Tanzania has made meaningful progress with considerable improvements in implementing the 2016 EITI Standard.
Outcome of the Validation of Tanzania.
Board decision
The Board came to the following decision regarding Tanzania's status:
The EITI Board agrees that Tanzania has fully addressed ten of the eighteen corrective actions from the country’s first Validation. Consequently, Tanzania has made meaningful progress overall in implementing the 2016 EITI Standard, with considerable improvements across several individual requirements.
The Board congratulates Tanzania for progress in improving disclosures, as well as stakeholder participation in the EITI process. Improved disclosures related to state participation in the extractive sector and financial transfers between the government and state-owned enterprises (SOEs) increase public understanding about the role of SOEs.
The Board welcomes the Government of Tanzania’s commitment to disclose oil, gas and mining contracts and to establish a register of beneficial owners. Concrete steps should be taken to implement these commitments in light of the provisions of the 2019 EITI Standard.
The Board recognises Tanzania’s efforts to strengthen institutionalisation through developing regulations for the implementation of the EITI. Tanzania has also made efforts to ensure local ownership of the EITI process and capacity-building through engaging a team of Tanzanian academics as the Independent Administrator. To further strengthen the sustainability of the EITI, Tanzania is encouraged to transition to systematic disclosures of, for example, licensing, production and export data. Progress on systematic disclosures would enable the MSG to focus on the analysis of EITI data and support the government’s objectives related to domestic revenue collection from the extractive industries.
The Board encourages Tanzania to ensure that the EITI process and the multi-stakeholder group contribute to policy-making and public debate. In this regard, the Board expresses its concerns regarding the potential impact of the 2018 Statistics Act and the 2019 NGO Act on EITI implementation. The Board thus encourages the Tanzanian Government to ensure that civil society representatives engaged in the extractive sector can continue to operate freely, analyse publicly available data and express their views on extractive sector governance without legal or practical barriers preventing. The Board is available to support Tanzania in these efforts. Civil society engagement in the EITI will be monitored by the Board and considered in Tanzania’s next Validation.
The Board has determined that Tanzania will have 18 months before a third Validation, i.e. until 17 December 2021, to carry out corrective actions regarding license allocation (Requirement 2.2), license register (Requirement 2.3), beneficial ownership (Requirement 2.5), state participation (Requirement 2.6), production data (Requirement 3.2), export data (Requirement 3.3), comprehensiveness (Requirement 4.1), subnational payments (Requirement 4.6), data quality (Requirement 4.9), quasi-fiscal expenditure (Requirement 6.2).
Corrective actions and strategic recommendations
The EITI Board agreed the following corrective actions to be undertaken by Tanzania. Progress in addressing these corrective actions will be assessed in a third Validation commencing on 17 December 2021:
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In accordance with Requirement 2.2.a, Tanzania should disclose any non-trivial deviations from the legal and regulatory framework. In accordance with Requirement 2.2.c, where licenses are awarded through a bidding process, the government is required to disclose the list of applicants and the bid criteria. Tanzania is encouraged to ensure that the websites of the regulatory agencies Ministry of Mines and PURA include comprehensive information about the process for awarding and transferring oil, gas and mining licenses.
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In accordance with Requirement 2.3, Tanzania should maintain a publicly available register of oil and gas licenses that includes all data points under Requirement 2.3.i-iv.
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In accordance with Requirement 2.5 and the Board-agreed framework for assessing progress, Tanzania is required to disclose the beneficial owners of all companies holding or applying for extractive licenses by 31 December 2021.
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In accordance with Requirement 2.6, Tanzania should ensure that the government, STAMICO and TPDC disclose more detailed information about the rules governing their financial relationship, including retained earnings and reinvestment. TPDC should disclose its level of participation in all oil and gas projects as defined in the PSAs, as well as the terms attached. Tanzania should consider whether NDC is a material SOE for EITI reporting purposes and, if so, ensure that public disclosures include comprehensive information as required under Requirement 2.6.
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In accordance with Requirement 3.2, Tanzania is required to ensure that the Ministry of Minerals discloses the production volumes and values of all minerals produced, disaggregated by commodity. Tanzania should ensure that TPDC and PURA disclose the value of gas production. Tanzania is encouraged to ensure that government agencies disclose this information regularly on their websites or in their annual reports and to consider disaggregating disclosures by project.
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In accordance with Requirement 3.3, Tanzania is required to ensure that the government discloses the volumes and values on mineral exports disaggregated by commodity. Tanzania is encouraged to ensure that the government discloses this data routinely, for example on the NBS website.
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In accordance with Requirement 4.1, Tanzania is required to ensure that revenues and payments are comprehensively disclosed and reconciled in line with the MSG’s materiality decisions. Tanzania is encouraged to consider a higher materiality threshold for selecting companies and revenue streams in the scope of reconciliation and continue disclosing additional data through unilateral government disclosures.
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In accordance with Requirement 4.6, Tanzania should ensure that all material revenues collected by subnational government entities from extractive companies are reconciled and disclosed disaggregated by revenue stream, company and local authority. The MSG is encouraged to set a materiality threshold for subnational payments to ensure that reconciliation is cost efficient while comprehensively capturing all local authorities collecting material revenues from extractive companies.
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In accordance with Requirement 4.9 and the Terms of Reference of Independent Administrators, Tanzania should ensure that EITI Reports clearly document whether all reporting entities had their financial statements audited and complied with agreed quality assurances for their EITI reporting. Possible omissions should be clearly documented. The Independent Administrator should provide a clear statement on the reliability and comprehensiveness of reconciled financial data.
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In accordance with Requirement 6.2, Tanzania should ensure that the MSG agrees a definition of quasi-fiscal expenditures in accordance with the IMF’s definition and discuss this with TPDC, STAMICO and the Ministry of Finance to ensure that there is common understanding of the nature of these expenses and that possible quasi-fiscal expenditures are comprehensively covered in disclosures by the SOEs, the government or TEITI.
Background
Tanzania joined the EITI in 2009 and became compliant with the EITI Rules in 2012. Tanzania’s first Validation under the EITI Standard concluded on 25 October 2017. The EITI Board found that Tanzania had made ‘meaningful progress’ in implementing the EITI Standard. Eighteen corrective actions were identified by the Board, to be assessed in a second Validation commencing on 25 April 2019.
Tanzania’s second Validation commenced on 1 January 2020 following an extension request approved by the Board in October 2019. The EITI International Secretariat has assessed the progress made in addressing the 18 corrective actions established by the EITI Board following Tanzania’s first Validation in 2017.
Tanzania has undertaken a number of activities to address the corrective actions:
- Published the 2015/2016 and 2016/2017 EITI Reports.
- The Controller and Auditor General has investigated discrepancies identified in the 2015/2016 EITI Report.
- Minister of Mines Doto Biteko reiterated the government’s commitment to the EITI and contract transparency at the EITI Global Conference in June 2019.
- Constituencies nominated new members for the MSG.
- TEITI launched a new website and a data dashboard.
The Secretariat assessed the progress made in addressing the 18 corrective actions established by the EITI Board, as well as progress in implementing Requirement 2.5 on beneficial ownership.. The EITI International Secretariat’s assessment is that Tanzania has fully addressed ten of the 18 corrective actions, progress in implementing Requirement 4.9 on data quality has fallen below “satisfactory progress”, and Tanzania has made meaningful progress in implementing Requirement 2.5 on beneficial ownership.
The draft assessment was sent to the multi-stakeholder group (MSG) on 3 April 2020. Following comments from the MSG received on 24 April 2020, the assessment was finalised for consideration by the EITI Board.