• Home
  • Photo News
  • News
    • NGO/CSO
    • Photo News
    • OrientalNews 7th Anniversary
    • Press Releases
    • World News
    • Nigeria News
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Sports
  • Interviews
  • SMEs
  • Law
    • Crime
  • Travel & Tours
    • Aviation
    • Tourism
  • Energy
    • Oil & Gas
    • Power
  • Business
    • Banking & Finance
      • Capital Market
      • Money Market
    • Pension
    • Insurance
    • Brands & Marketing
    • IT & Telecoms
    • Labour
    • Agriculture
    • Maritime
    • Property
    • Manufacturing
  • Regulators
    • Nigeria Bureu of Statistics
    • PENCOM
    • NAICOM
    • SEC
    • NSE
    • CBN
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Sunday, July 20
  • About us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Advertize here
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Oriental News Nigeria
  • Home
  • Photo News
  • News
    • NGO/CSO
    • Photo News
    • OrientalNews 7th Anniversary
    • Press Releases
    • World News
    • Nigeria News
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Sports
  • Interviews
  • SMEs
  • Law
    • Crime
  • Travel & Tours
    • Aviation
    • Tourism
  • Energy
    • Oil & Gas
    • Power
  • Business
    • Banking & Finance
      • Capital Market
      • Money Market
    • Pension
    • Insurance
    • Brands & Marketing
    • IT & Telecoms
    • Labour
    • Agriculture
    • Maritime
    • Property
    • Manufacturing
  • Regulators
    • Nigeria Bureu of Statistics
    • PENCOM
    • NAICOM
    • SEC
    • NSE
    • CBN
Oriental News Nigeria
Home»Energy»Oil & Gas»House Orders Tax Payments From Oil Traders
Oil & Gas

House Orders Tax Payments From Oil Traders

By orientalnewsngJanuary 28, 2016No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Joseph Bakare/Ijeoma Agudosi-Agency Report
NNPC building
The House of Representatives has directed three local oil traders to pay taxes it says they owe the country for crude swap deals.

The House also asked tax authorities to assess Swiss-based trader Trafigura’s tax liability for similar deals.

The House of Representatives launched a probe into crude swaps after NNPC cancelled several deals with other firms in August, complaining they had been “skewed in favour of the companies”.

The deals supply gasoline for crude as Nigeria, Africa’s top oil producer, relies on imports for the bulk of its domestic consumption.

Nigeria’s anti-corruption agency EFCC and domestic intelligence service DSS started a separate investigation last year into whether the government had been short-changed by a state oil company scheme to swap crude for refined products.

The probes are part of a drive by President Muhammadu Buhari to crack down on corruption in the energy sector.

Based on the probe’s findings, a special parliamentary committee concluded that three Nigerian oil traders owed a total of about 1.13 billion naira ($5.7 million) in taxes.

The committee said Taleveras owed 859.9 million naira in taxes, Aiteo 256 million naira and Ontario Oil and Gas 11.2 million naira, lawmakers said late on Wednesday.

In the case of Trafigura, the committee did not specify any amount of tax due because Trafigura is not registered with the tax authority. The Nigerian parliament now wants the tax agency to register and assess any tax liability for Trafigura.

The three Nigerian firms had pledged to pay the taxes, lawmakers said, but Trafigura denied it owed Nigeria any taxes.

“We do offshore business and offshore trading, we are not registered in Nigeria, your tax law doesn’t apply to us,” James Josling, oil trader for Trafigura Africa, told the committee.

The committee’s chair, Zakari Mohammed, rejected Trafigura’s stance. “The Petroleum Pipeline Marketing Company (PPMC) should immediately provide all documents on crude oil lifting by Trafigura to the tax agency for tax assessment,” he said.

“I am sure that there are aspects of our tax laws that capture the operations of firms like Trafigura,” Mohammed said.

Trafigura had no additional comment on Thursday.
Officials from the three Nigerian companies said during the committee session they would pay any taxes owed.

The parliamentary probe covered contracts that PPMC, a subsidiary of NNPC, had with several oil trading companies.

The Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) has said there was a revenue loss of at least $600 million due to a discrepancy between the value of the crude and the products delivered. The figure was taken from its 2009-2011 and 2012 audits of the oil and gas industry.

Share this:

  • Share
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Tweet
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
featured House Orders Tax Payments From Oil Traders
orientalnewsng

Related Posts

Dangote Refinery Insists Retail Outlets To Sustain Recommended Pump Prices

July 19, 2025

Oil Prices Rises On EU Sanctions Against Russia 

July 19, 2025

Chevron Completes $53 Billion Hess Corporation Acquisition 

July 19, 2025

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

2025 OrientalNews Conference

0
Years
:
0
Months
:
0
Days
:
0
Hrs
:
0
Mins
:
0
Secs
The latest
  • Lagos To Build More Technical Colleges 
  • FMDQ Academy Launches In-Personnel Financial Training 
  • First Bank Achieves N1 Trillion In Digital Loan Disbursement 
  • SanlamAllianz Nigeria Launches Nationwide Writing Competition 
  • Olukoyede Warns Against Naira Abuse 
  • Tinubu Eulogizes Dantata’s Integrity 
  • FG Denies Involvement In First HoldCo Share Acquisition 
  • NCS Spokesman To Receive Top Nigeria 2025 PR Award 
  • PenOP Holds Cancer Awareness Session For Young Professionals 
  • NSML Reaffirms Commitment To Capacity Building
Categories
Quick Links
  • About us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Advertize here
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
Copyright © 2025 Oriental News Nigeria. All right reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.