Nigeria Launches Forensic Audit of NNPC to Track Oil Revenue Remittances
Nigeria has initiated a forensic audit of the state oil company, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), to scrutinise deductions from oil revenues and improve remittances to the Federation Account. Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, announced the development on Friday in Abuja, linking it directly to a new presidential executive order designed to redirect specific oil and gas payments.
The audit, mandated by the Federation Account Allocation Committee, is examining various charges and costs that diminish the final amounts accruing to the federal, state, and local governments. This review coincides with the implementation of an executive order directing that three key revenue streams—the management fee, frontier fund, and gas flare penalty—be paid directly into the Federation Account. Previously, these funds were subject to deductions before remittance.
Minister Edun explained that the Federal Executive Council had earlier constituted a subcommittee to analyse deductions from the Federation Account, particularly collection costs. The new directive, he stressed, does not override existing legislative or institutional processes but aims to ensure immediate cash flow for these specific revenues while other reviews continue. “It does not prejudice anything else that is ongoing,” he stated, referring to parallel efforts by the National Assembly and other bodies examining the account’s accuracy and transparency.
A committee comprising federal and state representatives has been formed to oversee the efficient implementation of the executive order and is scheduled to meet next week. The minister expressed optimism that the combined effect of the forensic audit and the executive order would finally bring clarity to long-standing disputes over alleged remittance backlogs from the NNPC.
These actions are framed within broader fiscal reforms targeting Nigeria’s challenging economic landscape. With global interest rates high and fiscal space shrinking, the minister emphasised the critical need to intensify domestic resource mobilisation over non-self-liquidating debt financing. He warned that rising debt service obligations are crowding out essential spending on health, education, and infrastructure.
To strengthen public financial management, the government is also deploying technology across ministries, departments, and agencies to block revenue leakages and enhance accountability. The forensic audit of the NNPC and the direct revenue mandate represent a significant step in Nigeria’s efforts to ensure all oil-derived income is fully captured and distributed according to the constitution, addressing a chronic point of contention in the country’s federal fiscal structure.
