable to pay salaries on time without recourse to borrowing, so this is very important to us.

"This is an all-governors' committee; we wear the shoes and we know where they pinch. So we are going to do this as quickly as possible.

"The next meeting of the council is on July 23; we hope to complete our work and be in a position to report to council on that day. So within the next one month, we will be done by God's grace."

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________

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