Tag: NNPC

  • NNPC trucks storm Dangote Refinery to commence lifting of petrol

    NNPC trucks storm Dangote Refinery to commence lifting of petrol

    • Vessel also readied for distribution
    • Officials keep mute on price

    A long queue of petrol tankers yesterday formed along the stretch of  the road leading to the Dangote Refinery at Lekki, Lagos as they slowly made their way into the company’s fuel loading gantry ahead of the commencement of  the distribution of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) today.

    Also on standby at the refinery’s loading/discharging facility is  a vessel –Binta Saleh- for the same purpose.

    The trucks  and the vessel belong to the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) which confirmed that it had mobilised over 100 of such vehicles to the refinery by yesterday afternoon in preparation for petrol lifting.

    More were on the way,the company said on X.

    It said: “In preparation for the Dangote Refinery’s scheduled petrol loading on Sunday, September 15, 2024, NNPC Ltd. has been mobilising trucks to the refinery’s fuel loading gantry in Ibeju-Lekki. As of Saturday afternoon, NNPC Ltd. had deployed over 100 trucks, with hundreds more en route.”

     Spokesman for NNPCL Femi Soneye in an update on his X handle  @FM_Soneye last night said the figure would reach 300 by the end of the day.

     “NNPC Ltd. trucks are arriving at the Dangote Refinery in preparation for the scheduled petrol loading on Sunday, September 15, 2024. By the end of today (yesterday), at least 300 trucks will be stationed at the refinery’s fuel loading gantry,” he said.

     The NNPCL is the only off-taker of Dangote petrol for now, according to the terms of  agreement reached between the company and the refinery.

     In effect, interested marketers will  be buying  the product from the national oil firm.

     However, any marketer can buy diesel directly from the refinery.

     Under the agreement, the NNPCL will supply about 385,000 barrels of crude oil per day (bpd) to the refinery with effect from next month.

    The crude supply will be paid for in naira.

      In return, the refinery will supply PMS and diesel of equivalent value to the domestic market, to be paid in naira.

     “Diesel will be sold in naira by the Dangote Refinery to any interested off-taker. PMS will only be sold to NNPC, NNPC will then sell to various marketers for now,” Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy,Mr. Wale Edun said on Friday at a press conference in Abuja.

     The minister, who was represented by Zach Adedeji, executive chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), also said  that all associated regulatory costs pertaining to the Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA), Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) and others would also be paid for in naira.

     “We are also setting up a one-stop shop that will coordinate service provision from all regulatory, and security agencies, and other stakeholders to ensure a smooth implementation of this initiative. This will be located in Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA), Lagos,” Edun said.

     He added: “The technical committee that worked to flesh out this initiative will transition to an implementation execution and monitoring committee that will be working out of Lagos for the next three to six months.”

     It was gathered that the NNPCL would pay Dangote Refinery in dollar for the PMS until the end of this month because the crude it has been using was imported and paid for in dollar.

     Sources also said that  NNPCL assumed the role of sole off-taker for  Dangote’s PMS because most dealers showed no interest and also lack the capacity for the job.

     Government  believes that  allowing   the refinery pay for the crude supplied it by NNPCL in naira would go a long way in easing the demand for foreign exchange in the country.

     There is no official statement yet on the price of the Dangote petrol.

     The petrol distribution is coming about 480 days after the May 22,2023 inauguration of the refinery.

    However, production of diesel and aviation fuel began last January after the refinery took its first delivery of  crude on December 12, 2023.

    Chairman of the Dangote Group,Alhaji Aliko Dangote said the refinery has capacity to  load 2,900 trucks a day at its truck-loading gantries.

    “The products from the Refinery will conform to Euro V specifications. The refinery design complies with the World Bank, US EPA, European emission norms, and Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) emission/effluent norms. Employing state-of-the-art technology,” he said.

    LASG to ensure effective traffic management

    The Lagos State Government promised a comprehensive traffic management strategy to guarantee uninterrupted traffic flow in the  Lekki-Ajah corridor in view of the heavy vehicular traffic to be generated by fuel loading at the refinery.

    The Special Adviser to the Governor on Transportation, Mr. Sola Giwa, said the  State Transport Management Agency (LASTMA) had been fortified with state-of-the-art equipment and trained personnel which would be strategically deployed to oversee and regulate traffic flow within the affected areas.

    He assured residents and commuters in the Lekki-Ajah vicinity that thorough preparations had been made, urging them to remain calm and confident in the state government’s capabilities.

    “In collaboration with relevant stakeholders, LASTMA has mobilised advanced tow trucks and emergency response equipment to promptly address anticipated potential traffic disruptions.

    “Medical ambulance services are also on high alert to ensure rapid response in emergency situations,” the special adviser said.

    He said that it was imperative for tanker operators to strictly adhere to traffic regulations, particularly during loading and navigation, within the Lekki-Ajah axis.

    Giwa said that the state government would rigorously enforce the regulations to avert traffic disruptions and ensure seamless vehicular movement.

    “The Lagos State Government reaffirms its commitment to safeguarding citizens’ welfare and maintaining orderly traffic during this pivotal period of industrial activity.

    Read Also: Dangote Refinery begins distribution of PMS tomorrow – Edun

    “All motoring public, particularly commercial bus operators, including mini-bus drivers, are hereby cautioned to comply with traffic laws refraining them from picking up, or dropping, passengers at undesignated bus stops.

    “They are urged to avoid driving against traffic. They are also advised to observe all road signs, including traffic signals, among other regulations.

    “Adherence to these regulations will ensure a harmonious and efficient transportation system.”

  • Dangote free to fix petrol price but no guarantee it’ll be cheaper — NNPC

    Dangote free to fix petrol price but no guarantee it’ll be cheaper — NNPC

    • Manufacturers lament new price regime
    • IPMAN president: Crisis will be over soon
    • NANS opts out of planned protest

    The fuel price controversy raged on yesterday after the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) declared that local refining of petrol does not necessarily guarantee lower prices of the product.

    The company said fuel price is principally determined by market forces and exchange rate.

    The fuel shortage triggered by short supply persisted yesterday although the National President of Independent Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), Alhaji Abubakar Maigandi Shettima, said the fuel crisis would soon be over.

    An influential section of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) opted out of the strike being called for next month by some people over the recent rise in fuel price.

    The Forum of Zonal Coordinators of NANS said in Abuja that Nigerian students are no touts that could be deployed at will by vested interests.

    Manufacturers said the price hike has done a lot of damage to business.

     The Chief Corporate Communications Officer of NNPCL, Olufemi Soneye, said in a statement in Abuja that domestic refineries, including Dangote Refinery, “are free to sell directly to any marketer on a willing buyer, willing seller basis, which is the current practice for all fully deregulated products.”

    He was reacting to an allegation by Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) that the NNPCL was undermining DRL.

    Read Also: Tinubu accepts Ngelale’s indefinite leave request

    The Islamic group had claimed that the recent adjustment to the pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) would prevent Dangote Refinery from offering lower prices and that NNPCL had become the sole off-taker of all products from the refinery.

    Similar claims were made by IPMAN, whose spokesman, Chief Chinedu Ukadike, expressed strong concerns over what he called the designation of NNPCL as the sole off-taker of petrol from the Dangote Refinery.

    He said: “As major stakeholders and independent marketers, we believe Dangote should be allowed to sell directly to us. The distribution should be open so that other stakeholders can purchase the product, just like NNPC.

    “NNPC is also a competitor in the downstream sector, and it is wrong to single out one competitor among others, giving them exclusive access to petrol while others remain dependent on a single source. This will lead to monopoly, profiteering, and stagnation in the distribution process.”

    However, the NNPCL dismissed the allegations as untrue yesterday.

    It said: “The pricing of petroleum products from any refinery, including the Dangote Refinery Ltd. (DRL), is determined by global market forces. The recent changes in PMS prices have no impact on the DRL or any other domestic refinery’s access to the Nigerian market.

    “In fact, if current prices are perceived as high, it presents an ideal opportunity for the refinery to sell its products at lower prices in the Nigerian market.

    “Furthermore, we emphasise that there is no guarantee of lower prices associated with domestic refining compared to any global parity pricing framework, as confirmed by the DRL.

    “The NNPC Ltd will only fully off-take PMS from the DRL if the market prices of PMS are higher than the pump prices in Nigeria. The DRL and any other domestic refinery are free to sell directly to any marketer on a willing buyer, willing seller basis, which is the current practice for all fully deregulated products.

    “NNPC Ltd. has no desire or intention to become the distributor for any entity in a free market environment, and therefore, the notion of becoming a sole off-taker does not arise.

    “The NNPC Ltd. cannot undermine a business in which it holds a billion-dollar stake.

     “As an advocacy group for fair and just treatment, MURIC should have verified the facts before making statements that are entirely flawed and has the potential to incite ordinary Nigerians against the NNPC Ltd.”

    The NNPCL currently holds 7.2 per cent equity in the DRL.

    Fuel crisis will soon be over, says IPMAN President

    Reviewing the current fuel shortage across the country, IPMAN President Shettima said yesterday in Kaduna that the crisis would soon be over.

    He told newsmen that his optimism stemmed from the assurances given the association by the Group Managing Director (GMD) NNPCL and the Minister of Oil and other stakeholders in the oil industry during a recent meeting.

    According to him, wherever there are chances, especially increase in pump price of fuel, there is bound to be some problems in the adjustment of fuel pump and marketers will be asked to pay any outstanding debt before they can be allowed to lift fuel on the new price.

    “The moment all these requirements are put in place the fuel crisis will be over,” he added.

    The oil marketer said his organisation was not aware of the reason why fuel prices were increased, because it is the authority that decides on the price.

    He said: “We are marketers and we are there to market the products.

     “We are not aware of their reasons for the increase in fuel prices.”

    Protest not solution to fuel price hike – NANS

    Addressing reporters in Abuja yesterday, the Forum of Zonal Coordinators of NANS called for a shift from protests to constructive dialogue on the fuel price hike.

    Engaging the relevant stakeholders in talks, they said, would be more effective in addressing the issue and finding sustainable solutions rather than resorting to demonstrations that could be hijacked by those with selfish interests.

    The coordinators said NANS did not call for any protests or demonstrations, and urged the public to disregard such move by non-students with ulterior motives.

    The Chairman of the Forum, Comrade Bilal Kurfi, who spoke for the group, said: “Rather than the student population marching on the streets in protests that could be hijacked to further heighten the already escalated tension in the system, we believe that dialogue, rather than confrontation, should be adopted to resolve the current crisis.

    “We are intellectuals, not street urchins or political thugs who can be hired by anyone or a group of moneybags to destabilise the country.

    “NANS is committed to peaceful and constructive engagement, and we will not be part of any activity that may compromise the safety and well-being of our members and the general public.

    “The students shall engage in dialogue with the FG and NNPCL to seek a reduction in petrol prices to mitigate the effects of inflation on our colleagues.

    “The idea of protests being called by some non-students masquerading as our colleagues could destabilise the country, and this is not an option for us.

    “We prefer dialogue over actions that could be deemed partisan and counterproductive to the development and unity of our nation.”

  • NNPC yet to lift petrol from our refinery – Dangote

    NNPC yet to lift petrol from our refinery – Dangote

    Dangote Group has dismissed reports that the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has started lifting Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), popularly known as petrol, from its refinery.

    A newspaper had reported that NNPCL lifted petrol from Dangote Refinery and sold it for N897 per litre to Nigerians.

    However, the Group Chief Branding and Communications Office of Dangote Group, Anthony Chiejina,  in a statement on Thursday, September 5 said, NNPCL was yet to start lifting fuel from the refinery.

    According to Dangote Group, the petrol market is strictly regulated, and as such, the company cannot determine, fix, or influence the product price which falls under the purview of relevant government authorities.

    “We would like to state that NNPC has not commenced lifting of refined Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), commonly known as petrol, from our Dangote petroleum refinery.

    Read Also: NUPENG hails Dangote’s petrol production

    “Therefore, the issue of fixing the price of petrol lifted from our refinery does not arise, as we are yet to finalise our contract with NNPC.

    “The PMS market is strictly regulated, which is known to all oil marketers and stakeholders in the sector, hence we cannot determine, fix, or influence the product price, which falls under the purview of relevant government authorities.

    “We urge the public to disregard the headline as it is misleading and does not represent the true position in this matter. We are guaranteeing Nigerians exceptionally high-quality petroleum products that will be readily available all over the country,” the statement said.

  • BREAKING: NNPC stations adjust fuel pump price to over N800

    BREAKING: NNPC stations adjust fuel pump price to over N800

    Some NNPC filling stations in Lagos and Abuja have adjusted the pump price of fuel from N568 to over N800 per litre.

    The Nation observed on Tuesday morning that some NNPCL retail stations in Lagos are selling fuel between N865 to N897 per litre.

    Read Also: Some of arrested suspects visited my book shop, says wanted British suspect Wynne

    In Alausa, the pump price of the NNPC station reads N865 while others in Ikeja and Ikuo displayed N868 and N897.

    Fuel queues have been prominent in major cities in the last few weeks with Nigerians unable to get fuel.

    The NNPCL at the weekend admitted it was owing over 8bn dollars fuelling speculation that there may be increase in the pump price of fuel.

    Details Shortly…

  • NNPC seeks private operators for Warri, Kaduna refineries

    NNPC seeks private operators for Warri, Kaduna refineries

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited is inviting bids from “reputable and credible Operations and Maintenance (O&M) companies to run the  Warri Refining and Petrochemical Company (WRPC) and the Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company (KRPC).

    “The move is part of the effort to meet the nation’s fuel supply and energy security obligations.”

    The company said on its official X handle yesterday that the O&M (Operations and Maintenance) tender would “be treated as a single tender through a three- stage tender process (expression of interest, EOI, technical and commercial) leveraging on all the possible opportunity costs associated with procurement of consumables, personnel/manpower management, utilisation of computerised maintenance management software (CMMS), warehousing management system (WMS) etc.”

    Read Also: NNPCL seeks operations, maintenance contractor for Warri/Kaduna refiner

    NNPC stated further that the contract would cover long-term and short-term production and operations planning, production and operations execution, monitoring, reporting and optimisation of operation, maintenance planning (short-term), maintenance execution, and reliability and inspection.

    Others include process and controls engineering, quality control, quality assurance and laboratory, specialist engineering, health and safety, environmental management, turnaround maintenance planning and execution, minor projects, non-contractor management, subcontractor management, inventory, and warehouse management.

    Bidders are required  to “fill out and submit mandatory details through this link http://forms.office.com/r/kjSyVwz3Eg on or before 12 midnight Thursday 12th September 2024.”

    Individual bidders  are expected to  be duly notified on their registration in NNPC LTD/NipeX tender process portal and thereafter have access to make their submission on the NNPC LTD/NipeX tender process portal.

  • Growth in oil sector GDP contribution shows NNPC strategies working

    Growth in oil sector GDP contribution shows NNPC strategies working

    By Ukpe Philip

    The strategies adopted by Nigeria’s wealthiest and most profitable company, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Ltd (NNPCL) to ramp up crude oil production has again proven to be effective after a surprise 3.19 per cent growth in Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) which defied expert projections.

    The GDP figures released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed that the Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas (oil sector) was the fifth largest contributor to the GDP in the second quarter of 2024, accounting for 5.70 per cent of total GDP which was measured at 3.19 per cent.

    The oil sector is a crucial part of the Nigerian economy and it is evident that the economy driven by growth in the oil sector and service industry is returning to the good old days when Nigeria’s GDP grew sustainably.

    Since 2020, when Nigeria’s economy has slipped into recession, the oil sector has been struggling with negative growths of -8.89 per cent in 2020, -8.30 per cent in 2021 and -19.22 per cent in 2022.

    But the rate of decline decelerated drastically in 2023 to -2.22 per cent in 2023 full year which signalled great relief for the economy and the country is expected to experience a full year growth in the oil sector for the first time since 2019 when the sector recorded 4.59 per cent growth.

    Growth in the oil sector has a huge implication for the Nigerian GDP because the economy is an oil economy. A clear instance is that in 2020, when the sector fell -8.89 per cent, GDP also fell -1.79 per cent.

    The game has changed in 2024 as efforts by the NNPC led by the Group Chief Executive Officer, Mele Kyari, to increase oil production is translating to growth in the sector and, by extension an improved GDP performance. 

    In the second quarter of this year, NBS measured average oil production at 1.4 million barrels per day compared to 1.22mbpd production in the corresponding period of 2023.

    Read Also: Mobil Trust donates three ambulances to Akwa Ibom community

    According to the NBS, the real growth of the oil sector in Q2 2024 was 10.15 per cent annualised, indicating an increase of 23.58 per cent points relative to the rate recorded in the corresponding quarter of 2023 where negative growth of -13.43 per cent was recorded. 

    This drove the sector to contribute 5.70 per cent to the total real GDP in the second quarter of 2024 which is a rise from the figure recorded in the corresponding period of 2023 when the sector accounted for 5.34 per cent of GDP.

    The NBS emphatically said, “The nation in the second quarter of 2024 recorded an average daily oil production of 1.41 million barrels per day higher than the daily average production of 1.22 mbpd recorded in the same quarter of 2023 by 0.19 mbpd.”

    The Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) of 2021 empowers the NNPC to ensure energy security for Nigeria through increased crude oil output among others, and this has huge implications for the economy.

    Nigeria’s journey towards energy security faced great obstacles when crude oil output plummeted to 900,000 barrels per day in late 2022 due to theft, pipeline vandalism, and inadequate metering.

    Consequently, the oil sector equally witnessed -19.22 percent negative growth in 2022 while the GDP growth fell to 3.10 percent compared to 3.40 percent in 2021. This showed a direct correlation between the performance of the oil sector and the GDP.

    To rescue the economy which is largely dependent on oil, Kyari-led NNPC embarked on a massive campaign that united the security agencies, the NNPCL, Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission and host communities to fight oil theft in the oil-rich Niger Delta.

    The NNPC Ltd also awarded a pipeline surveillance contract to Tantita Security Services, which has led to the arrest of several vessels stealing Nigerian crude.

    In July 2023, Tantita Security Services working in collaboration with NNPC discovered over 60 illegal connections to the trans-Escravos, trans-Forcados, and other major trunk lines by oil bunkDeltaBayelsa states.

    In January 2024, the fight led to the interception of MT Kali, an illegal crude oil vessel loaded with thousands of metric tonnes of crude oil. About 20 crew members, including community collaborators, were arrested.

    Another success was achieved in June 2024 as the NNPC uncovered an additional 165 illegal refineries in various locations across the Niger Delta, while 65 illegal connections were discovered and disconnected in Bayelsa and Rivers States.

    In May, NNPC uncovered 122 illegal refineries at Tomble II, III, IV, Umuajuloke, Rivers State as well as Oporomor III, Eduwini, and Ajatiton in Bayelsa State, all in the Niger Delta region.

    Aside from investments in oil, the NNPC has also shown commitment by investing in critical midstream gas infrastructure such as the Obiafu-Obrikom-Oben (OB3) and the Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano gas pipelines to boost domestic gas production and supply for power generation, industrial development and economic prosperity of the country.

    Without a doubt, NNPC’s effort is helping the Nigerian government shake up the economic pressure on the government and different sectors of the economy.

    As of May 2024, crude oil production rose to 1.7mbpd, according to Kyari who linked the rise in oil output to the firm’s fight against crude oil theft and vandalism as well as massive investment in the sector.

    Financial analysts at United Capital Research said that due to improved crude production, net exports are expected to be the primary growth drivers, with rising oil export volumes due to improved security in the Niger Delta.

    “We align with the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) projection that Nigeria’s real GDP will increase modestly to 3.1 percent in 2024. In the oil sector, the Nigerian economy is set to benefit from favorable developments, offering positive momentum in 2024,” the firm said in a recent report.

  • NNPC, Oando and Atiku Abubakar’s attacks, by Temitope Ajayi

    NNPC, Oando and Atiku Abubakar’s attacks, by Temitope Ajayi

    By his advanced age and eminent status as a former Vice President of Nigeria, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar is by no means qualified to be an elder statesman. Statesmen are highly venerated and revered people to whom we go for advice, guidance and direction.

    But sometimes, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar behaves as if he should be removed from that exclusive club. Or how else can one interpret some of his utterances and statements? Or is the former vice president merely playing politics? But politics should have its season and time and should sometimes give way to nation-building and patriotism. Statesmen are not given to flippancy.

    Neither are they whimsical. They are measured in words and deeds, a quality that Alhaji Atiku has not demonstrated in public discourse since losing the last presidential election as the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). 

    Alhaji Atiku, obviously still stung by his electoral loss, cannot see that a person of his profile must make interventions decorously and decently. 

    As a former Vice President of Nigeria, Alhaji Atiku self-denigrates when he makes interventions that eschew basic decency and without weighing how such unguarded outpourings portray the country and the implications for businesses and state institutions. 

    A man who still nurses the ambition to be president despite being close to the Octogenarian Club should be mindful not to destroy the institutions of state upon which the government functions.

    For reasons borne out of desperation and frustration arising from an unrealised presidential ambition, Alhaji Atiku and his attack dogs have been unrelenting in their assault on NNPC and members of President Bola Tinubu’s family without any justifiable reason. It is more telling that the attacks have been based on outright lies, half-truths, and deliberate distortion of facts to hoodwink the public.

    In his recent tirades, the former Vice President falsely accused President Tinubu, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company, and Oando Plc, where the President’s relative, Mr Wale Tinubu, holds sway as the Chief Executive, of unwholesome practice in a purely commercial transaction involving a downstream company where Oando had interests and the retail arm of NNPC.

    For Alhaji Atiku, facts are not sacred if his politics are served. The damage he has inflicted on the economy and the public image of the entities involved in this matter means nothing to a man who wants to pollute the environment enough to create a credibility crisis. 

    While Alhaji Atiku, on whose authority false claims are regularly made via reckless press statements, is vicariously liable, it is pathetic that the defeated PDP presidential candidate parades media aides such as Paul Ibe and Phrank Shaibu, who also lack introspection. The two pitiable men, who must be seen working to justify their pay, have scant regard for the truth. 

    Ibe and Shaibu have a superficial knowledge of the issues they raised in many of their arid press releases. The two men are either too lazy to do the necessary research on the subject matter or at least seek the opinions of experts for proper education on the transaction dynamics involved in the OVH/NNPC deal and that of OANDO/AGIP divestment.

    In one of his press statements, Alhaji Atiku misinformed the public when he accused President Tinubu of mortgaging the country to his family members and associates. In his rage, he said NNPC puts its retail arm under the control of OVH, a company he alleged that Oando, led by Wale Tinubu, owns a 49% stake in. One would expect that a former Vice President of Nigeria should speak to facts and not innuendos. This is more so for a man who expects the public to take him seriously. To start with, Wale Tinubu and Oando do not own a 49% stake in OVH after Oando sold its downstream business. 

    Evidence declines to support any of the wild claims contained in the Atiku’s press statements. NNPC has rightly responded to Atiku and set the records straight in a statement issued by its Chief Communication Officer, Femi Soneye, on 22 August 2024. In the statement entitled ‘OVH Acquisition: The Facts by NNPC Limited,” Soneye firmly pushed back against Atiku’s tissue of lies thus:

    Read Also: NNPCL expands global market footprint to Japan, China with LNG

    “At the time NNPC Ltd acquired OVH in 2022, Oando (in which Mr. Wale Tinubu has equity interest), had fully divested its equity in OVH to the two other partners – Vitol and Helios. Oando began its divestment in 2016, with Vitol and Helios coming in as equity partners, leading to the name change from Oando to OVH. In 2019, Oando fully divested its equity interest in OVH, resulting in Vitol and Helios holding 50% equity interests, respectively.

    “Upon acquisition of OVH by NNPC Ltd, NNPC Retail Ltd and OVH effectively became subsidiaries of NNPC Ltd. However, based on professional advice and sound commercial considerations, NNPC Ltd opted to merge NNPC Retail Limited into OVH, and then retain NNPC Retail Limited as the company name post-merger. The first step of merging NNPC Retail Ltd into OVH has been completed, and the post-merger renaming of NNPC Retail Ltd is ongoing. Contrary to the false alarm, neither Wale Tinubu nor the President has any interest in the OVH acquisition.”

    Providing more significant details and clarity on the OVH/NNPC deal, Mr Femi Awoyemi, Publisher and Chief Executive Officer of Proshare decried how political actors like Alhaji Atiku pursue personal political agendas at the expense of the economy and public good, arguing that “players seeking to push self-interested agendas must come with evidence and not innuendos.” 

    Mr Awoyemi averred: “Despite misgivings about an entity, I, as a member of the governance community, understand that it is unhelpful if we allow misrepresentations to replace objectivity and accountability.

    “On this note, I offer my thoughts on the NNPC-OVH issue without holding a fort for any party. Public and analyst records available to our economic and market intelligence (EMI) unit affirm that Oando Plc was out of OVH three (3) years before NNPC Retail chose to buy it out. (OVH stands for Oando, Vitol, and Helios). A review of Oando’s financial statements shows that it divested its downstream business (OVH) in three tranches: 60%, 35%, and 5%.”

    From the dates of Oando’s divestment from its downstream business, which started with the first one to OVH on 30 June 2016 and ended with the final exit on 29 November 2019, the company no longer participated in subsequent transactions between OVH and NNPC Retail.

    We are in a political environment where politicians like Alhaji Atiku are constantly plotting and scheming, using every fair and foul means, but it should not be so. After all the divisive rhetoric of electioneering, a nation deserves healing time when the focus should be solely on nation-building and governance.

    Alhaji Atiku is not willing to yield any space. He wants to remain in the election mood till the next electoral season, dishing falsehoods in industrial quantities to create his alternative universe. He is acting out the Trumpian playbook, which is to constantly push out falsehoods in the forlorn hope that they would gain currency and that people would believe. 

    That was why Shaibu doubled down on the lies on the OANDO/AGIP deal when the ones by Paul Ibe did not gain traction. In a scathing and uninformed statement issued by Shaibu, Alhaji Abubakar queried the Oando/AGIP deal, seeking to know why the transaction has gone through while that of SEPLAT/Mobil is yet to be fully consummated. Alhaji Atiku’s cheap shot and laborious attempt to draw false equivalence should never be lost on anyone. If the former Vice President and Shaibu had applied themselves well, they should have known that the circumstances around Oando/AGIP and SEPLAT/Mobil were different.

    Industry regulator the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) gave an update on divestment activities by the International Oil Companies in a statement issued on Monday, August 26, 2024. Its Head of Public Affairs, Mrs. Olaide Shonola signed the statement. The issues involved in the two upstream deals differed. 

    While both transactions predate the current administration, Oando/AGIP did not face the legal encumbrances faced by SEPLAT/MOBIL.

    On a comparative basis, through a letter dated February 24, 2022, Mobil notified the regulator of its intention to assign 100% of its issued shares to Seplat Offshore Energy Limited. NUPRC did not consent to this assignment because Mobil should have obtained a waiver of pre-emption rights and the consent of NNPC.

    The matter was held up in court in Suit No: FCT/HC/BW/173/2022 Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited versus Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited, Mobil Development Nigeria Inc., Mobil Exploration Nigeria Inc., and Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission. The transaction could not have been concluded until the parties resolved the dispute.

    According to the statement by NUPRC, NNPC and MPNU resolved their dispute in June 2024, and MPNU, by letter dated 26 June 2024, informed the regulator of the resolution of the dispute. Upon resolution of this dispute, the Commission communicated its no-objection decision to the assignment via a letter dated July 4, 2024, and requested MPNU to provide information and documentation required under the Commission’s due diligence checklist to enable the Commission to conduct its due diligence as required under the PIA. MPNU, by letter dated 18 July 2024, provided the information requested by the Commission. 

    Accordingly, MPNU’s application to the Commission for consent is undergoing due diligence review under the same divestment framework applied to the NAOC-Oando and Equinor-Chappal divestment. The Commission’s due diligence process is ongoing and within the 120-day timeline required by the PIA.

    Unfortunately, Alhaji Atiku ignored the facts above in the transactions to make a mountain out of a molehill as part of his grand design to misinform the public and continue his needless war of attrition against President Tinubu. 

    The PDP presidential candidate has elected to seek and push darkness. Where Alhaji Atiku and others like him see only despair, President Tinubu will continue to work toward building a virile society and a buoyant economy while holding on to the promise of a greater Nigeria.

    -Ajayi is Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity

  • Coalition seeks independent leadership for NNPCL, oil & gas agencies

    Coalition seeks independent leadership for NNPCL, oil & gas agencies

    The Citizens and Economic Freedom Rights Activists in Nigeria (CEFRAN) has called for an independent leadership for the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) and oil and gas agencies as well as an independent judicial inquiry to unravel the alleged fraud in the importation of adulterated fuel.

    At a briefing in Abuja, CEFRAN Convener, Obinna Francis, condemned those importing and distributing substandard fuel, which poses a grave health hazard to Nigerians.

    It said: “It is a profound national embarrassment that Nigeria, the continent’s largest oil producer, finds itself beholden to imports of subpar petrol, particularly from a nation like Malta, which lacks indigenous oil refineries.

    “This clandestine scheme, involving the importation of inferior petrol from Russia to Malta for blending prior to its arrival on our shores, is not only illicit but also poses a formidable threat to our collective health and environmental well-being.

    “It is deeply alarming to discover oil traders have allegedly established blending plants in Malta where they engage in practices that compromise the quality of fuel supplied to Nigerians, thereby jeopardizing our collective well-being.

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    “Their actions prioritise profits over the welfare and safety of the Nigerian people, exemplifying a reprehensible disregard for human life.

    “The actions of such individuals have rendered the removal of subsidies a perceived hoax, rather than a genuine measure to revitalise the economy from its current state of disarray.”

    The group urged President Bola Tinubu to constitute an independent management team for NNPC Limited to oversee a thorough investigation into the adulterated fuel saga, ensuring accountability and justice.

    CEFRAN emphasised the need for a transparent, accountable, and equitable fuel supply system that serves the interests of the Nigerian people, rather than catering to the interests of a select few.

    The group called on all Nigerians to join them in their quest for justice and accountability, stressing that the time has come to liberate the nation from the suffocating grip of those who prioritise pecuniary gains over the well-being of citizens.

    “A thorough, transparent, and exhaustive investigation into the operations of our fuel sector is imperative, and it cannot be conducted under the supervision of those who have demonstrably failed to safeguard the interests of the Nigerian people. A comprehensive inquiry must be launched to expose all individuals involved and hold them accountable for their actions,” the statement added. 

    “Mr. President, we urge you to constitute an Independent Management Team for the NNPC Limited, untainted by the current leadership. This team will oversee a thorough investigation into the adulterated fuel saga, ensuring accountability and justice.

    “We fervently implore the Nigerian government to take swift and decisive action to address this pressing issue. The implementation of more stringent regulations, robust enforcement mechanisms, and a steadfast commitment to providing Nigerians with clean, high-quality fuel is imperative. Through collective effort, we can strive for a healthier, more prosperous Nigeria, where the well-being of our citizens is paramount.”

  • Trial; constitution; NNPC innocent?  

    Trial; constitution; NNPC innocent?  

    Congratulations world on a successful Paris 2024 Olympics. Congratulations Nigerians in diaspora. Commiserations Team Nigeria.

    Note how quickly the UK is trying rioters because of CCTV, cell-phones and emails. Lesson for Nigeria.

    Nigerians and indeed Nigeria suffer from a constitution disease called ‘We, not the people’ constitution disease.  Some people called ‘we’ who are not ‘we, the people’ wrote a proposed 1999 constitution in semi-secret for a Nigeria reeling from a brutal military rule. 

    The ‘we, not the people’ 1999 constitution had time bombs which crippled Nigeria’s  growth compared to funds available since 1999 from a serial government which, cross-party, failed GoodGovernance  while imposing unbearably ‘juicy’, cripplingly high cost-of-governance and corruption on Nigeria with added multiple taxation.

    Since 1999, politicians tweaked the ‘we not the people’ constitution with one constitutional review buried before birth, dead on expensive arrival, a costly diversion or killed by those who benefit from the existing constitution.

    The current 10th National Assembly has inaugurated separate committees, 45-member Senate and 43-member House of Representatives on constitutional review. Can suspects judge their own case? Politics has sworn itself to silence and criminalised self-criticism, correction or improvement. Politics is vicious to its own dissenters or whistle-blowers who are vilified, suspended or expelled. Nigerians know any outcomes by NASS reducing NASS houses to one, or reducing numbers or reduction in Salaries, Allowances and Perks and Pensions, SAPPing Nigeria dry will not be approved by incumbent NASS members. No politician will sacrifice his seat voluntarily for a cheaper Nigeria even if Nigeria is dirt poor. We need a NON-POLITICAL GROUP for the ‘gainful’ political treatment which must include amputation surgery [reducing members of parliament by closing one NASS House-probably the Senate -aka GRA ‘Governors’ Retirement Abode’], tummy tuck surgery [cutting out fattening funds going to the federal government and cutting fulltime to part-time members with 1. Modest Sitting Allowances or 2. 75% reduction in SAPP and 3. Eliminating Constituency Projects].

    The new constitution must add surgical reduction in the Federal Exclusive List to remove sectional monopolistic and development stunting , which triggered the vicious ‘EndbadGovernance’ riots in the North which controls the  majority of the exclusive and LGA list and most of the budget since 1960. This control   has never guaranteed  ‘GoodGovernance’ with people-oriented use of an excessive resource allocation at the expense of other parts of the country. However all parts of government are subject to ‘BadGovernance’ corruption consequences. 

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    ‘Politicians Beware. The people are aware of citizen power. GoodGovernance is now a necessity for the survival of every class.  Reducing the Exclusive List would be useless unless we have leaders not ‘greeders’ at state and LGA level preventing corruption and extortion. 

    The Patriots met President Tinubu urging the initiation of a completely new constitutional process. Their blueprint should be acted upon to the letter.       

    Who is stealing our oil with vessels asks Elumelu? We do too! Also, are men in Buhari’s government negotiating to return 1/3 of money looted from oil deals? If true, it makes nauseating reading. NIGERIAN PLEA BARGAIN OFFICIALS MUST NEVER SETTLE FOR LESS THAN 100% REFUND OF STOLEN FUNDS AND ONLY THEN PUBLICLY NEGOTIATE ONLY THE SENTENCE, NEVER THE AMOUNT. NIGERIA’S DESTITUTE CHILDREN ARE TOO POOR TO LOSE N1 IN A PLEA BARGAIN.

    The oil deal revelation emphasizes our demand for a NON-POLITICAL 10-year FORENSIC NNPC AUDIT with 100 forensic auditor staff and consequent prosecution. Last week, termites were added to unfortunate animal kingdom members accused wrongly perhaps in the theft of Nigeria’s cash and account documents. We all remember snakes, rats, cockroaches and now termites. We should budget for anti-snake bushes and insect spray in accounts departments, abi no be soooo??

    The ‘honesty’ outbursts from NNPC officials are noted. However, seeing is believing. If you take a job on behalf of Nigeria and you fail, you should resign. If you cannot make 4/4 Nigerian refineries work… Resign. If you cannot get Ajaokuta to run….. Resign. Nigerians must question serial failures by officials and NNPC Plc and the leadership in oil and gas and even steel. We have rights to doubt the professional competence and dedication of a serially failed leadership. We must ask every single Nigerian official from gateman to General Manager of governor, from cleaner to clerk to chairman, to be of GoodGovernance-compliant and be of good moral behaviour and demonstrate accountability, financial transparency, honest administrative non-ethnic transparently.

    NNPC laboured under historic anti-Federal Character ethnic bias and the perception of a huge cloak of corruption. Has the perception or the practice changed?

    So, you and presumably the NNPC are not corrupt. Hurray! Prove that by actions-at every level of operation!  Gas measuring meters, 187 in number are great anti-corruption items and 30 years overdue but are only as good as those monitoring the lines. Are they honest? NNPC is a house that Nigerians think emits a foul odour of corruption primarily because the citizens’ yard stick is simply the 0/4 functioning four refineries from ‘sabotaged or incompetence-driven failure to deliver multimillions dollar failed TAM-Turn Around Maintenance x 4. Please correct that impression by getting the refineries working. Period. If not ..Resign. Nigeria awaits the 10-year NNPC Forensic Audit. Even if NNPC is innocent of corruption, NNPC is certainly guilty of institutional monumental technical incompetence and fuel-delivery-failure, depriving Nigerians of 30 years of affordable fuel and the country of its pride as a major oil producer and refiner. What a scam!

  • NNPC Ltd as an all-round asset to Nigeria

    NNPC Ltd as an all-round asset to Nigeria

    • By Olufemi Soneye

    In its editorial of 2nd August, 2024, the BusinessDay newspaper, characteristically, launched another scurrilous and baseless attack on the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd). In the editorial entitled: “NNPCL: Liability or Asset to Nigerians?”, the newspaper set out to paint the picture of NNPC Ltd that is a liability to Nigeria instead of an asset that it should be. It chronicled a litany of issues which in its estimation have made the company to lose its place as an asset to the nation. As to be expected, all the issues it raised were either outright lies or unfair misrepresentation of facts. Let’s take a look at them one by one.

    According to the newspaper, NNPC Ltd.’s status as an asset is undercut by the opacity of its operations and corruption. The truth, however, is that this is a regurgitation of age-long allegations that have since been overtaken by the emergence of Mr. Mele Kyari as the Group Chief Executive Officer of the company and the transition of the old NNPC as a corporation into a limited liability company under the Petroleum Industry Act.

    One of the key thrusts of the Kyari-led management since 2019 has been its focus on transparency and accountability. This was what gave rise to the Transparency, Accountability and Performance Excellence (TAPE) management philosophy under which the company’s audited financial statements began to be published annually since 2019. In fact, the same BusinessDay newspaper that is so bent on hanging the tag of opacity on the company actually honoured Kyari with its “Energy Executive of the Year” award in 2021 for turning the fortunes of the company around and entrenching the culture of transparency in the company. But out of sheer mischief, the newspaper has forgotten so soon and chosen to borrow some ignoble tricks from Josef Goebbel’s playbook, that of repeating the lies of opacity and corruption against the NNPC Ltd frequently with the hope of sustaining the propaganda just so well the public would believe the lies to be the truth.

    The next point made in the editorial is that of mismanagement of resources and inefficiency. In its bid to present a semblance of balance, the newspaper acknowledged the role of government interference in the company. A bulk of the legacy problems, such as the age-long lack of maintenance of the refineries, is traceable to government interference. Any old refinery staff member of the NNPC Ltd will tell you that NNPC engineers used to carry out the turn-around maintenance of the refineries until past governments started dabbling in to influence contracts for their cronies.

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    However, with the PIA, all that is behind as the NNPC Ltd now operates as a limited liability company under the Company and Allied Matters Act (CAMA). As is presently constituted, the company is owned by the government through the Ministry of Finance Incorporated and the Ministry of Petroleum. But the PIA envisages that in no distant time, the company will be listed on the stock exchange with shares owned by Nigerians in their individual capacities. But prior to that time, the management of the company under Kyari has instituted a management system encapsulated in the Performance Excellence element of the TAPE philosophy. Under this, the company has made great strides in moving from a position of loss in 2019 to consistent profitability. This is in spite of the fact that the company contends with monstrous odds in the form of crude oil theft and pipeline vandalism.

    The fact is: companies like Saudi Aramco, with which the newspaper tried to benchmark the NNPC Ltd, do not contend with such odds that have very practical implications for crude oil production. The newspaper is only being disingenuous in blaming the nation’s suboptimal crude oil production on inefficiency in the NNPC Ltd when it is common knowledge that the security challenges are not of the company’s making. But even at that, the NNPC Ltd has not fared badly in managing the bad situation to get the results that it has been posting in the past few years. The truth is that the current reality of the NNPC Ltd, in terms of management and performance, does not reflect the picture of mismanagement and inefficiency that the BusinessDay tried to paint in its editorial. The question that arises from all this, which the BusinessDay must answer, is: do companies that have issues with mismanagement of resources and inefficiency make profits as the NNPC Ltd has consistently done in the past three years?

    The other issue that has stymied the NNPC Ltd from being an asset to the nation, according to the BusinessDay, is its monopolistic control of the petroleum sector. Supporting its position, the newspapers states: “The corporation’s dominant position as the sole importer of petrol and the primary issuer of import licenses for diesel creates market distortions”. This allegation, coming from a business newspaper like the BusinessDay, is very curious. For the newspaper to state that NNPC Ltd is the “primary issuer of import licenses for diesel” shows how little it knows about the oil and gas industry. It only means that the BusinessDay either does not know the difference between an industry regulator and an operator or it just wants to take its mischief to a ridiculous level, hoping that the public would swallow its lies hook, line, and sinker.

    For the avoidance of doubt, NNPC Ltd does not issue import licenses for diesel or any petroleum product for that matter. This is because, NNPC Ltd, as provided in Section 64 of the PIA, is an operator just like any other company that operates in the oil and gas sector, and not a regulator. The PIA makes provision for the establishment of two regulatory agencies in the sector. They are the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC). The newspaper actually acknowledged these two regulatory agencies in the editorial. But how it came by the idea that the NNPC Ltd issues import licenses to marketers, a clear regulatory function, is really difficult to understand. This, however, goes to show that the newspaper and its editors know very little about the subject matter of their editorial.

    On the allegation that NNPC Ltd runs a monopoly in the importation of petrol, here are the facts that the BusinessDay failed to acknowledge in its editorial. When the downstream sector was deregulated on 29th May, 2023, with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s declaration that fuel subsidy was gone, every petroleum marketer was automatically empowered to import the product and sell at whatever price(s) they chose. NNPC Ltd only stepped in to close the gap as a supplier of last resort, a role assigned to it by the framers of the PIA to guarantee energy security for the nation. NNPC Ltd did not muscle any marketer out of petrol importation to become a monopoly. Besides, it does not look like the company is making any profit from being the sole importer of petrol which is usually the major objective of monopolists.

    In fact, by playing this role of sole importer of petrol at this time when others are not able to import the product, NNPC Ltd has proved to be a huge asset to the nation- much more of an asset than the BusinessDay would want Nigerians and the world to believe!

    Soneye, is the Chief Corporate Communications Officer, NNPC Ltd.