Tag: NNPC

  • NNPC uncovers 83 illegal refineries, arrests 22 suspects

    NNPC uncovers 83 illegal refineries, arrests 22 suspects

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has said it has uncovered no fewer than 83 illegal refineries in the Niger Delta in the past one week.

    The NNPCL disclosed this on its X handle, as part of its war against crude oil theft, adding that 15 illegal pipeline connections were also discovered within the same period.

    “In the past week, 15 illegal pipeline connections and 83 illegal refineries have been uncovered in the Niger Delta,” the NNPCL said.

    According to a video shared with the post, it was disclosed that between January 6 and 12, a total of 211 incidents of oil theft and vandalism were reported.

    The NNPCL also said 15 illegal pipeline connections were also discovered within the same period.

    NNPCL in a documentary shared on X, stated that between January 6 and 12, 2023, a total of 211 incidents of oil theft and vandalism were reported.

    It said 15 illegal pipeline connections were also discovered within the same period, adding that it inspected an illegal crude oil vessel loaded with thousands of metric tons of crude, while 23 crew members onboard the vessel were arrested.

    This was disclosed in a post on its official X handle, noting that the move was part of efforts by the company and its partners to end the threat of crude oil theft.

    It said: “Earlier today, the Group CEO (Chief Executive Officer) of NNPC Ltd, Mr Mele Kyari, and the Chief of Defence Staff, General Christopher Musa, were in Oporoza, Warri, Delta State, to inspect MT Kali, an illegal crude oil vessel loaded with thousands of metric tons of crude oil.”

    It stated that the vessel was intercepted by Tantita Security Services, a private security firm, in collaboration with the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, “while it was loading directly from an offshore platform in Bayelsa State.”

    The national oil company added that “all 23 crew members onboard the illegal vessel have been arrested.”

    According to NNPCL, during the inspection tour of the illegal vessel, General Musa said that the military remained committed to working with the national oil firm and other government and private security agencies to halt the menace of crude oil theft in the Niger Delta.

    He was quoted as saying: “We are committed to stopping all acts of criminality in Nigerian waters. We are also sounding a note of warning to the perpetrators of this crime that enough is enough.

     “The country is bleeding and we need all funds to develop as a nation. It is by stopping these acts of criminality that we will be able to achieve that dream”.

    The oil firm stated in another post on X, that it uncovered 83 illegal refineries in the Niger Delta region in the past one week.

    It said 15 illegal pipeline connections were also discovered within the same period.

    Read Also: CBN uncovers forex violations

    Earlier, the company revealed that it discovered 52 illegal refineries in the Niger Delta region in the past one week.

    It also stated that 32 illegal pipeline connections were uncovered, at the time the 52 illegal refineries were destroyed in the Niger Delta.

    “Between December 30, 2023 and January 5, 2024, 157 (oil theft) incidences were recorded from several incident sources, including Nigeria Agip Oil Company, 62 incidents; Pipeline Infrastructure Nigeria Limited, 29; Maton Engineering Limited, 18; Tantita Security Services, 8; Shell Petroleum Development Company, 4; NNPCL Command and Control Centre, 2; and Government Security Agencies, 24,”  the company stated.

    It explained that in the past week, the 52 illegal refineries were discovered in Abia, Imo, Rivers and Bayelsa states, adding that the 32 illegal connections were uncovered in several parts of the Niger Delta, including Bayelsa, Rivers and Delta states.

    The company said illegal connections were also removed and repaired along the central corridor in the Niger Delta, while seven illegal storage sites were uncovered in Akwa Ibom State, where buried drums of crude oil were unearthed.

  • NNPC increases equity in GACN to 40%

    NNPC increases equity in GACN to 40%

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has increased its equity in the Gas Aggregator Company of Nigeria (GACN) from 30 per cent to 40 per cent.

     Its Group Chief Executive Officer, Malam Mele Kyari, broke the news yesterday in Abuja during the issuance of domestic gas aggregation license to the GACN by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA).

    The ceremony was also the “Unveiling event of GACN’s New Mandate Identity and Expanded Mandate.”

    He predicated the increase on the stake on NNPCL’s bid to meet the aspiration of the citizenry and country.

    He said: “And we in NNPC we recognise our role. We understand our involvement from upstream all the way to the fuel stations or wherever gas ends or to homes.”

    “We know the critical role we have to play and that is why we took increased interest in GACN by also elevating our presence in the company by scaling from 30 to 40per cent and also giving one of the best of hands that we can get for you.”

    He also noted that owing to the vision to meet the gas needs of the people, NNPC has engaged Mr. Chijioke Uzoha as its staff.

    According to him, gas can be delivered to the domestic market to create the spike and revolution Nigerians envisage.

    Kyari said in view of the recognition of the fact that Nigeria is a gas country with associated oil, and that only little has been done about the gas, NNPC is now set for business.

    He promised that the company can create the infrastructure needed to deliver gas to the domestic market.

    Seeking the right pricing especially for power, Kyari directed his attention towards the Niger Delta Power Holding Company Managing Director, Chiedu Ugbo, saying:  ”We have created the market, thank God my brother (NDPHC) is here, I will send him my invoice. You have to start paying your bills. And that can only happen if there is appropriate pricing for gas.

    “We don’t want to enjoy anything unless we have the right pricing for gas, and people can pay their bills, they are able to pay for the gas that they take and also that we are able to produce the gas that comes into the market. Then enjoyment can come. And these connections are very critical in our country.”

    He reminded the stakeholders about the conversation around energy transition, which is basically the adoption of gas as a transition fuel.

    He noted that beyond semantics, the plan is realizable only with the creation of the required infrastructure and payment for the gas.

    Speaking, the Authority’s Chief Executive Officer, Malam Farouk Ahmed, noted that the license is expected to stimulate vibrancy and efficiency and spur additional investments into natural gas value chain in the country through support for the Implementation of domestic gas delivery obligation.

    According to him, the license will ensure transparency in the domestic gas strategic sectors.

    The ACE noted that it will culminate in ÿþÿþoperating nomination and balancing mechanism for equitable curtailment of natural gas deliveries in cooperation with the Authority.

    He further said the “Gas Aggregator Company Nigeria Ltd/Gte is being presented with the Domestic Gas Aggregation License to carry out its functions according to the conditions prescribed in the Petroleum Industry Act, 2021, the Regulations and terms & Conditions made therefrom.

    Ahmed said the Authority, as a business enabler, is pleased with the attainment of this milestone. “We believe it will reinforce the commitment and the renewed-hope efforts of this Administration towards the development of gas resources for the betterment of the lots of the investors and Nigerians in general,” he said.

    Read Also: Delta govt, NNPCL, UTM to develop floating LNG project 

    The NMDPRA also explained that Section 153 of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA 2021) provides that the Authority may upon approval of an application and payment of prescribed fees, grant and issue a qualified person a domestic gas aggregation license.

    In line with the above, Gas Aggregator Company of Nigeria (limited by guarantee) application for Domestic Gas Aggregation license was approved after due consideration and upon fulfilment of the specific requirements.

    The Domestic Gas Aggregation license as provided for in the PIA is significant in many respects as it underscores the focus and priority attention placed on the domestic gas market space.

    In his goodwill message, the Minister of State for Petroleum (Gas), Hon. Eberikpo Ekpo said the expanded mandate of the GACN is not just for GACN but for the entire gas sector.

    He added that “the rebranding and expansion of GACN’s mandate symbolises a tripod towards actualizing the Federal Government of Nigeria ambition to make sure there is gas penetration nationwide with already existing and laid down policies to create a thriving domestic gas sector that will build national development.”

    The minister further noted that GACN has consciously grown its volume from simple facilitation of gas supply agreement to nurturing the growth of gas domestic market. This role, according to him, has been pivotal in shaping Nigeria’s gas sector.

  • NNPC E&P, NOSL lift 50 widows out of poverty in Mkpat, A’Ibom

    NNPC E&P, NOSL lift 50 widows out of poverty in Mkpat, A’Ibom

     The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Exploration and Production (NNPC E&P) and Natural Oilfield Services Limited (NOSL), have empowered over 50 widows in Akpadem and Ekim communities, two key oil operational areas in Mkpat Enin, Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State.

    The women were given the cash token to assist them in their fishing business and to boost their their social and economic condition.

    At the event which was held at the First Fruit Hotel in Eket, Akwa Ibom State, the widows were reminded not to see the death of their husbands as the end of life, adding that though, it could push the triggers of poverty for many widows, yet, women must pull themselves together and begin to work their way out of the poverty net.

     The Clan Head of Ikpa Ibom, His Royal Highness (HRH) Etebom Moses Ukpong, said; “helping the widows in our communities by NNPC E&P and NOSL is truly commendable and highly appreciated. Such initiative will serve as a stepping stone for their growth and development in the community.” 

    He said the financial empowerment will undoubtedly play a key role in fostering self-reliance and enable them to face the challenges and other vissicitudes of life.

    Principal Cooperative Registrar, Ministry of Women Affairs, Mrs. Uduak Etukudo,

    said the financial empowerment is “a thoughtful gesture from NNPC E&P and NOSL, as it will create a platform where widow’s voices will be heard and respected.”

    Read Also: NNPC increases equity in GACN to 40%

    She commended the two firms for the assistance which she said will help them overcome lack, achieve financial stability, and self-sufficiency, 

    “NNPC E&P and NOSL are committed to enhancing livelihood of the widows in the host communities, for a sustained positive transformation,” she said.

    Among other dignitaries at the event were HRH Etebom Moses Ukpong, Clan Head of Ikpa Ibom; Mrs. Uduak Etukudo, Principal Cooperative Registrar, Ministry of Women Affairs, Akwa Ibom; Chief Youni Ekamem, Village Head of Akpaden; Eteidung Paulinus J. Udoh, Village Head of Ekim; and Group Captain Etete Ekpo (Rtd.), Senior Base Manager of NOSL, Akwa Ibom State.

  • Former NNPC GMD Thomas John dies at 84

    Former NNPC GMD Thomas John dies at 84

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd.) has announced the death of a former Group Managing Director (GMD) and acting alternate chairman of the board of the defunct Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Thomas Maurice Asuquo John, at the age of 84.

    NNPC chief communications officer, Olufemi Soneye, who made this known in a press statement on Thursday, December 14, described him as a quintessential administrator and oil and gas industry professional, John was the 5th GMD of NNPC, succeeding the late Aret Adams from April 1990 to June 1992.

    He was also a Non-Executive Director of South Atlantic Petroleum (SAPETRO), Executive Chairman of Hydropec Engineering Services Ltd., and former Non-Executive Director of United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc, among other positions.

    Read Also: NNPC, remittance, opacity: setting the records straight

    On behalf of the entire NNPC Ltd. Management and Staff, the GCEO, Mele Kyari, extended the company’s heartfelt condolences to his dear wife, family, friends, and relatives during this very trying period.

  • NNPC, remittance, opacity: setting the records straight

    NNPC, remittance, opacity: setting the records straight

    • By Kunle Badmos

    As the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited fated to endure unending but unfounded attacks on its integrity? Again, primordial allegations against the oil behemoth have been dredged up. In the last year, there have been unremitting but unfounded allegations of wrongdoing by the management.

    The latest in the series is the allegation by former Central Bank (CBN) governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, of non-remittance of money (dollars) into the Federation Account and opacity in the operations of the NNPC. He also described the national oil company as the most opaque oil organization in the world.

    These allegations are not exactly new but are a rehash of the same accusation he levelled against the NNPC 10 years ago. Then, Sanusi had accused the NNPC of withholding over $49 billion, which he said ought to have been paid into government coffers.

    The federal government then headed by Dr. Goodluck Jonathan insisted Sanusi got it all wrong. The NNPC itself held that even as CBN governor, Sanusi did not have a proper grasp of how the process of remittance to the treasury worked.

    This was shown to be the case after the reconciliation of figures with relevant agencies of government, it was discovered that the balance of unremitted oil revenue was the amount spent by the NNPC on its operations under the then-extant law, the NNPC Act. Despite this evidence, Sanusi kept insisting funds were missing, banding different figures like $10.8 billion and $12 billion before finally settling for $20 billion.

    The former monarch’s continued insistence on missing funds forced the senate to investigate the allegation which eventually cleared the NNPC of any wrongdoing.

    Sanusi himself in his capacity as CBN governor attended hearings of the Senate Committee on Finance where the issue of kerosene subsidy was exhaustively looked at vis-à-vis the Presidential Memo directing the removal of kerosene subsidy.

    The explanation was that the process of implementing the presidential directive was not followed through by the Minister of Petroleum Resources at that time as required by law which technically meant that the kerosene subsidy was not removed.

    It was based on this that the Senate Committee on Finance led by Sen. Ahmed Makarfi recommended that the executive should prepare and present to the National Assembly, a supplementary budget ‘to cover the expenditure in the sum of N90.6 billion for Premium Motor Spirit subsidy 2012 and N685.9 billion for kerosene subsidy expended without appropriation by the National Assembly.

    The auditing firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), cleared the NNPC of misappropriation of funds. 

    For observers of events in the Nigerian oil sector, there can be no argument that the NNPC is the most investigated business entity in Nigeria. Beginning four decades ago when in 1979, the Justice Ayo Irikefe panel of inquiry set up to investigate an alleged missing N2.8 billion oil money returned a verdict of not guilty on the NNPC, the company has undergone several investigations and audits including the ones by the Senate and PwC mentioned above, and has not being found culpable for any infractions.

    There is abundant evidence to show that Sanusi is on shaky ground. Had he diligently followed developments in the last four years since Kyari has presided over the affairs of the NNPC, he would have noticed a level of transparency in the running of the company not seen since it was established over 40 years ago.

    One of Kyari’s first acts in office was to unveil his “Roadmap to Excellence” anchored on the TAPE Agenda. TAPE stands for Transparency, Accountability and Performance Excellence. 

    One of the key gains of the TAPE agenda is the entrenchment of global best practices within the NNPC leading to a transformation of administrative and technical processes.

    In September 2021, Kyari presented to Nigerians for the first time in 44 years, an audited report of the finances of the NNPC for 2020. The bonus was the fact that the company posted a profit of N287 billion to bring to an end decades of losses suffered by the organisation.

    Read Also: NNPCL remits N4.5tri into Federation Account in 10 months

    Beyond running the company on sound and globally recognised and acclaimed management principles, Kyari has repositioned NNPCL as one of the leading oil companies in the world. 

    He has used his position as helmsman of the company to aid in the tackling of key challenges confronting the Nigerian economy.

    One of these is the vexed question of crude oil theft, which has challenged successive governments in Nigeria since the country’s return to representative democracy in 1999. It is on record that the NNPC under Kyari’s leadership designed the “Crude Theft Monitoring Application”, an application, which has options for reporting incidents, with prompt follow-up and responses, and another for crude sales documents validation.

    Before the launch of the application, Kyari had taken leading officials to Niger Delta creeks to tackle the menace of oil theft.  

    His effort paid off as a four-kilometre illegal oil connection line from the Forcados Terminal into the sea where for nine years criminals had been siphoning Nigeria’s oil, was discovered.

    Success achieved in this regard proved pivotal as Fourth Quarter figures released by the NNPC Ltd showed a spike in the country’s oil production level, which rose to 1.6 million barrels from the erstwhile figure of 1.2 million, a development that helped Nigeria regain its position as Africa’s largest producer ahead of Algeria (1.021mb/d) and Angola (1.088 mb/d.

    NNPCL was able to resolve years-long disputes with its business partners, especially the International Oil Companies (IOCs). 

    As part of its determination to boost the country’s production of crude and unlock investments in the Deepwater space, the Kyari-led NNPC Ltd signed different Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) and other agreements including Dispute Settlement Agreements and Escrow Agreements that would produce about 10 billion barrels of crude and over $500 billion in revenue.

    NNPCL has also been able to pay Nigeria’s Joint Cash Call arrears to the IOCs to the tune of $5 billion through the introduction of the Alternative Funding Approach (AFA), which has replaced the former cash call payment system.

    NNPCL has signed memoranda of association (MoUs) with countries like Ghana, Gambia, Guinea, and Guinea Bissau, as part of the 5,600 kilometres Nigeria-Morocco Gas Pipeline project traversing these countries and seven others including Togo, Benin, Liberia, Cote d’ Ivoire, Mauritania and Senegal. The project when completed will supply about three billion standard cubic feet of gas per day (3bscf/d) from Nigeria to Morocco and then to Europe.

    In 2022, the NNPC Ltd secured a $1.4 billion external project finance agreement for hydrocarbon projects in the Niger Delta. This is in addition to acquiring the OVH Energy Marketing (OVHEM), owner and operator of Oando downstream assets.

    These achievements could not have been possible without the clear roadmap put in place at the NNPC. 

    It is a no-brainer that no organisation no matter how desperate it is for partnership will do business with an opaque organisation of the kind described by Sanusi. That old NNPC has been buried with the coming of the Kyari-led management. 

    In its place is an organisation driven by a determination to outperform its local and international competitors through entrenching world-class standards for qualitative service delivery.

    •  Badmos, a public commentator, writes from Abuja.
  • Understanding NNPC Limited’s governance ecosystem

    Understanding NNPC Limited’s governance ecosystem

    By Pius Nnolum

    Ex Emir Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, a former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, from June 2009 to February 2014, on Thursday, December 7, 2023 claimed that “The NNPC Limited is the ‘most opaque’ oil company in the world,” and advised “that the President becoming a petroleum minister is not a good idea,” in an apparent swipe at President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. He made these positions known while delivering his remarks at the Bank Directors Summit organised by the Bank Directors Association of Nigeria in Abuja.

    These comments have compelled this obligatory need to interrogate the governance ecosystem in the NNPC Ltd on the watch of Malam Mele Kyari so as to reach a clear understanding of how the national oil company is faring under his leadership.

    President Tinubu, in an apparent tradition of his predecessor, ex-President Muhammadu Buhari, kept the position of the substantive Minister of Petroleum Resources to himself. He clearly has the power to appoint his cabinet and self as minister and ex-Emir Sanusi would do well to note this.

    Several critical considerations, of course, drove this presidential decision but first a background context. Cut to the bone, energy and its associated infrastructure remain the key development drivers of both ancient and modern civilisations. It’s actually strange that in the morning of the 21st Century, many Nigerian state actors are blissfully unaware that much of the problems of socio-economic transformation are really complications of physical infrastructure – with energy at the epicentre.

    Undeniably, energy systems tend to be high-cost investments but are clearly vital to a nation’s economic development and prosperity. Put simply to thrive in the choppy waters of rapid technology and business model changes, organizations that manage a nation’s energy sector require the right leadership. It is imperativeness for any leader to have a clear vision and articulate it well.

    Today, National Oil Companies (NOCs) in Africa stand on the brink of significant disruption – and of substantial opportunity – as a new era of structurally lower oil prices challenges business models that have long relied largely on exploration and production of hydrocarbons. This scenario goes beyond the volatilities in the sector, seeded by the Middle East crisis and the Russia-Ukraine war.

    The onerous responsibility to drive this behemoth energy corporation fell on the sturdy shoulders of Mele Kyari who was appointed the GMD of the now-defunct Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) by President Muhammadu Buhari, on July 8, 2019. Clearly, Kyari, an unassuming scientist who has traversed the entire value chain of the petroleum industry, has turned out to be the right pick as NNPC boss.

    Perhaps his toughest call in an industry he has spent much of his professional life in, Kyari has responded to his top-draw responsibility by quickly taking charge in close synergy with his corporation’s oversight entity, the Ministry of Petroleum Resources. His four-year leadership has demonstrated a fundamental grasp of what fossil energy means and an adroit understanding of the imperativeness of circumspect governance of Africa’s preeminent NOC.

    Read Also: COP28: Ogbuku lists NDDC’s gains from climate change conference

    Kyari set sail by defining a clear vision of NNPC’s transformation and sending a clear message that the corporation’s lukewarm governance narratives of the past were gone for good. Recognising the imperativeness of inclusive governance, he considerably up-scaled engagements with various stakeholders to ensure that they were carried along in the Company’s operations.

    Besides its role as the bedrock of the Nigerian economy, the petroleum sector has been one of the defining features of the country’s post-independence history. This fact centralizes NNPC in the nation’s political economy, given the oil corporation’s assigned role in the industry.

    Not surprisingly, the corporation’s experience has been marked by struggles over what the corporation controls and over who controls it. Perhaps this unique centrality of the corporation in the Nigerian state has spawned its fair share of challenges and reproach.

    It could be recalled that a 2010 joint report by Transparency International and Revenue Watch Institute found that NNPC had the poorest transparency record out of 44 national and international energy companies examined. It is heartening that within his four years in the saddle, the NNPC boss has changed that negative narrative.

    With Kyari’s new vision, the NNPC is boldly anchored on the principle of Transparency, Accountability, Performance and Excellence (TAPE). Perhaps, one of Kyari’s most important and earliest governance initiatives that sounded a death knell to the extreme operational opacity reputation of the corporation is “Operation White.”

    It is a presidential-mandated collaborative initiative driven by NNPC with the active participation of regulatory and security agencies as well as other stakeholders in ensuring that all molecules of regulated petroleum products imported by NNPC are well accounted for and utilised in the country. This initiative effectively ended the era of very poor transparency in the corporation’s governance style. I am not sure ex-Emir Sanusi is aware of this initiative.

    Barely five months after publishing its 2018 Audited Financial Statement, the Kyari-led NNPC released its 2019 Audited Financial Statement with a 99.7% reduction in its loss profile from ₦803bn in 2018 to ₦1.7bn in 2019. On account of these unprecedented governance positives, the conservative Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) lauded the corporation.

    Even the ravages and disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic did not derail the compelling focus, integrity of service delivery, operational stability and reasoned interventions by the NNPC boss.

    Looking at the big picture, the NNPC Ltd’s management, under the firm guidance of Mele Kyari, has patriotically and assiduously worked towards building a stable oil industry for the nation’s growth and development. He has done a good job in posting resounding successes since stepping in the saddle.

    Kyari had scaled a number of hurdles, including the mindless theft of Nigeria’s oil by criminal cabals and individuals, which had left Nigeria for a long time unable to meet its oil production quota. The NNPC Limited management, under Kyari’s astute leadership, launched the “Crude Theft Monitoring Application”.

    The portal has application options for reporting incidences of crude theft, with prompt follow-up and responses, and another one for crude sales document validation. In a subsequent operation that followed, Kyari announced the discovery of a four-kilometer illegal oil connection line from Forcados Terminal into the sea which had been in operation for nine years.

    Certainly, efforts at checkmating crude oil theft and illegal refineries have been yielding positive results as there has been a significant spike of daily oil production to 1.6 million barrels per day. In addition, according to Fourth Quarter 2022 figures released, Nigeria has regained its position as the largest crude oil producer in Africa, ahead of Algeria’s 1.021mb/d and Angola’s 1.088mb/d in November 2022.

    The management of NNPC Limited under Kyari addressed persistent oil loss that the old NNPC had suffered before he became its helmsman in 2019. In 2022, the company posted its second consecutive year of ‘profit’ announcing N674.1 billion in the 2021 financial period and growing it from N287 billion in 2020.

    The figure represented an increase of N387 billion or 134.8% when compared to the previous N287 billion recorded in 2020. Kyari, who made the disclosure via the verified Twitter handle of the company, said the improvement followed the approval of the 2021 audited financial statements by the board of the oil company.

    Aside from recording profit for the company, Kyari has also led the NNPC Limited to resolve age-old disputes with its business partners notably the International Oil Companies (IOCs). This is part of its efforts at boosting Nigeria’s crude production and unlocking investments in the Deepwater space in the aftermath of the coming into being of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

    Consequently, the NNPC and the IOCs signed various production sharing contracts (PSCs) agreements that would ensure the production of about 10 billion barrels of crude oil and generate over $500bn revenue.

    A notable accomplishment of Kyari’s leadership of NNPC Limited is the payment of Nigeria’s joint venture cash call arrears to the IOCs totaling $5.1 billion. This was made possible through the introduction of the Alternative Funding Approach (AFA), which replaced the erstwhile cash-call payment model.

    Besides, NNPC signed various Memoranda of Association (MoU) with many countries, including the national oil companies of Ghana, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, and Sierra Leone in furtherance of the planned Nigeria-Morocco Gas pipeline project. The Nigeria-Morocco Gas Pipeline (NMGP), an initiative of the federal government of Nigeria and the Kingdom of Morocco, is a 5,600 kilometers gas pipeline project traversing 13 African countries namely: Nigeria, Benin, Togo, Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, The Gambia, Senegal and Mauritania to Morocco.

    But, by far, one of the most impressive accomplishments of Kyari’s stewardship at NNPC Limited is the flagging off in November 2022 of the Kolmani Integrated Development Project in Bauchi State, marking the commencement of effort to commercially exploit oil in the Northern part of Nigeria.

    The Kolmani Oil Field, estimated to have a reserve of about one billion barrels of crude oil, OPL 809 and 810, lies in the Gongola Basin of the Upper Benue Trough, straddling Bauchi and Gombe States. The oil blocks are owned by the NNPC Limited as a concessionaire with New Nigeria Development Company Ltd, Africa Oilfield Movers Ltd, and SEEPCO as partners. The well is expected to produce 50,000 barrels of crude per day during the first phase.

    Going forward and putting negative characterisation of NNPC Limited behind, the Kyari leadership as it is has simply chosen the solemn path of sharply focusing on the subsisting challenges in the sector. The leadership stated it was focused at the moment on delivering the task that had been set for the national oil company, stressing that everyone was free to air their opinion. NNPC’s Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Olufemi Soneye, told the media that there would be no need for an official response to the claims made by the ex-CBN boss.

    He explained that constant responses could hinder the enormous task before the oil company, adding that NNPC would rather concentrate on handling the work that it was established to do.

    According to Soneye, “Everyone is entitled to their opinion. Constant responses to every individual can hinder our work. Our focus remains on delivering energy security, managing ongoing projects, and implementing reforms.”

    But before the Senate recently, the NNPCL GCEO had already made in-sector clarifications that addressed Sanusi’s remittance concerns. He had buttressed that maintaining the energy security target has fostered the confidence that in 2024, Nigeria will become a net exporter of petroleum products.

    He affirmed that no subsidy was charged to the federation, adding that the NNPC had contributed N4.45 trillion as direct revenue into the federation account in a combination of taxes, royalties and dividends and paid N406 billion as dividend to Federal Government’s account from July 2023.

    The narratives about the success stories of NNPC under Kyari’s leadership promise to be inexhaustive as he continues to come up with one innovation after another.

    Dr. Nnolum wrote in from Lagos

  • FOI: Disclose how much oil Nigeria produces and exports daily, SERAP tells NNPC

    FOI: Disclose how much oil Nigeria produces and exports daily, SERAP tells NNPC

    Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has asked the Group Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited, Mele Kolo Kyari, to promptly publish details of barrels of oil Nigeria produces and exports daily and the total amounts of revenues generated from oil since the removal of subsidy on petrol in May 2023.

    SERAP urged Kyari “to disclose how much of the revenues generated from oil have been remitted to the public treasury since the removal of subsidy on petrol.”

    The demand was contained in a Freedom of Information (FoI) request dated December 9, 2023 and signed by SERAP’s deputy director, Kolawole Oluwadare.

    Former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, had last week alleged that “the NNPCL is failing to remit enough foreign exchange into the treasury despite the removal of fuel subsidy,” asking: “Where is the money?.

    Sanusi said: “There is a legitimate public interest in disclosing the information sought.”

    The organization gave the NNPCL seven days to accede to its request failure of which the organization said it would take appropriate legal actions to compel the NNPCL to comply with its requests in the public interest.

    SERAP said: “According to our information, the NNPCL has failed to disclose the amounts of barrels of oil the country produces and exports.

    “The NNPCL has also reportedly failed to publish details of revenues generated from the production and exportation of oil and the amounts of revenues remitted to the public treasury as required by Nigerian laws.

    “According to the former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, ‘It is only the NNPCL that can give the figures about how much oil we produce daily, how much we sell, and where the money is going. We are no longer paying subsidies so where are the dollars? Where is the money?

    “The NNPCL has a legal responsibility to promote transparency and accountability in barrels of oil the country produces and exports every day, and to ensure that the revenues generated from such production and exportation are dully remitted to the public treasury.

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    “The NNPLC also has a legal responsibility to disclose details of payment of N11 trillion subsidy.”

    SERAP urged the NNPCL  to disclose details of payment of N11 trillion as subsidy, and to clarify allegations that the corporation has failed to remit revenues generated from oil to the public treasury since the removal of subsidy on petrol.

    “Opacity in the amounts of barrels of oil the country produces and exports daily, the revenues generated and remitted to the public treasury would have negative impacts on the fundamental interests of the citizens and the public interest.

    “Transparency would ensure that the revenues are not diverted into private pockets, and increase public trust that the money would be used to benefit Nigerians.”

    The letter, read in part: “The public interest in publishing the information sought outweighs any considerations to withhold the information.

    “SERAP is seriously concerned that years of allegations of corruption and mismanagement in the oil sector and entrenched impunity of perpetrators have undermined public trust and confidence in the NNPCL.

    “Ensuring transparency and accountability in the operations of the NNPCL would improve the enjoyment by Nigerians of their right to natural wealth and resources.

    “SERAP is concerned that despite the country’s enormous oil wealth, ordinary Nigerians have derived very little benefit from oil money primarily because of widespread grand corruption, and the culture of impunity of perpetrators.

    “Combating the corruption epidemic in the oil sector would alleviate poverty, improve access of Nigerians to basic public goods and services, and enhance the ability of the government to meet its human rights and anti-corruption obligations.”

  • Protesters block entrance to NNPC depot in Lagos

    Protesters block entrance to NNPC depot in Lagos

    Protesters have blocked the entrance to NNPC depot in Lagos state, preventing the factional chairman of Lagos zone of Petroleum Tanker Drivers (PTD) Branch of NUPENG, Saheed Gbolahan Adigun and his entourage from gaining access to the facility.

    The protesters, who are loyal to the Comrade Lucky Osesua and Comrade Dayyabu Yusuf Garga faction of PTD, said they could no longer subject themselves to the leadership of Augustine Egbon who they claimed had betrayed them and turned them to slaves in the hands of their parent body (NUPENG).

    Osesua and Garga made this known in a statement at the weekend.

    They noted that the angry PTD members also decried the manner with which armed security agents came to the facility, noting that if there was any case of accidental discharge on Thursday or pulling of the trigger by an impulsive operative, the situation could have made the depot to go up in flames.

    They further alleged that Adigun’s intention was to impose a caretaker committee on them on Thursday while also refusing to conduct fresh election that would usher in fresh leadership at the unit in line with Branch’s guidelines.

     They also said should he succeed, revenue generated at the depot would be siphoned with no one having the courage to ask questions. 

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    The protesters were not deterred by the heavy presence of armed military operatives that came in with the convoy of the zonal chairman to provide cover for him and those who rode in the white PTD branded Toyota Hiace bus with Lagos number plate, AP542VP.

    Members of PTD at the NNPC Ejigbo unit, as gathered, were unhappy with the manner in which the union was being managed by the current leadership of both PTD Lagos Zone and the National leadership of NUPENG 

    They were reported to have claimed that since Gbolahan attained office as Chairman of the Zone, there had been no record of transparency or accountability on all the resources being generated by the tanker drivers in the Zone. 

    “Our protest is going on peacefully today on Thursday. We don’t want Gbolahan and his people here in Ejigbo Depot; he has betrayed us; he should explain to us where he takes our money being generated every week to. 

    “We can’t be working here under the sun and rain, and you will be taking our money to Ibadan every week. He can’t impose caretaker committte here, we won’t allow them, we want election, we want to freely choose those who will lead us without rancour. Enough is enough. 

    “See them bringing soldiers with arms and ammunition to silence, intimidate, harrass, victimise, and bully us. The same thing we see at the Lagos Zone every day, we have Naval officers with ammunition manning the secretariat. How many of us can they kill? Is this the way union is run? 

    “They have lost their legitimacy; thats why they are bringing soldiers to foist their leadership on us, and that can never work. This is not the same union that late Frank Kokori, Akinlaja, Okuogbo, Akpatason, Igwe Achese built. I wonder why EFCC, ICPC, NFIU etc hasn’t come to look at NUPENG shoddy financial records all this while.

    “How on earth can you bring armed security agents to a petrol depot that houses highly inflammable products? What if there was a case of accidental discharge on Thursday or that a trigger-happy personnel pulled his trigger? The whole depot could have gone up in flames and lives and properties in the depot, and its envions could have been jeopardized.

    “This is not the type of union that should be running our affairs; all they do is to loot our resources, impoverish our members and make them look like slaves and beggars, while they are building filing stations, mansions, hotels, parks and buying cars for their women and sending their children abroad to school. 

    “Comrade Lucky Osesua and Comrade Dayyabu Yusuf Garga are leaders who mean well for the union. These are the type of people we can trust in the leadership of the Union. Workers inside the tank farm have joined the protest as we speak,” Faleti Taoreed, one of the organisers, said.

    “Nobody is going in and out of the facility, we cannot support leaders who can’t protect our interests. We are the foot soldiers, yet they don’t reward our hard work. They are thieves. Akporeha, Afolabi, and Otunba should leave us alone and retire from the union immediately.”

    The crisis rocking NUPENG has been in the news since November 2023 as the Lucky Osesua-led faction consistently condemns the posture of its parent union, which they said had been hijacked by the General Secretary, Afolabi Olawale.

    The group asserted that Olawale allegedly practised forum shopping, blackmail, contempt of court, and relied on sentiments to impose Augustine Egbon’s leadership on Tanker Drivers, the federal government, and other stakeholders in the oil and gas industry, contrary to the desires of PTD members.

  • NNPC, partners commit to reduce methane emissions

    NNPC, partners commit to reduce methane emissions

    Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited has expressed its commitment to work with global partners in the march towards reducing methane emissions in oil and gas operations.

    On the sidelines of the ongoing United Nations Climate Change Conference, also known as COP28, taking place in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates, the Oil and Gas Decarbonization Charter was released.

    The Charter calls on the oil and gas sector to achieve the goal of reaching net-zero emissions for their own operations by 2050. It also includes commitments to achieve near-zero methane emissions and no routine flaring by 2030.

    Speaking on the development during a Panel Session titled: “Accelerating the Elimination of Methane Emissions & the Decarbonisation of Oil & Gas,” NNPC Ltd’s Executive Vice President, Upstream, Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan said the Charter was a major opportunity not just for the NNPC Ltd., but for the African sub-region.

     ”Africa contributes three percent to emissions, but that does not exclude us from the consequences of the emissions. I think the decarbonisation drive and the charter are not just ethical but also a strategic imperative for a major African National Oil Company (NOC) like ours.

    Read Also: NNPC’s inability to supply crude to local refineries not a challenge – Kachikwu

    We believe this charter is an important one. We are committed to working with all stakeholders to deliver on that,” Eyesan stated.

    She said to achieve its near-zero methane emissions, Nigeria has since declared this decade as Decade of Gas, which is not only geared towards producing more gas for export, but also towards producing gas for local economy and that of the entire African sub-region.

     ”I assure you that we are open to working with our partners towards achieving zero-flare and methane emission reduction by 2030. This fits perfectly with our dreams, and we consider it achievable,” Eyesan added.

    She described finance and technology as the two major challenges in delivering on the provisions of the charter, noting that for the two problems to be solved, African countries need to work with partners who have the technology and finance.

    She said NNPC Ltd. remains committed to expanding its alternative energy sources through investment in solar, wind, and other renewable sources.

  • Kachikwu: NNPC’s inability to supply crude to local refineries no challenge

    Kachikwu: NNPC’s inability to supply crude to local refineries no challenge

    The former Minister of State for Petroleum Prof. Emmanuel Kachikwu has corrected the impression that the inability of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Ltd. to supply crude to local refineries will rubbish the idea of having functional local refineries.

    Some government-owned and private refineries are about to commence operation by the end of this month but there are concerns that the NNPC will have no crude to supply them.

    Kachikwu explained in an interview with reporters at the sideline of a seminar at the University of Ibadan on Thursday that refineries all over the world import crude oil to process and sell both locally and export to foreign buyers.

    He said private and government-owned refineries across the country already know that they will source crude from outside Nigeria, stressing that many foreign refineries are built in countries that do not have crude oil which makes them import the crude they process.

    He said sourcing crude from foreign countries only costs a little more than sourcing it locally because the commodity has uniform international price. He added that NNPC is also free to choose buyers of its products though it will do everything to feed local refineries for patriotism and its economic benefits.

    Kachikwu urged Nigerians to support all the efforts to refine crude oil in the country, stressing that the Federal Government will definitely do all in its capacity to ensure that oil supply chain is undertaken in the overall interest of Nigeria’s economic development.

    Speaking on the topic ‘Nigeria Energy Policies: Energy Transition, Domestic Crude Obligation, Oil Subsidy & PIA’ Kachikwu, who recalled that the development of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) took 20 ‘catastrophic’ years to develop and pass, pointed out that the slow pace cost Nigeria $15 billion annually with additional loss of $50 billion investments in the last 10 years.

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    He said: “It was estimated that Nigeria has lost about $50 billion in investment over the last 10 years and according to Rystad Energy, Nigeria was estimated to have lost about $15 billion annually due to the delays in passing the PIB.”

    The former minister added that the delays in the PIB passage was a major reason several large-scale oil and gas projects were stalled in Nigeria.

    “Large-scale projects like Bonga Southwest-Aparo (BSWA) and Bonga North and Etan – Zabazaba (EZ) have been on hold largely due to fiscal uncertainties.

    “These projects have the capacity to unlock larger reserves thereby reversing the depleting reserves and boosting production of hydrocarbons and ultimately generating more revenue to the government.”

    Though he said the PIA is not perfect, he expressed satisfaction that the legislation eventually saw the light of the day. He said the government will continue to improve on the law in order to get the best of the oil sector.

    Kachikwu, however, called on the government to learn from the oil industry mistakes and quickly move to develop the framework for the identification and exploration of other mineral resources which are in abundance in Nigeria.

    He said the focus was already shifting to clean and renewable energy to address environmental pollution.

    “In the last four years, the focus has been on production or products achieved with low carbon emission. The world is moving away from oil due to efforts to tackle environmental pollution leading to global warming.  Non-fossil fuel, solar and nitrogen are the in-thing because they are cleaner energy sources.

    “Once people move away from a product source, financing for it dries up gradually. The PIA that was eventually passed was not to me as robust as it should be.

    “Nigeria should offer more incentives to oil investors because new fields are being discovered in other countries thereby increasing competition. Ours are already developed and predictable but we must be sensitive to competition.

    “I’m still seeing a lot of government interventions in NNPC. But we should allow NNPC run professionally.” he said.