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NNPC To Embark On Transparency Operation To Regain Lost Credibility, Says Kachikwu

By Editor
26 September 2015   |   1:55 am
THE Group Managing Director (GMD) of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Emmanuel Kachikwu, yesterday said the corporation would urgently embark on a transparency operation to regain its lost credibility.
Kachikwu, NNPC GMD

Kachikwu, NNPC GMD

THE Group Managing Director (GMD) of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Emmanuel Kachikwu, yesterday said the corporation would urgently embark on a transparency operation to regain its lost credibility.

In his first interactive session with journalists in Lagos since his appointment as GMD, Kachikwu said the transparency operation would start with an audit of the corporation’s finances, which was last audited in 2010‎.

He said the corporation’s finance would not only be audited and brought up to date, but would also be made available to the general public.
The NNPC GMD said the transparency operation would also involve posting of the corporation’s activities on its website regularly.

He added that along with the regular data, there would also be a weekly broadcast of issues concerning the corporation on its website from now henceforth.
“Contracts will be made open to the public and we will choose the best module that works for us and that helps us save money.
“We need to clean the system and carry everybody along. The concept of what is right and wrong will take us very far,’’ Kachikwu stressed.

According to him, though, there are huge challenges in driving the corporation forward but they will be surmounted with good planning and efficiency.

The NNPC GMD, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), said the challenge of cleaning NNPC would be a bumpy, exciting ride, which would eventually yield positive results.

Commenting on the state of the nation’s refineries, he said they were currently working at 30 percent capacity, which was unprofitable.
Kachikwu noted that for the refineries to be profitable, they needed to attain a minimum of 60 percent operation capacity.
“Personally, I will have chosen to sell the refineries, but President Buhari has instructed that they should be fixed.
“After they are fixed, if they still operate below 60 per cent, then we will know what to do.
“The 90-day ultimatum for the refineries to be fixed will end in December and Port Harcourt Refinery looks like the only one that will meet the deadline, but we will wait and see what happens at the end of the 90 days,” he said.

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