Senate probes Shell over JV breach

The Senate yesterday set up an Ad-Hoc Committee to investigate Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) over alleged non-compliance with the Petroleum Act and breach of the Joint Venture Agreement it signed with the Federal Government.

The committee was mandated to probe the Oil Mining Lease granted to SPDC between 1959 and 1989, and 1989 and 2019 under the SPDC/NNPC Joint Venture agreement.

The Committee, which was constituted by the Senate President, Ahmad Lawan, has Senator Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi as its Chairman.

Other members on the panel include Senators George Thompson Sekibo, Yahaya Abdullahi, Bassey Albert Akpan, Solomon Adeola, Smart Adeyemi and Aishatu Dahiru Ahmed.

The Senate also demanded a refund of $200 million or any amount short of what was paid by SPDC, including penalties and interests under the said lease agreements to the Federal Government.

The resolution was reached by the upper chamber after it considered a motion sponsored by Senator George Thompson Sekibo (PDP, Rivers East).

The motion was entitled: “Non-payment of $200,000,000 accruals from the Oil Mining Lease (OML), by Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited under the SPDC/NNPC Joint Venture Agreement and, illegal and unlawful renewal of Oil Mining Leases by the Ministry of Petroleum Resources/Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) contrary to the provision of paragraph 10 of the First Schedule to the Petroleum Act 1969 (now Section 86(1) and 86(6) of the Petroleum Industry Act 2022.”

Sekibo in his lead debate observed that the SPDC/NNPC Joint Venture (JV) agreement, in contravention of the provisions of the Petroleum Act 1969, by the defunct Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, granted to the SPDC/NNPC a 30-year Oil Mining Lease from 1959 to 1989.

 

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