Tag: NNPC

  • ‘NNPC’s Abuja IPP vital to 8,500Mw target’

    ‘NNPC’s Abuja IPP vital to 8,500Mw target’

    The Nigerian Independent System Operator (NISO) has described the ongoing 350 megawatt (Mw) NNPC’s Abuja Gas Independent Power Project (IPP) as a vital step toward achieving the national target of 8,500Mw grid generation capacity by the end of this year, Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of NISO, Engr. Abdu Bello, said yesterday during an on-site assessment visit to the project location.

    Leading a high-level management delegation, he evaluated the current stage of construction and identified key areas for enhanced collaboration to accelerate project completion and timely commissioning.

    Read Also: NNPC hails Chevron over successful Awodi-07 Well in Niger Delta

    The visit also included an inspection of the Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) implementation site at the Gwagwalada transmission substation.

    The team expressed confidence that, before the end of 2026, the full electricity value chain, from generation through transmission to distribution will be integrated into a unified SCADA platform, enabling real-time visibility, improved grid monitoring, and enhanced system reliability and stability.

  • NNPC’s 350MW Abuja power project vital to achieving 8,500MW – NISO

    NNPC’s 350MW Abuja power project vital to achieving 8,500MW – NISO

    The Nigerian Independent System Operator (NISO) has described the ongoing 350MW NNPC’s Abuja Gas Independent Power Project (IPP) as a vital step toward achieving the national target of 8,500MW grid generation capacity by the end of 2026.

    Engr. Abdu Mohammed Bello, Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of NISO, made the commendation yesterday during an on-site assessment visit to the project location. 

    Leading a high-level management delegation, he evaluated the current stage of construction and identified key areas for enhanced collaboration to accelerate project completion and timely commissioning.

    Read Also: NNPC hails Chevron over successful Awodi-07 Well in Niger Delta

    The visit also included an inspection of the Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) implementation site at the Gwagwalada transmission substation.

    The team expressed confidence that, before the end of 2026, the full electricity value chain, from generation through transmission to distribution will be integrated into a unified SCADA platform, enabling real-time visibility, improved grid monitoring, and enhanced system reliability and stability.

  • NNPC hails Chevron over successful Awodi-07 Well in Niger Delta

    NNPC hails Chevron over successful Awodi-07 Well in Niger Delta

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) has commended Chevron Nigeria Limited (CNL), operator of the NNPC Ltd/CNL Joint Venture, on the successful completion of the Awodi-07 appraisal and exploration well, with a production capacity of 146,000 barrels per day, located in the shallow offshore western Niger Delta.

    The Awodi-07 well was drilled as part of the Joint Venture’s ongoing strategy to further delineate and unlock hydrocarbon potential across its asset portfolio.

    Drilling activities began in late November 2025 and were concluded by mid-December 2025, with operations carried out safely, efficiently, and in full compliance with approved regulatory and operational standards.

    Following extensive testing, logging, and data acquisition, the well was safely secured, marking the successful completion of the programme.

    The development was disclosed in a statement issued on Monday by NNPC Ltd’s Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Andy Odeh, who described the results as highly promising.

    According to him, findings from the well confirmed a substantial presence of hydrocarbons across multiple reservoir zones, underscoring the commercial potential of the asset.

    He noted that the outcome represents a significant milestone for the NNPC Ltd/CNL Joint Venture, strengthening confidence in the underlying asset base and reinforcing the prospectivity of the area.

    Odeh added that the success of Awodi-07 highlights the value of disciplined exploration, robust technical evaluation, and effective operational collaboration between NNPC Ltd and its Joint Venture partner.

    Commenting on the achievement, the Group Chief Executive Officer of NNPC Ltd, Engr. Bashir Bayo Ojulari, commended Chevron Nigeria Limited for its operational excellence, technical competence, and consistent delivery of value.

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    He stated, “The success of the Awodi-07 well further reinforces the strength of the NNPC Ltd/CNL Joint Venture and our shared commitment to responsibly growing Nigeria’s hydrocarbon reserves. This achievement aligns squarely with our strategic priorities of increasing production, enhancing national energy security, and delivering sustainable value for the Nigerian people.”

    Also speaking on the milestone, the Executive Vice President, Upstream, NNPC Ltd, Mr. Udy Ntia, described the Awodi-07 results as a clear demonstration of the value of sustained collaboration, technical rigour, and a stable, enabling operating environment.

    According to him, “This discovery underscores the importance of disciplined exploration programmes, strong partnerships, and the positive impact of the reforms introduced under the Petroleum Industry Act. We look forward to working closely with Chevron Nigeria Limited to mature this opportunity and progress it towards timely development and monetisation.”

    NNPC Limited and Chevron Nigeria Ltd work together under a joint venture agreement to operate several oil and gas fields in Nigeria’s Niger Delta. In this partnership, Chevron owns 40 per cent of the assets, while NNPC Limited holds the remaining share. The arrangement allows both companies to combine resources, expertise, and investment to develop Nigeria’s oil and gas resources more effectively.

    Through this collaboration, the partners aim to increase oil production to about 146,000 barrels per day, which would support government revenue, create jobs, and contribute to the country’s energy supply.

  • Energy group faults ADC claims on Tinubu’s approval of NNPC legacy balance reconciliation

    Energy group faults ADC claims on Tinubu’s approval of NNPC legacy balance reconciliation

    The Centre for Energy Governance and Public Finance Accountability (CEGPFA) has dismissed allegations by the African Democratic Congress (ADC) that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu acted unconstitutionally or undermined state and local government finances in approving the reconciliation and removal of certain Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) legacy balances from the Federation Account.

    At a press conference on Friday at the Transcorp Hilton, Abuja, the centre described the ADC’s assertions as unfounded, arguing that they ignore the historical, legal and fiscal context surrounding the disputed balances.

    Dr Julius Osagie Eromonsele, executive director of the centre, clarified that the balances were not new revenues generated under the present administration but long-standing entries accumulated over several decades, many existing before the enactment of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

    He explained that the disputed figures originated from unresolved production sharing contract disputes, domestic crude supply obligations linked to the former fuel subsidy regime, royalty assessment disagreements and reconciliation gaps involving NNPC, regulators and revenue agencies.

    Eromonsele noted that the balances had remained on the Federation Account books for years despite multiple audits questioning their accuracy, legal validity and recoverability, thereby distorting the financial position of all tiers of government.

    Rejecting claims that the balances were arbitrarily written off, he said the approval followed a formal reconciliation process involving fiscal and regulatory institutions, with submissions made to the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC).

    According to him, official records indicate that approximately $1.42 billion and N5.57 trillion were removed from the Federation Account after reconciliation confirmed that the amounts were duplicated, overstated, unsupported by verifiable documentation or no longer legally recoverable.

    He stressed that the directive applied exclusively to legacy balances accumulated up to December 31, 2024, adding that reconciliation should not be misconstrued as the cancellation of legitimate revenue.

    “Reconciliation is a recognised public finance practice. It is not the same as cancelling valid revenues. Rather, it is the process of aligning records to reflect economic and legal reality,” Eromonsele said.

    He also clarified that no cash was removed from the Federation Account and that no allocations to states or local governments were reversed.

    Read Also: ADC afraid of its shadow, says Lagos APC

    “The funds in question were not sitting as cash in the Federation Account. What occurred was the correction of inherited accounting distortions that had long outlived their practical relevance,” he added.

    Addressing constitutional concerns raised by the ADC, the centre said Section 162 of the Constitution applies only to revenues that are lawfully due and payable, not to disputed or extinguished claims.

    “Public finance administration requires constant reconciliation to ensure that only valid, auditable and legally enforceable revenues are presented for distribution,” Eromonsele said.

    He argued that sustaining false receivables undermines budgeting, fiscal discipline and revenue predictability for subnational governments, noting that credible and realistic revenue flows are more beneficial than inflated figures that never materialise.

    The centre said the reconciliation aligns with reforms introduced by the PIA, which repositioned NNPC Ltd as a commercial entity operating under international accounting standards.

    Concluding, the centre commended President Tinubu for approving what it described as a difficult but necessary decision.

    “Writing off long-standing, unverifiable legacy balances required political will and a commitment to fiscal honesty over convenience. It sends a clear signal that Nigeria is prepared to confront the structural weaknesses of its energy revenue system rather than perpetuate them,” Eromonsele said.

    He urged politicians and stakeholders to approach the issue responsibly and support reforms that strengthen transparency and accountability in Nigeria’s public finance system.

  • Court grants EFCC’s request for interim forfeiture of N30.7m linked to alleged fraud in NNPC 

    Court grants EFCC’s request for interim forfeiture of N30.7m linked to alleged fraud in NNPC 

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has issued an order granting an  interim forfeiture of of N30,700, 000.00 the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) claimed was associated with an alleged fraud perpetrated by some senior officiala of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    Justice Emeka Nwite issued the order while ruling on an ex-parte motion, marked:FHC/ABJ/CS/2775/2025, filed by the EFCC and moved last Friday by its lawyer, Emenike Mgbemele.

    Justice Nwite held, in the ruling, that having considered all the material evidence placed before the court by the applicant, the application was meritorious and ought to be granted.

    The judge ordered the EFCC to publish the interim order of forfeiture in a national daily for interested persons to show cause, within 14 days, why the funds should not be permanently forfeited to the Federal Government.

    He then adjourned till January 22 for the EFCC to report its compliance with the order for publication.

    The EFCC, in a supporting affidavit, said the funds are currently lodged in EFCC’s Recovery Account with United Bank for Africa (UBA) in account number: 9058700029 with manager’s cheque name: M/C Draft Outstanding Account, be forfeited to the Federal Government.

    It stated, in a supporting affidavit, that the funds were discoverd while investigating allegations of fraudulent activities of some high profile officials of the NNPC as well as other criminal petitions brought to the commission.

    The EFCC added: “In the cause of investigation and analysing some of the documents received from the bank, the name of Mr. Adamu Yakubu, a Bureau De Change (BDC) operator, featured prominently.

    “On September 2, 2025, Mr. Yakubu, whose name featured in the cause of investigation, was invited and he volunteered his statement.

    “Mr Yakubu submitted a ledger to the commission evidencing records of his transactions wherein the details of customers and the amount of dollars sold by them are recorded.

    “Upon analysing the entering in the ledger submitted by Mr Yakubu, it was revealed that over N4, 000, 000, 000.00 (Four Billion Naira) was transferred to the accounts of different individuals and companies on the instruction of one Mr. Ibrahim Sani, a staff of Federal Inland Revenue Services (FIRS).

    “It was discovered that the balance of N30.7 million sought to be forfeited was still in possession of Yakubu from the funds which he claimed was given to him by Mr Ibrahim Sani.

    “On the 15th day of September 2025, Mr. Ibrahim Sani, a staff of FIRS, whose name appeared on the ledger and who Mr Yakubu claimed owned the N30, 700, OOO (Thirty Million, Seven Hundred Thousand Naira Only) was invited and he volunteered his statement.

    “Mr. Ibrahim Sani gave statement on how he had been using Yakubu, the BDC operator, to be sending monies to different individuals and companies.

    “Mr.Ibrahim equally confirmed how he usually deposit huge amount of money (Dollars) with Mr Yakubu who in turn sends its naira equivalent to individuals and companies accounts provided by him.

    “Mr. Ibrahim neither ascertained nor verified the source of these monies, which he has been depositing with Mr. Yakubu for onward transfer to other people, which are reasonably suspected to be proceeds of unlawful activities.

    Read Also: Court declines bail to Bauchi finance commissioner, others accused of financing terrorism with $9.7m

    “Mr. Ibrahim, however, denied ownership of the N30.7 million found in Yakubu’s account as at the time of making his statement.”

    The EFCC further stated that Ibrahim claimed that Yakubu was not holding any of his money as at September 15, 2025.

    It added that Yakubu and Ibrahim denied ownership of the said N30.7 million found in the account of the former (Yakubu).

    The EFCC stated Mr. Yakubu has since raised four different managers’ cheques in the name of the EFCC Recovery Account in favour of the Federal Government of Nigeria.

    It added  that the source of the funds sought to be forfeited in the account of Mr. Yakubu “is proceeds of unlawful activities.”

  • JUST IN: NNPP appoints Abiya as Kano acting chairman amid leadership shake-up

    JUST IN: NNPP appoints Abiya as Kano acting chairman amid leadership shake-up

    Abdullahi Zubairu Abiya has emerged as the Acting State Chairman of the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP) in Kano State, following the sacking of former chairman Hashimu Dungurawa.

    The NNPP State Executive Committee endorsed Abiya’s appointment at an emergency meeting held at the party’s secretariat in Kano.

    Read Also: NDDC submits N1.75trn 2025 budget to Senate as lawmakers plan project inspection

    The decision was announced by Yusuf Mukhtar, the party’s Assistant Legal Adviser, citing the NNPP constitution

    The development followed the submission of a formal resolution on Dungurawa’s sacking by the Dawakin Tofa Local Government Executive Committee, which accused him of anti-party activitie

    Abiya pledged the party’s commitment to justice, loyalty to national leader Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, and support for Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf.

  • NNPC restores Escravos–Lagos pipeline after explosion

    NNPC restores Escravos–Lagos pipeline after explosion

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited, yesterday said it has full restored the Escravos–Lagos Pipeline System (ELPS) in Warri, Delta State, following an explosion that rocked the facility on December 10.

    In a statement signed by the Chief Corporate Communications Officer, NNPC, Andy Odeh, the oil firm noted that the achievement was made possible through the unwavering support of the host communities, the guidance of regulators, the vigilance of security agencies and the dedication of its partners and staff.

    “Together, we turned a challenging moment into a success story, restoring operations in record time while upholding the highest standards of safety and environmental stewardship.”

    READ ALSO: Bridging the gaps in budget implementation

    “We immediately activated our emergency response, deployed coordinated containment measures, and worked tirelessly with multidisciplinary teams to ensure the damaged section was repaired, pressure-tested, and safely recommissioned. Today, the pipeline is fully operational, reaffirming our resilience and commitment to energy security.

    “As we move forward, NNPC Limited remains steadfast in its pledge to protect our environment, safeguard our communities, and maintain the integrity and reliability of our assets. Thank you for your trust as we continue to power progress for Nigeria and beyond,” Odeh said in the signed statement.

  • Competition will favour Nigerians, says NNPC GCEO as market adjusts

    Competition will favour Nigerians, says NNPC GCEO as market adjusts

    … Oil output hits 1.7mbpd in 2025, gas rises above 7bcf/day

    … Company targets 1.8mbpd in 2026, eyes $30bn investment by 2030

    The Group Chief Executive Officer of Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd), Bayo Ojulari, has assured Nigerians that the growing competition among downstream petroleum players will ultimately benefit consumers, even as the market undergoes what he described as an inevitable period of adjustment.

    Speaking to journalists after a meeting with Bola Ahmed Tinubu at his Lagos residence on Sunday, the NNPC chief said the transition to a fully competitive, willing-buyer, willing-seller regime was bound to create early tensions but would settle in the long run.

    “At the end of the day, Nigerians on the streets are going to be the beneficiaries. Where there is healthy competition, the buyers are the ultimate beneficiaries”, he said.

    The GCEO explained that the meeting with the President was to brief him on the company’s end-of-year performance and outline strategic priorities for 2026, adding that the visit was also an opportunity to appreciate the President’s support for the ongoing transformation of the national oil company.

    Read Also: 2027: Former legislators back Tinubu for second term, endorse Barau for Kano governor

    “I came to update Mr President about the end-of-2025 performance of NNPC and to discuss our strategic priorities for 2026. It is also to thank Mr President for the inspiration he has given to the new NNPC management and board through this very challenging period of transformation”, he said.

    He described the reform of NNPC as a difficult but necessary process, noting that presidential backing had been critical to the progress recorded so far, saying “transformation is very difficult. With his backing, we have been able to begin to make significant improvements to the structure of NNPC.”

    On production performance, Ojulari said the company recorded measurable gains in 2025 compared with the previous year, saying “last year, we were producing about 1.5 million barrels per day. This year, we are getting to over 1.7 million barrels per day in terms of oil production.”

    He added that gas output also rose significantly within the same period.

    “Our gas production increased from about 6.5 billion standard cubic feet per day to over 7 billion standard cubic feet per day. Those improvements are underpinned by very structural changes within the organisation”, he said.

    The NNPC boss also highlighted progress on the Ajaokuta–Kaduna–Kano Gas Pipeline (AKK), describing it as one of the most important milestones of the year.

    “We successfully completed the welding of the main line of the AKK.We were able to cross the River Niger, which had been a struggle for many years”, he said.

    According to him, the completion of the main line would allow connections to begin early next year, unlocking gas supply to large parts of northern Nigeria.

    “By completing the main line, we can now begin to make all the connections in the early part of next year. That brings gas in its full form to the northern part of Nigeria”, he said.

    He listed Kaduna, Kano, Ajaokuta and Abuja as key beneficiaries, saying gas availability would drive industrialisation.

    “We will begin to see industrial parks, gas-based industries, fertiliser plants and power generation,” he said.

    Looking ahead to 2026, Ojulari said increasing production would remain the company’s top priority, stressing that it required deliberate efforts to attract investment.

    “When we say increasing production, it sounds simple, but there is a lot that goes into it. It means attracting the right investment, whether in oil or gas”, he said.

    He disclosed that NNPC is targeting at least 1.8 million barrels per day next year, while pushing gas production even higher.

    He added that the company expects more final investment decisions and is reviewing its asset portfolio to unlock value.

    According to him, President Tinubu commended the management and board for the early gains but reminded them of long-term targets, adding “Mr President charged us with driving his performance aspiration. He reminded us of the target of attracting over $30 billion in additional investment by 2030.”

    The President, he added, also reiterated the goal of raising crude oil production to two million barrels per day by 2027.

    Responding to concerns about downstream pricing and supply, the NNPC chief said Nigerians must understand the structural changes introduced by the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) explaining that “the PIA did something fundamental. It separated regulation from business.”

    He explained that regulatory responsibilities now rest with the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), while NNPC operates strictly as a commercial entity.

    “Post-PIA, NNPC is not a regulator. We are a CAMA company that must compete profitably”, adding that NNPC no longer receives federation allocations.

    On supply, he said NNPC remains the supplier of last resort and is working with all key downstream players, including Dangote Refinery, to ensure availability of petroleum products.

    He acknowledged the current tension in the market but insisted it was temporary, saying “competitiveness is not easy. We are in the early stages of a willing buyer-willing seller market.”

    He added: “By the time you have a refinery like Dangote in-country, which we did not have before, the market will be impacted.”

    Describing domestic refining as a positive development, he said Nigeria must collectively manage the transition.

    “It is a great thing to have a major refinery in Nigeria supplying West Africa and other parts of the world. What we need to do is to walk through this reality together so that the market forces can stabilise and everyone can be okay”, he said.

    He expressed confidence that, with sustained reforms and stakeholder cooperation, the benefits of competition would become clearer to ordinary Nigerians in the months ahead.

  • NNPC confirms explosion on Escravos-Lagos pipeline

    NNPC confirms explosion on Escravos-Lagos pipeline

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited, yesterday confirmed an incident

    involving a gas pipeline explosion about 17:50 hours on Wednesday near Tebijor, Okpele, and Ikpopo communities in Gbaramatu Kingdom, Delta State.

    A statement signed by the Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Andy Odeh late yesterday night, read: “Initial observations indicate a pressure drop consistent with a loss of containment on an NNPC Gas Infrastructure Company (NGIC) pipeline.

    “The cause of the explosion is still unknown but would be confirmed after a detailed investigation has been concluded.

    READ ALSO; Aregbesola’s ally, Adeoti, set to join APC

    “Our priority at this time is the safety of nearby communities and the protection of the environment.

    The statement further added that “Emergency response procedures have been activated, and we are working closely with relevant authorities and community leaders to ensure a coordinated approach to mitigate impact.

    NNPC Limited remains committed to the highest safety and environmental standards.

    “Further updates will be provided as more confirmed information becomes available,” thee statement said.

  • Assessing NNPC’s transparency, accountability

    Assessing NNPC’s transparency, accountability

    By Enam Obioso

    For decades, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited sat at the centre of public suspicion.

    Every spike in oil prices sparked a new round of accusation, every dip opened the door to speculation, and every audit prompted arguments about what was paid, what was deducted, and what was truly missing.

    The latest claim, a supposed N210 trillion gap in NNPC’s accounts, followed the same pattern.

    It swept through the public space quickly, but analysts were blunt in their response: the allegation belonged more to myth than to mathematics.

    What stands out today is not the noise around the numbers, but the way the new NNPC Limited is choosing to confront it. There is a marked shift toward openness, documented reporting, and a willingness to let auditors, analysts, and even critics examine the books. In many ways, this is the quiet revolution shaping Nigeria’s most strategic company.

    The phantom trillions and the new clarity

    When lawmakers raised the N210 trillion claim, some analysts, such as Professor Uche Uwaleke, an authority in accounting and capital market, Mr. Victor Eromosele, former chief financial officer at Nigerian top companies, dismissed it as “an accounting impossibility that reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of national cash flows.” They explained that the figure was larger than the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) and far beyond what decades of crude oil sales could produce.

    More importantly, they said the allegation stems from treating gross revenue as if it belonged to NNPC to lose. In the words of one them, “the total sales value was never NNPC’s money. It was always subject to first-line charges: funding joint venture (JV) cash calls, paying for petrol subsidies, and covering operational costs before anything could be remitted to the Federation Account.”

    This was the structural flaw of the old system. NNPC served as both operator and collector. It deducted costs first, remitted later, and battled constant suspicion over the balance.

    The analyst noted that this confusion is exactly what the Petroleum Industry Act was designed to end. The new framework “makes NNPC a taxed and dividend-paying entity, separating its commercial finances from state revenue in a clear, auditable way.”

    Cash calls and the shift to discipline

    The transformation is also evident in how NNPC now handles joint venture funding. Under the old structure, cash call delays were routine. They stalled investment, caused mounting arrears, and froze new projects. But the expert describes the issue as structural, not ethical. “The JV cash call system was historically the Achilles heel of the sector. Government budgets simply could not keep up.”

    The new incorporated joint venture model changed that. “This means the JVs are now standalone legal entities with their own financing, moving liabilities off NNPC’s balance sheet,” he said. The company’s claim that it no longer owes cash calls holds true under this new system. Legacy arrears are being resolved in a controlled process, while new projects are funded on schedule. International partners have responded by approving multi-billion-dollar investments that previously sat on hold.

    Profit, performance, and the question of sustainability

    NNPC’s N5.4 trillion profit in the 2024 financial year raised eyebrows, but analysts warn against seeing it as a fluke. Yes, the removal of the petrol subsidy removed a major financial burden. Yet the analyst pointed to deeper changes within the company. “Look beyond the top line. Operating expenses per barrel are falling, and refinery utilisation is rising. This shows structural improvement, not just a policy-driven windfall.”

    The next test, he said, is capital discipline. “If this profit is used to fund high-return, low-cost projects and gas infrastructure, it creates a virtuous cycle. If it is pulled into quasi-fiscal duties, the gains will evaporate.”

    So far, the company’s strategy signals the former. There is an emphasis on upstream reinvestment, gas expansion, and long-term, revenue-generating assets.

    The transparency model that never existed before

    Critics often point to opacity in past remittances, but the analyst stresses that those issues belonged to another era. “The old model was inherently opaque because NNPC was both a commercial operator and a revenue collector. The new model is fundamentally cleaner.”

    Under the current structure, NNPC sells its crude, pays its taxes, pays royalties, and then pays dividends. Each of these is a distinct, auditable line item.

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    “This makes tracking and verification infinitely easier,” he said, adding that IFRS-compliant reporting and external audits give the public something they rarely had in the past: verifiable numbers.

    Gas, the transition, and the long game

    Some observers have questioned the heavy investment in gas infrastructure like the AKK pipeline, suggesting it might become a stranded asset. The analyst strongly disagrees.

    “That view misunderstands both the global transition and Nigeria’s context. Gas will remain in demand until at least 2050. For Nigeria, this is not just about transition but about industrialisation.”

    He explained that the AKK pipeline is designed to replace diesel use, reduce emissions, power industry, and strengthen the non-oil economy. “These pipelines can even be retrofitted for hydrogen. This is a strategically sound investment in national infrastructure.”

    The strongest evidence: voluntary transparency

    Perhaps the most telling sign of change lies not in numbers but behaviour. The analyst said the real proof of transformation is the company’s willingness to subject itself to scrutiny. “By holding an earnings call, they are inviting analysts to scrutinise every claim.

    By publishing IFRS-compliant accounts audited by a major firm, they are creating a legally binding record of their performance. By talking about an IPO, they are signalling an intention to be valued by global investors.”

    His conclusion was blunt: “You cannot fake this for long. The market will punish any regression.”

    A turning point built on openness

    In a sector where suspicion once overshadowed facts, the new NNPC Limited is betting on transparency as a strategy. The numbers are clearer, the obligations are cleaner, and the company’s operations are more visible than at any time in its history. Nigeria’s energy future still carries uncertainties, but the shift from opacity to accountability proves to be the most important reform yet.

    •Obioso, a veteran journalist, writes from Abuja