SABOTAGE: How foreign interests are impeding productivity in Nigeria’s oil industry

1 month ago 7

..Disguise as NGOs preaching ‘energy transition commitment’

BY HARUNA SALAMI

There appears to be hidden forces orchestrating inefficiency in Nigeria’s huge oil industry to the detriment of the larger society indeed.

Apart from the recent revelation at the National Assembly earlier in the week, this fact may have been buttressed by the revelation from the award winning journalist, David Hundeyin that he received an N800,000 offer last week from an international NGO called Dialogue Earth (formerly known as China Dialogue Trust) to write an article essentially saying that Dangote Refinery is terrible for the environment.

This is coming a few days after the Senate Ad-hoc Committee to “investigate alleged economic sabotage in the Nigeria petroleum industry” had an interactive session with all stakeholders at the National Assembly.

READ ALSO: Abuja car dealer drags Tonto Dikeh to court

The Senate investigative session last Wednesday August 7, 2024 had in attendance the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, Minister of State for Petroleum (Oil) Heineken Lokpobiri, GCEO NNPCL, Mele Kyari, CEO of Nigeria Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission NUPRC Engr. Gbenga Komolafe, CEO Nigeria Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority NMDPRA, Engr. Farouk Ahmed, Dangote Refinery, Modular refinery owners and other stakeholders in the industry.

The Senate Leader who is the chairman of the committee made it clear that there will be no sacred cows while he revealed plan to conduct investigation jointly with the House of Representatives amid pervasive allegations of sabotage in the petroleum industry.

While insisting that nobody will be untouchable, Bamidele said the task of ridding the petroleum industry of malfeasance “is urgent and must be carried out in the spirit of nationalism and patriotism. We are ready to carry it out with all senses of honour and responsibility.

It is against this background that the David Hundeyin alleged bribery to do a hatchet job becomes more worrisome.

Hundeyin said “the (unstated but clearly implied) thrust of the brief was for a prominent local voice to put their name on an article that is an argument or a premise for the Nigerian government to kill the refinery based on its “energy transition commitments” and “environmental policy.”

He said this conclusion wasn’t immediately apparent when they reached out to him, but he suspected where it was heading, and he quickly accepted the offer so that he could see the brief and obtain hard evidence, which he attached screenshots of.

“Basically, this London-based NGO is headed by Sam Geall, an Oxford professor and is funded by several American intelligence fronts such as Ford Foundation and ClimateWorks (which is blacklisted in India for funding organisations working against India’s national interest).

He said for whatever reason, the same NGO is now quietly mobilising a resistance campaign against what it describes as “Nigeria’s first refinery.”

According to Hundeyin, “apparently, the status quo of Africa’s largest oil producer having no functioning oil refinery to beneficiate its own oil was not a problem for Dialogue Earth and the American CIA fronts who fund it.

“The human poverty caused by exporting this raw material and importing refined fuel was not bad for the environment. Also, the fact of European refiners regularly blending West African fuel cargoes with toxic waste and sulphur content 200 times the European legal limit (leading to asthma, bronchitis and eye infections in West Africa) was also not bad for the environment.

But Nigeria having a refinery that will wean West Africa off import dependency on those European refiners (and allow West Africa control the sulphur content of its own fuels) is where Dialogue Earth and its funders draw the line. That one is bad for the environment, and David Hundeyin should write an article calling for the refinery to be shut down or limited.

“I’m putting this out there publicly so that nobody will henceforth use the term “conspiracy theory” when it is pointed out for the umpteenth time, that there are American and European state and private interests that are heavily invested in keeping Africa exactly as poor as it is, and that they regularly push levers most of us do not even know exist, to make sure that this status quo is protected. These people believe that Africans should not exist or have nice things in this world. Apparently, the sole purpose of our existence is to enhance their experience of the planet and all that it has to offer.

“It is because of them that I have to make a public spectacle out of this, even though I know that doing this is probably going to cost someone their job. The message needs to be passed that as poor as we are, you cannot convince us to campaign for the elongation of our own poverty by commissioning $500 hack jobs in the hope that we will be greedy enough to only see the money and ignore the bigger picture of what we can clearly see you trying to do”.

He reiterated something he has said multiple times – that he is not a believer in the religious faith called Climate Change/Saving The Environment.

“I care exactly as much about the environment as do the rich white men who destroyed it to begin with. I firmly believe that if what it takes for Africa to industrialise is for it to burn so much fossil fuel that snow stops falling in Wisconsin and it starts raining concentrated sulphuric acid in Doncaster, it is not too big a price for Europe and North America to pay – it is certainly not bigger than the price Africa had to pay for Europe and North America to develop.

“It is and will continue to be 100% OUR prerogative to determine what to do with our hydrocarbons. It is not the rich white men hiding behind these “Climate Advocacy NGOs” who will tell us what to do with our energy reserves, and by what means we are allowed to escape the poverty that they engineered for us”.

Hundeyin said he might not be a fan of Aliko Dangote or his “monopolistic business practices – as is well known” – but he is also “smart enough to know when rich white men in DC, Houston, Rotterdam and London and trying to use me as a marionette in their 400 year-old coloniser games. If you are reading this and you are one of the rich white men whose economic interests are threatened by Nigeria refining its own oil, you should come out and fight Aliko Dangote by yourself”.

Alternatively, he asked those behind the conspiracy theory, “at least go find a much stupider African to do your dirty job – there’s plenty of those” vowing, “it will never be me”.

Undoubtedly, the task ahead the of the Senate Ad-hoc Committee is not a mean one. Thanks be to God that David Hundeyin has refused to be a willing tool in the hands of international enemies of Nigeria, but how many such patriotic Nigerians do we still in the face of the current economic downturn?

Meanwhile, the National Assembly, in its determination to confront the cabal in the Nigerian petroleum industry and exterminate it for the overall benefit of the country, the investigative panel will hold public hearing early September.

All eyes are on the National Assembly, which has vowed that this investigative committee will not go the way of previous investigations, which have not been able to stop crude oil theft, none functionality of a any of the four government owned refineries despite spending billions of dollars in the name of Turn Around Maintenance (TAM).

It is also a unique opportunity for the legislature to redeem its image in the public domain, which is view with a lot of distrust.

Visit Source