According to authoritative sources
within the ministry of petroleum resources, the proposal to list the
stocks of NNPC on the exchange after its restructuring as contained in a
new draft national oil policy has not yet been approved by the
government.
Furthermore, the draft policy document was released
last week by the ministry of petroleum resources. It indicated that
parts of the stocks of the NNPC would be listed for trading at the NSE
or other exchanges after its restructuring and corporation.
According to it: “The NNPC will be made
autonomous from the state, it will relinquish all its policy making and
regulatory activities, and it will be treated on an equal basis with
private sector operators for projects.”
The document also said the
corporatisation and restructuring of NNPC will involve separating NNPC
into five independent autonomous units or profit centre subsidiaries
which will be operationally independent, self-accounting and will hold
funds in their own right.
It explained that there will be a new
parent holding company to be called the National Oil Company of Nigeria
(NOCN) which will replace NNPC as a statutory corporation and legal
entity.
“NOCN will be incorporated as a limited
liability company, NOCN will be governed according to the governance
rules of the Nigerian Stock Exchange prior to the listing of its shares,
and by the rules of any bourse where its shares are eventually listed,”
it stated.
One of the sources however told World News Center
on the status of the proposal, that it has not been approved by the
government, and that it was still a work-in-progress.
“It is important to note that since
2009, the PIB (petroleum industry bill) in its different versions
including the latest in 2014 has always prescribed that the holding
company (hold-co) would list a minority stake in the Nigerian Stock
Exchange to provide a pathway for funding of the National Oil Company
thereby improving its governance and funding for effective returns to
its shareholders.
“In spite of the fact that this is the
position adopted in the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill, the issue of
the funding of NNPC going forward is still under consideration of the
government,” said the source.
“This clarifies
that the government has not taken a position on the issues raised in the
petroleum and gas policies which are still a work in progress and are
for consultation at this juncture. It is ultimately for the government
to decide on a final position on the issues after the consultative
process with industry,” he explained.
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