…As economy remains largest in Africa
The Royal Dutch Shell has warned that Nigeria’s claims that it is owed billions in taxes could delay the development of a major oilfield off the coast of the west African nation.
Nigeria ordered several major foreign oil and gas companies to pay nearly $20 billion in taxes it says are owed to local states, industry and government sources told Reuters.
Shell, the largest investor in the country, would likely dispute the charges, Shell’s head of upstream Andy Brown said on the sidelines of the International Petroleum Week conference in London.
“It is something that has gone through the courts in Nigeria which relates to an original clause within the original PSCs [production sharing contracts],” he said.
“We will have to take it seriously but we think it has no merits,” said Mr Brown, who steps down from his role this year.
The outstanding tax issue will delay the final investment decision (FID) on developing Shell’s Bonga Southwest deepwater oilfield, one of Nigeria’s largest with production expected to reach 180,000 barrels per day, Mr Brown said.
“We’ll need to resolve that before we ever FID the Bonga Southwest project,” he said.
Shell has made progress with the government on some basic terms for operating the field but a decision on its development was now unlikely to be made in 2019. “Bonga Shouthwest’s FID may slip into next year,” Mr Brown said.
Separately, in the Gulf of Mexico, he said Shell planned to move swiftly to develop the Whale discovery, which it announced in January 2018. Shell holds a 60 per cent stake in the field and Chevron the remaining 40 per cent.
“We’re going to crack on with the development of this project,” he said, without giving a specific timeline for the development except to say it would be “fast”.
Mr Brown said the field had the potential to be developed into a new production hub for Shell in the Gulf of Mexico.
Shell and many of its peers have been cutting costs sharply for developing large offshore fields to compete with cheaper sources of oil such, as US shale.
The development comes after a two-decade fight over whether Shell contributed to the execution of nine Nigerian oil-industry critics landed at the company’s doorstep.
A court in The Hague, Netherlands heard its first arguments earlier this month, as part of determining if Shell played any role when the military dictatorship ruling Nigeria convicted nine men, including well-known activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, of murder and then executed them in 1995.
Shell has strongly denied any connection to the executions, saying it in fact requested clemency to prevent the death sentences, according to Bloomberg.
The company “did not collude with the authorities to suppress community unrest, it in no way encouraged or advocated any act of violence in Nigeria, and it had no role in the arrest, trial and execution of these men”, Shell’s Nigerian unit said. “We believe that the evidence clearly shows that Shell was not responsible for these distressing events.”
The Hague court will make a judgment on May 8 but “it is not clear if that will be the final one,” Sabrina Tucci, a campaigner for Amnesty International said on Twitter.
Meanwhile, Nigeria has been named Africa’s largest economy for the second year in a row by multinational professional services network PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).
The auditing firm disclosed this in the latest edition of its Nigeria’s economic outlook titled: “Top 10 Themes for 2019,” distinguishing the Nigerian economy from other seven.
Nigeria led the pack in the western part of the continent with Kenya falling short to Ethiopia in the East African region. The level of competition in East Africa was quite tight with various sectors accounting for the hefty foreign investments.
Other than agriculture which is the spine of many African economies, the report noted that the aviation and oil sector are contributing heavily to the economies. Egypt led in North Africa while South Africa led southern African countries as it is recovering from economic recession to be a competitive investment hub.
Following the recent 1.93 per cent Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth recorded by Nigeria in 2018, as against the 0.82 per cent achieved the previous year, the federal government had beat its chest, saying it was evidence that the President Muhammadu Buhari administration’s economic policy is working.
But analysts had said the outcome only signalled the need for increased investments in the country in order to achieve better and sustainable growth.
According to Nigeria’s GDP report for the fourth quarter and full year 2018 released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), Nigeria’s GDP growth rate increased to 2.38 per cent (year-on- year) in the fourth quarter of 2018 (Q4, 2018).
This indicated a 0.55 percentage rise compared to the 1.81 per cent growth recorded in the preceding quarter.
This also represented an increase of 0.27 per cent when compared to the 2.11 per cent growth rate recorded in the fourth quarter of 2017.
The federal government had disclosed that it was considering tough measures to achieve higher revenue.
Minister of Finance, Mrs. Zainab Shamsuna Ahmed, had disclosed this while speaking on the topic ‘Revenue growth & Economic development: Expectations for 2019,’ at the Deloitte Nigeria 2019 Economic Outlook held in Lagos recently.
The minister reiterated that the government was planning higher Value Added Tax (VAT) and excise duties for carbonated drinks produced in Nigeria, “for which companies do not pay excise.”
According to her, “We still need to do more to achieve higher revenue outturn. Peer comparison on our ability to convert Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to revenue for capital and social investmentkey drivers of sustainable economic growth -show that we have a lot to do to catch up. Nigeria must mobilise significant resources to invest in human capital development and critical infrastructure.
“Indeed, some reforms will be tough, but it must be done if we will look at the facts and be frank to ourselves. Given the low revenue to GDP ratio (currently at about seven per cent), we must pursue optimal revenue generation,” she added.
Speaking further, Ahmed said the federal government’s recently launched Strategic Revenue Growth Initiatives (SRGI) aims to boost revenue generation in order to meet “our targeted revenue to GDP ratio of 15 per cent as set out in the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP).”
The minister noted that in 2018, the federal government recorded revenue of N6.9 trillion, which according to her was unsatisfactory.
She listed some of the key achievements of the federal government to include the Treasury Single Account (TSA) implementation, IPPIS implemented across several MDAs to improve public service productivity and increase government revenue and the establishment of Efficiency Unit to cut costs and block leakages.
“We will continue to ensure fiscal discipline and optimise some revenue improvement initiatives that have been achieved thus far. By prioritising revenue generation, the federal government intends to continue significant investments in human capital and critical infrastructure to sustain the growth trajectory.