• Saturday, November 23, 2024
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Saudi Arabia plans another sale of stake in state oil firm as Nigeria dithers

Saudi Arabia-oil

Saudi Arabia the world’s largest oil exporter is seeking to sell one per cent of its national oil corporation ARAMCO and raise about $20bn to finance its ambitious plan to create jobs and to diversify away from crude oil, according to the crown prince.

Saudi Arabia mounted a highly successful public offer in 2019 and its desire to sell a further stake diverges from fellow oil exporter Nigeria where the lack of political will and a preference from borrowing has lefts its finances in the wilderness.

The Crown prince who was speaking on Saudi television said the one per cent stake will be sold to an unnamed oil firm from a big country. The sale could happen as early as the next 12 months, analysts say.

Oil prices are surging again and the Saudis are positioning intelligently to take full advantage of rising valuations in energy assets and the kingdom is clearly pivoting away from fossil fuel while Nigeria dithers.

Nigeria has consistently said it will sell down oil assets to fund the burgeoning budget deficit but the country’s leadership has somehow not managed to live up to its promises.

A long-awaited bill that could reorganize the petroleum industry of Nigeria, Africa’s biggest crude producer, makes provision for a possible sale of shares in its powerful state oil company.

Draft legislation presented to parliament last year also suggests the Nigerian National Petroleum Corp. NNPC be independent of government, with no recourse to state funding.

Tightly controlled by the Nigerian government since it was established in 1977, the NNPC has become a tool for political patronage to cronies, with opaque transactions helping fuel corruption. The bill, in the works for 20 years, is being debated in parliament.

While the current proposed law isn’t as “pro-privatization” as a 2012 version of the bill — it omits a previous target date for selling shares and specifics on how much of a stake would be sold — it’s still a huge step forward, said Malte Liewerscheidt, a vice president at research group Teneo Intelligence.

It’s submission to lawmakers demonstrates that the reformist camp in President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration is making progress with its agenda, Liewerscheidt said. Any efforts to make the NNPC more transparent is “a good thing,” he said.

If it gets there, the government would have to approve any plans to privatize the company, according to the bill. A sale or transfer of shares would be at a “fair market value and subject to an open, transparent and competitive bidding process,” it said.

The NNPC would be replaced by a limited-liability company known as Nigerian National Petroleum Co., that operates on a commercial basis. The state’s shareholding in the new entity would be held by the Finance Ministry.

The bill also provides for an annual audit of the new oil company by an independent firm.

Other Highlights of the Bill

A provision for “unrestricted free-market pricing” of petroleum products, ending decades of government-subsidized gasoline.
The establishment of a regulator to provide pricing and tariff frameworks for natural gas in midstream and downstream gas operations and petroleum products.
Establishment of a midstream infrastructure fund to make equity investments in gas-related assets on behalf of the government.

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