Tag: NNPCL

  • Vandals caused Buguma well head fire, says NNPCL

    Vandals caused Buguma well head fire, says NNPCL

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) said vandals were responsible for the fire outbreak at its Buguma Wellhead 008, operated by its subsidiary, NNPC Eighteen Operating Ltd (NEOL).

    Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Mr Olufemi Soneye made this known in a statement.

    He added that the vandals were attempting to compromise the Christmas Tree and steal crude oil.

    “The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) reports that the fire incident at its Buguma Wellhead 008, operated by its subsidiary, NNPC Eighteen Operating Ltd (NEOL), was directly caused by the activities of pipeline vandals attempting to compromise the Christmas Tree and steal crude oil,” Soneye said. 

    The statement further said the unfortunate act of sabotage, which also resulted in severe damage to the well’s back pressure valve, reflects a disturbing pattern of repeated attacks on wellheads in the zone. 

    The state-owned oil firm recalled that since March 2023, crude oil theft on this asset has been persistent, with criminals now resorting to extreme measures, including the use of dynamite to destroy installations and illegally access hydrocarbons.

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    The statement reads in part: “NNPC Ltd remains committed to combating these fires and mitigating the financial losses associated with these criminal activities, which place a significant burden on the nation’s economy. 

    “The company is working closely with relevant security agencies to put an end to these acts of vandalism.

    “Additionally, NNPC Ltd reaffirms its commitment to supporting communities affected by these destructive activities and will continue to provide necessary relief efforts to mitigate the impact on those affected.”

  • NNPCL’s Pipelines and Depots Rehabilitation Project set to ensure energy sufficiency – Soneye

    NNPCL’s Pipelines and Depots Rehabilitation Project set to ensure energy sufficiency – Soneye

    Olufemi Soneye, Chief Corporate Communications Officer (CCCO) of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) says the company’s ongoing pipelines and depots rehabilitation project is set to resolve longstanding supply challenges and strengthen the country’s energy infrastructure for the long term. He spoke with Biodun Adetunji. Excerpts:

    There have been concerns about sustainability regarding NNPCL’s efforts to rehabilitate…

    The NNPC Ltd. is working towards transforming Nigeria into a self-sufficient producer and net exporter of refined petroleum products and a very first step in that direction is the successful rehabilitation work that has birthed the renewed operations of the Port Harcourt and Warri refineries.

    The rehabilitation and upgrade of the Old Port Harcourt and Warri Refineries by the end of 2024 marked a significant milestone in this journey.

    And, as you know, work on the New Port Harcourt and Kaduna Refineries is at advanced stages, reinforcing the commitment to eliminating fuel importation.

    The reason the term so-called came in is because of the manifest challenges that are clear and present threats to your operations?

    Okay, as you rightly observed, in every human endeavour, there are challenges everywhere. In fact, any human engagement that does not come with its challenges may never stand the test of time because challenges would rear their heads at some point. Yes, despite the progress, several challenges threaten the sustainable operation of the refineries and the efficient supply of petroleum products.

    Pipelines, for instance?

    I was coming to that. The aging pipeline infrastructure is an issue that we have to deal with. Nigeria has a 5,120 km network of crude oil and product pipelines connected to 22 storage depots (terminals). The infrastructure is dilapidated, making product transportation inefficient. Then there is the issue of pipeline vandalism and security concerns. Frequent pipeline vandalism has led to losses and disruptions in supply.

    In the past, refineries have been forced to shut down due to full storage tanks and inability to evacuate products and rather than use the pipelines, this has led to an over-reliance on road transport – the breakdown of pipelines has resulted in increased use of trucks for product distribution and this has led to frequent road accidents, fires, and high transportation costs. As the saying goes, Rome was not built in a day and all that we are doing now is to re-commit to the ethos and virtues of protecting critical assets with a view to avoiding mistakes of the past, the consequence of which we are facing and pausing for now. 

    But there must be solutions?

    Whereas there are limited financial resources, which pose challenges in executing both refinery and pipeline rehabilitation projects simultaneously, we are exploring creative and innovative approaches to ensure a cost-effective funding model to proceed with the pipeline and depot rehabilitation.

    For instance, to ensure the sustainability of refinery operations and improve the supply chain, NNPC Ltd. designed a robust rehabilitation plan for pipelines and depots: We will be deploying a new financial model: Finance, Build Operate and Transfer (FBOT) approach. Unlike the refineries, which were funded through loans, the pipeline and depot rehabilitation project is based on the Finance, Build, Operate, and Transfer (FBOT) model. Under this model, contractors finance the project, operate it for a set period to recover their investment, and then transfer ownership back to NNPC Ltd.

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    The entire pipeline and depot infrastructure was divided into four lots, with contracts awarded to different private companies. The Concession Agreements, signed in 2023, outlined key rehabilitation and upgrade activities.

    The activities include but may not be limited to the construction of new crude oil and product pipelines to replace obsolete ones, implementation of advanced technology to enhance pipeline security and prevent vandalism, rehabilitation and modernisation of storage terminals to support increased refining capacity.

    These outlined activities look ambitious but how realisable are they?

    Despite the challenges, the pipeline and depot rehabilitation project has made significant progress: Lot 1: Rehabilitation of pipelines from Bonny to Port Harcourt, including depots in Aba, Enugu, Makurdi, and Yola. We have started rehabilitation at Port Harcourt terminal, enabling seamless product loadout. Lot 2: Rehabilitating of pipelines from Escravos to Warri Refinery, extending to Benin and Ore depots and this rehabilitation at Warri terminal has enabled the restart of smooth product distribution. Lot 3: Pipelines and depots associated with Kaduna Refinery, including crude supply from Warri to Kaduna and product distribution to Kano, Gusau, Jos, Gombe, and Maiduguri have commenced with assessment of the Warri-Kaduna crude pipeline for full rehabilitation. Lot 4: Another firm is rehabilitating the Lagos coastal pipeline network, spanning Atlas Cove-Mosimi-Ore-Ibadan-Ilorin. Mobilisation has begun for the rehabilitation of Atlas Cove terminal and pipeline connections. Mobilisation letters have been issued to some of the companies upon the submission of Bank Performance Guarantees and NPSC is closely working with the concessionaires to fast-track project execution.

    When would these be completed?

    The pipeline and depot rehabilitation project is expected to be completed within two to three years. Upon completion, Nigeria will achieve the following: Sustainable crude oil supply to refineries; seamless product distribution through pipelines, reducing reliance on trucks; improved energy security and reduction in fuel importation; lower transportation costs and reduced road hazards caused by fuel tankers. We can assure Nigerians that the NNPC Ltd.’s pipeline and depot rehabilitation project is a game-changer in achieving Nigeria’s energy security and self-sufficiency in refined petroleum products.

    With a structured financial model, strategic partnerships, and committed execution, the initiative is set to resolve longstanding challenges in petroleum supply and strengthen the country’s energy infrastructure for the long term.

  • NNPCL denies alleged PHRC recruitment

    NNPCL denies alleged PHRC recruitment

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) has urged 

    members of the public to discountenance purported recruitment announcement for the Port Harcourt Refining Company (PHRC)) circulating in certain online platforms. 

    The Company clarified that there is no separate recruitment process for the Port Harcourt Refinery other than the one which started last year, which also includes all NNPC Ltd.’s businesses, with successful candidates at the Computer-Based Aptitude Test proceeding for the interview stage this week.

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    Its Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Olufemi clarified this in a statement on Friday. 

    The statement explained :“The purported recruitment link being circulated in various online platforms is the handiwork of fraudsters who are keen on taking advantage of the newly revamped Port Harcourt Refinery to fleece unsuspecting members of the public with a phantom recruitment announcement. We, therefore, call on members of the public to be wary of the ploy and not fall for it.” 

  • Niger Delta movement congratulates NNPCL chief at 60

    Niger Delta movement congratulates NNPCL chief at 60

    Niger Delta Renaissance Movement (NDRM) has congratulated Group Chief Executive Officer of Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), Mele Kyari, on attaining 60 years.

    The group, led by youth advocate and social crusader, Oghenekaro Edor, national president and Alhaji Lutegbe, secretary, said Kyari has used his office to build peace and tranquility in Niger Delta.

    In a statement in Abuja, they noted that Kyari had managed NNPCL in a manner that fosters peace among youths of Niger Delta.

    Edor argued that since NNPCL awarded the security surveillance contract to security firms, particularly Tantita Security Services Nigeria Limited (TSSNL), youths and others have been in sustainable peace.

    It stressed that but for the administrative acumen of Kyari the refineries in Warri and Port Harcourt would have remained moribund.

    He hailed the loyalty and solidarity demonstrated by the technocrat at 60, saying while his contemporaries were retired, he has shown his mettle as a reliable top-notch administrator and problem solver in the nation’s oil sector.

    “We see revitalisation of the refineries as an avenue to create jobs. Kyari has shown capacity, capacity, excellent disposition to his assignment by bringing the refineries to life.

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    “As he clocks 60, we are happy Kyari is bequeathing functional refineries to us, thereby buoying regional and national economies. Stepping on the 60th rung of the ladder, we congratulate and celebrate the man who succeeded where many failed. We saw his efforts come to fruition when the light of hope was lit in Port Harcourt and Warri refineries. Therefore, it is plausible to pray for progress and fulfilment as he surges further into prosperous years ahead of him.

    “Kyari is a blessing to our nation and we pray  the heavens celebrate him,” Edor said.

     The statement called on the youth to shun violence that could reverse progress made by stakeholders and the Federal Government to birth growth and regional development.

    It urged Niger Deltans to take advantage of the revitalised refineries to develop themselves in skill acquisition and entrepreneurship training.

    “Kyari is our hero and warrior against ravaging poverty, and we pray God endows him with long life and good health as he surges on into the club of septuagenarians. Today, youths are happy with what NNPCL has done but we ask that Niger Delta indigenes are considered first in recruitment into the refineries,” the Isoko-born activist said.

  • Prioritise crude oil supply to Dangote, other local refineries, group tells NNPCL

    Prioritise crude oil supply to Dangote, other local refineries, group tells NNPCL

    A group of concerned Nigerian citizens has called on the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) to prioritise crude oil supply to local refineries, including the Dangote Refinery, over foreign partners.

    At a briefing on Tuesday in Abuja, the group expressed concern over reports that the NNPCL plans to cut down on crude oil supply to the Dangote Refinery from 300,000 barrels per day.

    In an address by its national coordinator, Obinna Francis, the group feared the move may be part of a larger scheme to monopolise the oil sector and frustrate local investors.

    Francis noted the removal of fuel subsidies has led to increased hardship and suffering for Nigerians, with a hike in the price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) leading to a rise in the prices of goods and services across the country.

    The citizens also expressed concerns over the NNPCL’s claim that the Warri and Port Harcourt Refineries are operational and producing at 60-70% capacity.

    They questioned the basis for this claim, noting that the refineries have not produced a single litre of fuel.

    Francis argued that the Dangote Refinery has been making efforts to make petroleum products affordable for Nigerians and reducing its crude oil supply would undermine this effort.

    The refinery’s operations, they noted, are not a burden to taxpayers, unlike the government-owned refineries.

    The citizens called on President Bola Tinubu to intervene in the matter, stating that the NNPCL’s actions may be misconstrued as having the president’s consent.

    Francis added: “Citizens are no longer surprised that the NNPCL has been insisting that the Warri and Port Harcourt Refineries are operating at between 60 to 70 per cent operational capacity. It is clear now that the game from the beginning was to pave the way and create an angle of plausible engagement aimed at reducing the quota of crude that is expected to go the Dangote Refinery.

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    “We argued that the coming upstream of the Warri and Port Harcourt refineries is not expected to cut down allocation to local refineries. The naira for the crude agreement was purely an intervention at the time to boost local production and then provide some cushion from the volatility of the foreign exchange market. It was not so much about the crude but the FX.

    “If the Warri and Port Harcourt refineries are coming on stream, it is expected that it will make the price of petrol affordable for Nigerians and not become a stumbling block and a basis for adjustments of crude.

    “Citizens will also want to inform the world that while Dangote Refinery is operating at no cost to the taxpayer, the NNPCL is embarking on Project Leopard, the operation, will enable the company to raise $2bn in total exchange for crude oil, thereby pushing the volume of loans for crude to $8bn within four years, with consequential adversity and growing debts for the nation.

    “There is overwhelming evidence that the private sector has served the Nigerian public and stakeholders better than government-owned and operated utilities and parastatals. Let us examine two recent examples: the power and telecommunications sectors before we return to the refineries.

    “The federal government sold power-generating companies to the private sector some years ago. In the telecommunications sector, the government liberalised the industry in 2001 by selling GSM licences but retained ownership of the key operator.

    “In each of the above examples, continued operation by the public sector led to billions of naira being lost on poorly managed entities. These entities deprived Nigerians of important services, fostered corruption and deprived important budget items, like education and health, of vital funds; in each case, privatisation or liberalisation – allowing competition from private business – solved the problem, and ensured the greater common good.

    “On the refineries, we have also been down the road of reversing privatisation and retaining public ownership of these assets. In 2007, attempts by the administration to facilitate the sale of the refineries were reversed due to pressure by the unions and management renewed its commitment to revamp the refineries.

    “Yet, in 2011 alone, Nigeria reportedly spent $760 million on refinery maintenance, and the operational capacity of the refineries hardly changed. In the five years since the reversal, we have spent over US$30 billion in oil subsidies. These sums spent on Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) could have collectively funded our health and education budget for three years.

    “Under the Greenfield Refinery initiative, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) now Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited (NNPCL) planned to undertake a public-private partnership project to expand local refining capacity, eventually settling on establishing a 350 000 BPD refinery in Lagos.”

  • Obasanjo and NNPCL war

    Obasanjo and NNPCL war

    Ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, a veteran of war, and proponent of ‘do or die politics’ that sees politics as war by other means, is set for war against NNPCL. Obasanjo, a formidable opponent with intimidating credentials is an adversary who says “nothing embarrasses him”, a warrior who routinely cuts deals with enemies of his enemies, or “an incredible opportunist” to borrow retired Brigadier General Alabi Isama’s phrase in his “Tragedy of Victory’. NNPCL must also be warned that Obasanjo is a fighter who in the words of his friend, Andrew Young, former US permanent representatives at the United Nations (UN), “pursues his goals with great tenacity without caring about who he made mad”.

    But this is not to discourage NNPCL; I will in fact encourage NNPCL to accept Chief Obasanjo’s challenge. After all, it is not as if NNPCL, regarded by many as ‘a cesspool of corruption, an organization deficit in character and honour and the scourge of Nigerian fuel consumers has much to lose in a battle over honour. It was only  two days ago that the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) was asking through its letter dated January 4 that the Group Chief Executive Officer of the body, Mele Kyari, to explain the disappearance of over N825 billion and $2.5 billion allegedly deducted from crude oil sales between 2020 and 2021 ostensibly for refinery repairs.

    All Obasanjo – who cannot stand being proved to be imperfect – wants is for NNPCL to stake its honour by confirming that Port Harcourt and Warri refineries are indeed working. And now with  a television station mischievously waking up trouble that was hitherto deep asleep, the die is cast. It is one more opportunity for a vindictive Obasanjo to prove he alone is infallible, the fact he tried hard to establish in his war memoir “My Command” and in his “Olusegun Obasanjo, The Presidential Legacy 1999-2007”.

    His current battle is anchored on the following syllogism: He had as president invited Shell International to buy equity or run our refineries for us on its own terms, offers Shell turned down. Aliko Dangote, the apple of his eyes, was able to put a team together and offered government $750m to run the refineries on Public/Private Partnership basis (PPP) His successor, the late Umaru Yar’Adua refunded Dangote’s money following undertaking by NNPCL to manage the refineries. NNPCL ended up frittering away billons of naira without giving relief to Nigerians since he, Obasanjo left office. Therefore, NNPCL’s claim that both Port Harcourt and Warri refineries are now working cannot be true.

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    Obasanjo might have not provided enough empirical facts to validate its thesis beyond NNPCL’s past records which seem to provide additional ammunition to consolidate what Obasanjo considers as an unassailable position.

    But that was until Femi Falana, the respected human rights lawyer, who besides Obasanjo who wears his “PDP’s award of ‘Father of Nigeria’ title like St Christopher’s cross, is in my opinion, one Nigerian, that is deserving of being called “Mr. Nigeria”, stepped in to provide the missing link.

    According to him, the cancellation of the federal  government’ Public, Private Partnership (PPP) arrangement for the management of the Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna refineries approved by the Obasanjo government in 2007 was attributed to the questionable circumstances surrounding the deal. First, it was alleged that Obasanjo “in utter breach” of the Privatisation and Commercialisation Act, side-lined Vice President Atiku Abubakar, the chairman of the National Council on Privatisation (NCP), and “took over the privatisation of a number of public enterprises.”

    These include Obasanajo’s sale on May 17, 2007 of a 51% stake in the Port Harcourt refinery to Bluestar Oil for US$561 million and on May 28, 2007, sales of 51% shares in Kaduna Refinery at a cost of $160m to the same Bluestar, a consortium of three domestic companies, including Dangote Oil, Zenon Oil and Transcorp in which Obasanjo had acquired large shares through ‘blind trust.’

    Scandalously, the deals were consummated in the last days of the Obasanjo administration despite the four-day protests by National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) which also alleged that the nation had been short-changed as the shares acquired in the Port Harcourt refinery for $516 million were worth US$5 billion.

    Obasanjo’s case is not helped by the National Assembly awful report on the privatization programme he supervised. The World Bank for instance had defined privatization as a programme for middle-income countries ‘with a competitive market, a market-friendly environment with a good capacity to regulate. But as victims of cultural imperialism that ape everything, including policy thrust that have no chance of survival in our own environment, our leaders sheepishly followed Britain and France’s privatisation of the eighties.

    First to be launched was the Babangida’s Privatisation and Commercialisation Act of 1988, the Bureau of Public Enterprises Act of 1993 and Obasanjo’s Privatisation and Commercialisation Act of 1999. They were all doomed to fail.

    We don’t need any other proof than the 7th Senate report of November 30, 2011 which directed that the National Council on Privatization rescind the sale of Abuja International Hotels Limited (Nicon Luxury Hotel) for failure of the core investor to deliver on  some of the fundamental provision of the Share Purchase Agreement/Post Acquisition Plan; that the sales of assets of Daily Times Nigeria Pic by Folio Communications Limited and its directors should be investigated by anti-graft agencies and the sold assets recovered; that the former Directors-General, Nasir El-Rufai, Julius Bala and Irene Nkechi Chigbue be reprimanded for seeking approval directly from the president instead of the NCP as stipulated in the Public Enterprises Act 1999; and that   the Director-General, BPE, Ms Bolanle Onagoruwa be relieved of her appointment for gross incompetence in the management of the Bureau of Public Enterprises and for illegal and fraudulent sale of the 5 % FGN residual shares in Eleme Petrochemicals Company Limited (EPCL).

    Privatisation of the power sector by President Jonathan, his godson was also a rip-off. In August 2013, 15 companies made up of 10 Distribution Companies (DISCOs) and five Generation Companies (GENCOs) paid $2.238b to take over 60% of unbundled PHCN after an injection of between $8-$15b of tax payer’s money.

    Commenting on this on the occasion of the 11th Bola Tinubu Colloquium that took place in Abuja, Tinubu had then observed that “The PDP administration shared our generation, distribution and transmission to their friends and cronies without very deep and thoughtful research and evaluation. It has now become pork chops. It was his view that “for a more constructive reform to improve generation, transmission and distribution, “the privatisation must be reviewed”.

    Unlike our one-eyed kings who had no faith in themselves, it is on record that Obafemi Awolowo and his colleagues who laid the foundation for the Western Region, today regarded as the most educated part of Africa; Ahmadu Bello, who put together the biggest business conglomerate in Africa, south of Sahara and Michael Okpara and his group credited with running the fastest growing economy in the world in the early sixties, did not quarrel with  the economic model foisted on them by the colonial masters. All they did was to adapt mixed-economy model/public enterprises to the peculiarities of their own environment and the special needs of their people.

    It was also unfortunately lost on our one-eyed kings that we have no capitalists in Nigeria but parasitic elites who have no stakes beyond taking whatever they can get from the state. We see this play out daily with importers of labour of other societies including substandard goods and drugs while thousands of our highly qualified youths scrambled abroad in search of greener pastures. We also see this among unpatriotic sponsors of violent armed immigrant herdsmen who illegally occupy our ungoverned forests in the north from where they visit periodic violence on subsistence farmers, killing, maiming and sending survivors to IDP camps while houses, farm lands and villages are forcefully taken over.

    Whereas Western societies are owned by powerful individual capitalists who in early eighties under Margaret Thatcher decided that public enterprises had fulfilled its historical mission of repositioning the impoverished poor of the post World1 and 11 period as average workers  Their historic mission was to guarantee system survival without posing a threat to the highly stratified class social system by being able to build a house without mortgage or sending your children to the university without loan.

    And for Obasanjo and his crusading colleagues who falsely claim ‘for our today they sacrificed their tomorrow’, we now know patriotism sometimes is not without altruism. It was Babangida, who annulled the most credible election in our nation’s history, in order to remain in power or swap position with Abacha, who put and sustained him in power through military coups. Obasanjo’s boys also spoke of alleged bribe with tons of naira stocked in ‘Ghana must go’ bags in pursuit of derailed third term agenda, Obasanjo has continued to deny.

  • OBJ versus NNPCL

    OBJ versus NNPCL

    The thing about Olusegun Obasanjo is that he does not think Olusegun Obasanjo can have peace unless Olusegun Obasanjo does not make headlines. This time, he is fighting with NNPCL. What he did was being economical with the truth. First, he pretended he wanted Shell to run it, and one of the excuses of the multinational was corruption. They probably did or did not know that the man was also offering them a corrupt deal. In the interview, Obj did not mention Tra nscorp. He only said it was Dangote. The reason is simple. He wanted to tap into the success of the Dangote refineries. Two, he dodged his own filth in the matter. Obj had a so-called blind trust in Transcorp. What is that? He had an interest, and so he wanted to be in the oil business from the backdoor. But he was only being clever by half. He wanted to bequeath a corrupt deal to posterity. This was in the mould of his Bells University and Obasanjo Library. Both he acquired by subterfuge, raking up cash by blackmailing governors and politicians.

    So, he said the refineries could never work. In earnest, he was saying that he did not want the refineries to work. He was playing into a trend in both media and opposition who wanted the refineries to remain dud. They did not give NNPCL a chance.  So, it was not that NNPCL could not do it. It was that he wanted the business for himself. He failed, and decades after, he is still lamenting the pepper soup that got away. He is salivating in vain.

    Read Also: Falana to Obasanjo: Yar’Adua voided refinery sale over conflict of interest

    Well, if he says NNPCL could not do it, who is to blame? Was he not the president? Was NNPCL not reporting to him? On the face of it, we can say he failed as president. But it is more complicated than that. He wanted to fail so he could lap up another soup. He got neither. He failed and that explains why his successor who he glibly called Umoru cancelled the deal because of lack of transparency.

    NNPCL has invited him to the refineries. This is the first time that humour has come out of the oil giant. Corporations can also have a sense of humour. They know the man will not oblige. But is this not the same OBJ who, like Don Quixote, thinks he is bigger than the earth. This same man who seizes any opportunity as invitee and guest of honour to play baba.

    The thing is, he is still bellyaching over the last polls. He wants any opportunity, as the baba of obidients, to lash out without proof or reason at anything associated with President Tinubu. Well, he may have a blind trust in Transcorp, let him play blind at the evidence of the refineries all he wants. Those who have eyes can see.

  • Baba Obasanjo and the NNPCL Refineries

    Baba Obasanjo and the NNPCL Refineries

    By Simbo Olorunfemi 

    That Baba Obasanjo has an almost child-like emotional attachment to the public-owned refineries under the trust and care of the NNPCL is not in doubt.

    It is also not difficult to explain why that appears to be the case. 

    He can indeed assert some level of claim/credit for the construction of 2 of Nigeria’s publicly owned 4 Refineries.

    While the decision to construct the second and third refineries in Warri and Kaduna respectively was taken in 1974, with construction on the 3rd set to only commence “whenever the projection of the consumption of petroleum products justifies it”, by early 1975, fuel shortages made it necessary to proceed with its construction soon after.

    The Warri Refinery, whose contract was awarded in 1975 before General Obasanjo became Head of State, it was completed and commissioned in 1978 while he was in office. 

    The contract for the construction of the Kaduna Refinery was awarded in 1977 and commissioned in 1980.

    One interesting fact is that the construction of these Refineries was under the direct supervision of Muhammadu Buhari who was appointed Federal Commissioner (Minister) for Petroleum and Natural Resources in March 1976 and Chairman of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation when it was created in 1977, a position he held until 1978.

    So, it must have been heart-breaking for Baba Obasanjo to meet the Refineries in a state of much disrepair when he returned as President in 1999. Such was the state of the refineries that even with so much money expended on ‘Turn-around maintenance’ of the refineries while he was in office, there was no turn-around in fortune for the refineries that he had to put them up for sale a few weeks to the end of his administration.

    For the Port Harcourt Refinery, Blue Star, a consortium of Nigerian companies Zenon Oil, Dangote Oil, and Gas & Transnational Corp. outbid UK-based Indian steel baron, Lakshmi Mittal, who had offered $550 million. 

    The Dangote-led Blue Star, made up of Baba Obasanjo’s associates, paid $561 million to acquire 51% of the government-owned stake in the refinery. 

    There were two other bidders – Oando Plc as well as Sahara Energy in conjunction with Refinee PetroPlus, but the two were disqualified in a process conducted by the BPE. Bluestar will follow up with the buy-in in Port Harcourt to, soon after, also take a 51% stake in the Kaduna Refining Company.

    In what was a strange twist of irony, it was Baba Obasanjo’s anointed successor in office, President Umaru Yar’Adua, who, within only a few months of assumption, took a different position on the sale of the refineries, which prompted Blue Star to pull out of the deal. Baba, who never hid his pain, and tried to prevail on his successor without success, cannot get over the turn of events. 

    He often recoils at how Yar’Adua baulked under pressure and cancelled the sale.

     “The refineries are old and Dangote and some investors paid $750 million for two of the refineries. My successor came to office and reversed the sale. He even refunded the money they paid. So I went to him and asked him why he did this. He said it was because of pressure. So I wondered if the pressure by some people was more important than the interest of the whole nation,” he recalls.

    Even though the reversal of the Obasanjo sale took place over 17 years ago, and the administrations that succeeded further moved in the opposite direction, Baba Obasanjo has refused to accept that any approach other than the one he took will ever work. To him, the refineries did not work with him, and they can never work under any other dispensation no matter what is done, which is quite intriguing.

    Whereas Baba anchored his decision to sell as pro-Nigeria and the reversal of the sale as anti-Nigeria, those who cancelled the sale obviously thought otherwise. In the first place, the sale was greeted by widespread criticism from the public, with the main accusation then being that the sale did not follow due process.

    Indeed, NNPC and DPR spoke up against it, just as the Labour unions, especially NUPENG and PENGASSAN were up in arms against it. They claimed that “the sale of the two firms was completely lacking in transparency”, that no due diligence was carried out, and that the Port Harcourt refinery was worth about US$5 billion, roughly nine times the amount it was sold for. Indeed, the sale of the refineries to Bluestar was one of the grounds for a general strike that paralysed the Nigerian economy for four days in June 2007.

    So, while the reversal of the sale is often cited, these days, as a major setback, not everyone agrees with that. Not everyone saw the decision to sell the refineries as the right one. In his interviews with the media on the subject, Baba Obasanjo usually anchors his argument that the refineries can never work on the conversation he said he heard with top Shell executives whom he had invited to take a stake in the refinery and manage it. 

    Shell, he says, gave 4 reasons for declining his offer. According to Baba, the Shell Executive said: ” First of all, they make a major profit from upstream, not from downstream. He said they run downstream just to keep their head above water.

    “Two, our refineries were too small: 60,000 barrels 100,000 barrels and I think 120,000 barrels. He said that at that time, the average refinery was going for 250,000 barrels.

    “Three, he said our refineries were not well maintained. Four, he said that there was too much corruption around the activities of our refineries and they would not want to get involved in that.”

    But looking at these reasons said to have been given by Shell, none of them is novel or suggestive that Shell saw the refineries as beyond redemption, as Baba Obasanjo concluded. Indeed, it is well known that the refinery business is not the most profitable and that upstream is more profitable than downstream. 

    It is easy to understand why Shell, which is not even a player in the Nigerian downstream sector, will not be interested in running a refinery, even with corruption out of consideration. 

    It is ironic that observations made by Shell will make such a lasting impression on Baba Obasanjo that he will shut out any suggestion that does not endorse the impression he formed.

    It is instructive that following years of fits and starts under different administrations, with efforts at ‘turnaround maintenance’ not yielding lasting results, President Muhammadu Buhari who had worked with President Obasanjo in the past, will then take the bold step of shutting down the refineries and commissioned a complete rehabilitation of the 4 Refineries, as different from the TAMs, in 2021. 

    At the time, the NNPCL CEO, Mele Kyari said: “I have said it over and over that we have not taken care of these refineries over the years, that we have mismanaged the turnaround maintenance work over time in the last 20+ years, these plants have degenerated to a level that today, we are not turning around but resuscitating them, which is different from TAM.” 

    Apparently, many didn’t understand the difference then, even as many still don’t understand it now, thus going off tangent in their expectations of what the refineries can deliver. 

    At the time the contract for rehabilitation was awarded, some people had also made the point that a new refinery could have been built instead of rehabilitating the old ones, but Mele Kyari explained then:

    “We have people saying why not build a new one; why will you repair an old refinery with $1.5 billion? The fact is available even by Google search, what it takes to build a refinery of this status today.

    “It will be difficult for the country to build a new refinery as it will take four years for it to commence production. It is around $7 billion and $12 billion to construct a refinery of this nature (Port Harcourt refinery),” Kyari argued.

    Atedo Peterside submitted then that NNPC would only “enmesh Nigeria into a deeper financial mess by throwing $1.5 billion at a problem it created,”, while Prof Pat Utomi argued that “The decision of Federal government to invest $1.5 billion in the repair of Port Harcourt refinery is unwise, unreasonable and has no basis.”

    Indeed, only a few gave the NNPCL a chance with the rehabilitation of the refineries, with trust further eroded by multiple failures to deliver to its schedule. But things have turned around in the last 2 months with the commencement of production in the old wing of the Port Harcourt Refinery, and last week’s resumption of production at the Warri Refinery, with indications that the Kaduna Refinery would be going on stream soon.  The club of cynics and skeptics is fast thinning out.

    Baba Obasanjo appears unconvinced though. “I was told not too long ago that since that time, more than two billion dollars have been squandered on the refineries and they still will not work. If a company like Shell tells me what they told me, I will believe them. But here we are, over $2 billion squandered, and the refineries still won’t work,” Baba Obasanjo declares. It might be that Baba is of the mind that the rehabilitation work that was done at the Refineries is of the standard that was presented to him as having been done in the past, not realising that this is clearly beyond that, with experts positing that what we have now is virtually a new plant. 

    NNPCL has responded appropriately with its Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Olufemi Soneye, extending an invitation to the former President for a tour of the newly completed refineries to witness first-hand the state of operations there.

    President Olusegun Obasanjo has a reputation for being forthright and candid. One expects him to honour this invitation and share with Nigerians his impression thereafter. That is the right and honourable thing to do. 

    – Simbo Olorunfemi works for Hoofbeatdotcom, a Nigerian communications consultancy and publisher of Africa Enterprise.

  • NNPCL invites Obasanjo to tour PH, Warri Refineries

    NNPCL invites Obasanjo to tour PH, Warri Refineries

    • Oil giant tackles ex-president over claim that plant can’t function

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo received a special invitation yesterday: a tour of the Port Harcourt and Warri refineries to confirm their operational status.

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) assured Obasanjo the days of inefficiency were gone and that the one-time corporation is now a profit-driven company.

    NNPCL was reacting to an interview Obasanjo granted Channels Television, in which he said Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) told him that the NNPCL could not run a refinery.

    According to him, SPDC was invited to buy equity in the plant but complained that corruption would never allow it to function.

    Obasanjo expressed the view that NNPCL had been very deceptive about the functionality of the refineries.

    The Port Harcourt Refinery started working in November, while Warri began operation last month.

    NNPCL Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Mr. Olufemi Soneye, extended the company’s invitation to the former president for a tour of the refineries.

    Read Also; ‘Wike too busy to respond to Rivers opportunistic elders’

    He said: “We extend an open invitation to President Obasanjo for a tour of the rehabilitated refineries to witness firsthand the progress made under the new NNPC Limited.

    “We invite our esteemed former president to join us in this effort as we continue to deliver energy security for our nation and provide tangible benefits to Nigerians.

    “His wisdom and experience are invaluable, and we assure him that his advice will always be welcomed and appreciated.”

    According to Soneye, NNPCL did not merely carry out turnaround maintenance but did a complete overhaul of the refineries.

    He said: “As part of this transformation, NNPC Limited has gone beyond oil and gas to become an integrated energy company.

    “One of our notable achievements is the complete rehabilitation of the Port Harcourt Refining Company (PhRC) and Warri Refinery.

    “This process was not merely the Turnaround Maintenance (TAM) of the past but a full-scale overhaul designed to meet world-class standards.

    “Similarly, we are currently conducting the same comprehensive rehabilitation of the old Port Harcourt Refinery and Kaduna Refinery.”

    The spokesman said NNPCL has also moved on from being a loss-making organisation to profit -driven international energy firm.

    The new NNPC Limited, Soneye said, is committed not only to enhancing the refineries but also to maintaining them to global standards.

    He said: “The NNPC has undergone a transformative journey, evolving from a government corporation into a private entity—NNPC Limited.

    “This transition has marked a significant shift from being a loss-making organisation to a profit-oriented global energy company.

    “We deeply respect and hold President Obasanjo in the highest regard as a distinguished statesman who has contributed significantly to the progress of our nation.

    “He has every right to share his perspectives on national issues, and we value his insights and counsel.

    “We remain grateful for his leadership and enduring commitment to the growth and development of Nigeria.

    “Together, we can continue to build a brighter future for our great nation.”

    Obasanjo expresses doubts

    Obasanjo said his successor, the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, rejected a $750 million offer from Aliko Dangote to manage the Port Harcourt and Kaduna refineries in 2007.

    Speaking on the television programme, the former president said he sought external help to rehabilitate and manage the facilities but faced resistance.

    “When I was president, I wanted to do something about the three refineries: Port Harcourt, Warri, and Kaduna.

    “Aliko got a team together after I asked Shell to come and run it for us. And Shell said they wouldn’t.

    “Later on, I called them. I called the boss of Shell to come and tell me what the problem was and he gave me four or five reasons.

    “He (Shell boss) said, first of all, they make a major profit from upstream, not from downstream. He said they run downstream just to keep their head above water.

    “Two, our refineries were too small: 60,000 barrels, 100,000 barrels and I think 120,000 barrels. He said that at that time, the average refinery was going for 250,000 barrels.

    “Three, he said our refineries were not well maintained. Four, he said there was too much corruption around the activities of our refinery and they would not want to get involved in that.

    “After that, Aliko got a team together and they paid $750million to take part in PPP (Public–Private Partnership) in running the refineries.

    “My successor refunded their money and I went to my successor and told him what transpired.

    “He said NNPC said they wanted the refineries and they could run it.

    “I said: ‘But you know they cannot run it.’”

    Obasanjo was confident in Dangote’s ability to manage his refinery effectively, unlike those of the NNPCL.

    “I was told not too long ago that since that time, more than $2 billion have been squandered on the refineries and they still will not work.

    “If a company like Shell tells me what they told me, I will believe them.

    “But here we are, over $2 billion squandered, and the refineries still won’t work,” Obasanjo said.

    NLC, TUC presidents confirm PH Refinery operations

    Presidents of the Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC), Joe Ajaero, and the Trade Union Congress (TUC), Festus Osifo, in November confirmed the operational status of the Old Port Harcourt Refinery.

    Ajaero and Osifo, along with other union leaders, visited the rehabilitated refinery and verified its functionality, including the quality of its petroleum output.

    The confirmation of the refinery’s operations by the labour centre presidents came days after the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) confirmed the resumption of production.

    Last month, NNPCL insisted that the Old Port Harcourt Refinery was up and running, with loading operations in full swing.

    Group Chief Executive Officer, Mr Mele Kyari, extended an invitation to human rights lawyer, Mr Femi Falana (SAN), and all those in doubt to join a tour of the refineries to verify their status.

  • FULL LIST: Warri, Port Harcourt, seven other completed refineries in Nigeria

    FULL LIST: Warri, Port Harcourt, seven other completed refineries in Nigeria

    The 125,000 barrels per day Warri Refining and Petrochemicals Company (WRPC) has commenced operations.

    Mele Kyari, the Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), disclosed this during a tour of the facility on Monday, 30 December.

    Addressing the team during the tour of the facility, Kyari said, “This plant is running. Although it is not 100 percent complete, we are still in the process.

    “Many people think these things are not real. They think real things are not possible in this country. We want you to see that this is real.”

    Here are nine completed refineries in Nigeria:

    1. Edo Refinery and Petrochemical Company:

    This project is a wholly owned subsidiary of AIPCC Energy.

    It operates in two phases with capacities of 1,000 BPSD and 5,000 BPSD and has been commissioned and is fully operational.

    2. Duport Midstream:

    Located in Edo State, this is a 2,500-BPD refinery that was completed in 2022 and started production in 2023.

    3. Walter Smith refinery:

    The Walter Smith refinery is a 5,000-bpd oil refinery located in Imo State. The refinery started operations in 2020, with plans to expand its capacity to 50,000 bpd in the coming years.

    4. OPAC Refinery, Delta State:

    This 10,000-bpd modular refinery, located in Kwale, Delta State, was completed in 2021 as part of the federal government’s effort to improve local crude oil refining.

    5. Niger Delta Petroleum Refinery (Aradel).

    The initial 1,000 bbls/day AGO topping plant was commissioned in 2010. Currently, the 3-train, 11,000 bbls/day modular refinery produces Automotive Gas Oil, dual-purpose kerosene, Marine Diesel Oil, high-pressure fuel oil, and Naphtha.

    6. Old Port-Harcourt refinery:

    Built and commissioned in 1965 with a refining capacity of 60,000 barrels of oil per day.

    In March 2021, the federal government awarded the repair of the refinery to Tecnimont SPA, an Italian company that would carry out repair works in phases.

    In December last year, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Sen. Keineken Lokpobiri, announced the mechanical completion and flare startup of the refinery.

    7. Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company (WRPC):

    The 125,000-bpd capacity WRPC was built and commissioned in 1978 at a cost of around $478 million.

    Until today, the refinery has never achieved full capacity utilisation, as production declined steadily except in the early 1990s, during which there was a brief upswing in production.

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    In 2021, the federal government awarded the contract for the repair of the decrepit refinery to Saipem SPA for $897 million.

    8. New Port-Harcourt refinery:

    In 1985, the federal government commissioned the New Port Harcourt refinery, built for $850 million. It can refine 150,000 barrels of oil daily.

    The commissioning of the New Port Harcourt refinery increased the total refining capacity of the plants to 210,000 barrels per day.

    9. Dangote Refinery:

    This is a 650,000-bpd refinery located in Lekki, Lagos State. The refinery cost around $19 billion and was commissioned in May 2023. Oil refining started in late December 2023, and it began dispensing products to local and international markets in May 2024.