Tag: NNPCL

  • NNPCL denies clashes with marketers over petrol subsidy

    NNPCL denies clashes with marketers over petrol subsidy

    • Market remains stable in FCT

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPL) yesterday denied clashing with marketers or any other party over payment of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) petrol.

    This was contained in the company’s rejoinder to a media report that petrol should now cost N1,200 per litre owing to exit from the under recovery of the fuel cost.

    The rejoinder by NNPCL’s Group Communications, Officer, Mr. Olufemi Soneye,  reads: “NNPC Limited emphasises it has not clashed with any party. The Punch headline is deemed unfortunate. The publication sought confirmation on alleged subsidy reduction, to which NNPC responded that subsidy has been entirely removed.”

    Read Also: NNPCL denies clashes with marketers over petrol subsidy

    Meanwhile, the petrol market in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) was stable yesterday despite the report.

    The Nation observed that the NNPCL retail outlets vended the PMS for N617/ litre while independent marketers sold at different pump prices ranging from N650 to N660 per litre.

    Our Abuja correspondent also observed that the report failed to trigger any panic buying.

    “Once completed, ANOH will provide two income streams for Seplat: wet gas sales from OML 53 to the gas plant and dividends from the joint venture ANOH Gas Processing Company, which will operate the plant.

    “ANOH’s gas will further reduce Seplat’s and Nigeria’s carbon intensity and increase energy supplied to the Nigerian domestic market,” the CEO stated.

  • NNPCL denies clashes with marketers over petrol subsidy

    NNPCL denies clashes with marketers over petrol subsidy

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) on Wednesday, January 3, denied clashing with marketers or any other party on payment of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) petrol.

    This was contained in the company’s rejoinder to a media report that petrol should now cost N1,200 per litre owing to exit from the under-recovery of the fuel cost.

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

    The short rejoinder that NNPC, Group Communications, Officer, Olufemi Soneye issued today reads: “NNPC Ltd emphasises it has not clashed with any party. The Punch headline is deemed unfortunate. The publication sought confirmation on the alleged subsidy reduction, to which NNPC responded that the subsidy has been entirely removed.”

  • NNPCL Limited aims 2mn BPD production by 2024 – Akinyelure

    NNPCL Limited aims 2mn BPD production by 2024 – Akinyelure

    The newly inaugurated Pius Akinyelure-led Board of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited, on Monday, December 18, said it is committed to increasing the nation’s crude oil production to a minimum of 2 million barrels per day by 2024.

    The chairman of the NNPC Limited Board, Chief Akinyelure disclosed this while speaking to journalists after the inauguration of the Board by President Bola Tinubu at the State House, Abuja.

    The board has also promised that Nigeria will compete with the oil and gas industry around the world while it ensures that the key performance Indicators of the Oil Industry of the country are rated number one in Africa.

    It would be recalled that the nation’s petroleum sector has battled massive oil theft and vandalism of oil and gas facilities over decades, leading to significant economic losses and environmental degradation.

    In 2022, Nigeria lost at least $2bn to oil theft, according to an inquiry by the National Assembly, which also revealed that only 66 percent of the country’s oil production could be effectively guaranteed.

    The report of the inquiry, which was made public in November last year, also said the other 33 percent was affected by theft and lost production “due to the third-party easy access on land terrain.”

    Read Also: Port Harcourt refinery ready this month, NNPCL insists

    Speaking at the Villa on Monday, Chief Akinyelure said if the board is to achieve this, the federal government would ensure an overhaul of the security architecture of the oil-producing regions across the country to end the issue of Oil theft and vandalisation of pipelines.

    He said: “It is not an easy task we know we have the challenge of Oil stealing, and vandalisation of our pipelines, our commitment is to produce 2 million barrels per day anytime from next year but for this, we have to overhaul our security architecture so that the incidences of stealing, vandalisation of oil pipelines can be reduced and this will help to beef up our cash flow and we will become a better nation.”

    The chairman also said that the Board members assured the President of collective efforts to reposition the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited to sustain the economy better while guaranteeing improved fortune for Nigeria.   

    He stated: “We have assured him of our collective effort to make it a company that we will all be proud of and a company that will help sustain the economy and make sure we create some element of prosperity for Nigerians

    Chief Akinyelure further made known that the board secured 100 percent assurance and support of the President to carry out its responsibilities fully.

    He added: “He has assured us of his support and on our part too we have given him our 100percent assurance that we will do the best we can to make sure the key performance Indicators of the oil Industry in Nigeria will be rated number one in Africa and proudly competing with Oil and Gas industry around the world.”

    The Nigerian Leader inaugurated the newly appointed Board members on Monday at the State House, Abuja.

    Recall that on November 28th, the Nigerian President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu appointed Chief Pius Akinyelure as board chairman of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited alongside eight other board members.

    Other board members include Mele Kolo Kyari, Alhaji Umar Isa Ajiya, Mr. Ledum Mitee, Mr Musa Tumsa, and Mr Ghali Muhammad.

    Others are Prof. Mustapha Aliyu, Mr. David Ogbodo, and Ms. Eunice Thomas

  • Tinubu mourns former NNPCL GMD, Thomas John

    Tinubu mourns former NNPCL GMD, Thomas John

    President Bola Tinubu has mourned the death of one-time Group Managing Director of the then Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Thomas Asuquo John, who died at the age of 84 years.

    In a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Ajuri Ngelale, President Tinubu recalled Dr John’s dedication to the development of the Nigerian oil and gas industry in his time.

    He said: “President Bola Tinubu sends his condolences to the family, friends, and colleagues of the late Dr. Thomas John, former Group Managing Director of the erstwhile Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    Read Also: Tinubu mourns former Anambra governor, Ezeife

    “The President acknowledges Dr. John’s remarkable and impactful dedication to developing the Nigerian oil and gas sector, recognizing his years of tireless service to the nation, and versatile expertise widely acknowledged by industry players and colleagues. 

    “President Tinubu prays for the repose of the soul of the departed and divine comfort for those who mourn the loss of this distinguished Nigerian.”

  • Edun: Govt plans audit of NNPCL

    Edun: Govt plans audit of NNPCL

    • N650 petrol price not cost reflective, says World Bank chief

    Plans are underway to audit the accounts of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), Minister of Finance & Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Mr. Olawale Edun hinted yesterday.

    Insisting on the necessity for rigorous scrutiny, the minister stressed the government’s eagerness to ensure revenue inflows from the NNPCL and other revenue generating agencies.

    Edun, who spoke at the release of the latest “World Bank Nigeria Development Update” in Abuja, said: “There will be earnest scrutiny and I am sure NNPCL is getting ready for that.  We want revenue to come into the government coffers from NNPC and all other revenue agencies.

    “The last two ministers of Finance, namely, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun and Mrs. Zainab Ahmed publicly said that the accounts of the NNPCL would be looked into, but there has been no report of such audit made public.

    Addressing pending salary concerns, Edun reaffirmed government’s commitment to instituting a new salary structure next year.

    “The decision”, he said, “aligns with statutory requirements outlined in the Salaries and Wages Commission Act, mandating salary reviews every five years”.

    He assured that all stakeholders, including Labour leaders, would be actively engaged in the process.

    Edun also spoke about the substantial presence of foreign currency, particularly in domiciliary accounts belonging to affluent Nigerians.

    He indicated the government’s intention to encourage investments by incentivizing the release of funds from these accounts, without imposing forceful measures on their owners.

    He said: “There is a lot of FX liquidity in Nigeria and the federal government would take steps to make holders of such accounts release the money.

    “The government would not force holders of such accounts to give them up but would provide incentives to enable them invest in attractive instruments, going forward”.

    The revelation by the World Bank on the unsustainability of the prevailing petrol price as it does not reflect the actual cost raised eyebrows during the presentation.

    The bank’s Lead Economist, Alex Sienaert, said a litre of petrol should cost above N650. The expert suggested that a litre should sell for N750 per liter to be cost-reflective.

    The World Bank report called for transparency in NNPCL’s operations, urging the corporation to publicly disclose its financial statements and revenue flows.

    It emphasized the necessity for comprehensive information dissemination regarding pump prices and fiscal savings stemming from subsidy reforms.

    The report reads in part: “The removal of the subsidy was announced on May 29 and pump prices were adjusted on June 1. This results in fiscal savings of around N2 trillion or 0.9 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    “Between 2023 and 2025, the expected gains are over N11 trillion, against a scenario in which the subsidy had continued. Regularly publish information that explains prices at the pump.  “Publish detailed financial statements and revenue flows of NPPCL to safeguard the fiscal savings from the subsidy reform and ensure that oil revenues flow to the Federation Account.”

    Shubham Chaudhuri, World Bank Country Director for Nigeria, highlighted the substantial monthly expenditure on fuel subsidies and stressed the urgency of petrol subsidy and FX management reforms as crucial steps toward improving Nigeria’s economic outlook.

    He urged coordinated fiscal and monetary policy actions in the short to medium term to solidify the nation’s economic trajectory.

    Chaudhuri said that between N300 billion  and N400 billion was expended on fuel subsidy monthly, before the subsidy removal and that the expectation was that the NNPCL should have been paying such amount to the Federation Account, but which has not been the case.

    He said: “The petrol subsidy and FX management reforms are critical steps in the right direction towards improving Nigeria’s economic outlook. Now is the time to truly turn the corner by ensuring coordinated fiscal and monetary policy actions in the short to medium term.”

    Reacting to the N750/litre pump price proposal by the World Bank, Dr. Wahab Balogun of Ambosit Capital Managers, told The Nation: “The World Bank’s observation that the current fuel price in Nigeria is not reflective of the actual cost suggests that the government might be subsidizing fuel to some extent.

    “They estimate that Nigerians should be paying around N750 per litre, which is higher than the current N650 per litre.

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

    “There are a few factors to consider when analyzing this situation. Firstly, the actual cost of petrol is influenced by various factors such as crude oil prices, refining costs, transportation expenses, taxes, and distribution margins. These factors can fluctuate over time, affecting the final price paid by consumers.

    “Secondly, government subsidies are often implemented to cushion the impact of rising fuel prices on the general population, particularly those in lower-income brackets.

    “The removal of subsidies may lead to higher prices initially, but it also aims to encourage market efficiency and reduce fiscal strain on the government in the long run.

    However, it is important to assess the impact of petrol subsidy removal on the overall economy and the welfare of the Nigerian people. While subsidy removal might have positive effects in the long term, it can also place a heavier burden on citizens already struggling with various economic challenges, including inflation and unemployment.

     ”I would look at the broader picture and consider the effectiveness of subsidy removal in achieving the desired goals of economic efficiency and fiscal sustainability.” 

  • NNPCL remits N4.5tri into Federation Account in 10 months

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

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) on Wednesday, December 13, said it remitted N4.5trillion revenue into the Federation Account as at October 2023.

    The Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO) of NNPCL, Mele Kyari, disclosed this during an interactive session with the Senate Committee on Finance.

    Kyari said the present hardship in the country would soon dissipate and give way to prosperity.

    The GCEO of NNPCL in his presentation told the lawmakers that better days are ahead for the company and Nigeria as reforms contained in the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) for the oil sector have made NNPCL to be at par with its counterparts across the world.

    He said: “The NNPCL that is a creation of the National Assembly, requires that we conduct business transparently and profitably in line with  provisions  of the law and to create value for shareholders, and not to lose money, and also to continue to add value and pay dividends to shareholders.

    “I’m glad to inform you Mr chairman and Distinguished Senators  that as at  October  we were able to deliver N4.5 trillion into the federation account as a company to this country in 2023.

    “Every national oil company has a trading company. We have always had one which never worked prior to PIA’s implementation.

    “Currently NNPC Ltd is delivering on its mandate through the PIA reforms that have brought us to be at par with our peers, across the globe, and not to lose money anymore.”

    Read Also: NNPCL rejects senate’s bid to raise oil production benchmark to 1.8m

    He added that as NNPC Limited is expanding in bussiness and now the most transparent National Oil Company in Africa, the sector would be more investment driven by the time the issue of wide margins in exchange rate and import and export windows are narrowed.

    He stated: “There is always a parallel market in every country. There is also an import and export window in every country, even in the developed world.

    “But there is always a narrow gap between the two and it takes time for you to have stability in this gap so that you have a low margin between the two for a sustained period of time, then businesses will thrive.

    “There is a line of sight around this. I am very confident that by the end of the first quarter of next year, those margins will narrow and stability will come and you will see others coming into the market.”

  • Group hails Kyari’s reappointment as NNPCL boss

    Group hails Kyari’s reappointment as NNPCL boss

    A group known as the Forum of former and serving lawmakers in Nigeria has hailed the reappointment of Mele Kyari as the Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) by President Bola Tinubu.

    The Forum, in a letter of appreciation to the President signed by its National President, Hon. Yemi Alli, the appointment is well deserved and an indication the desire to bring about an economic turnaround in the downstream oil sector.

    Alli said that Kyari has enthroned transparency and accountable in the oil and gas sector.

    He added that his impressive ideas and knowledge have brought massive improvement.

    Alli said: “Mr. President Sir, many of us are happy with this appointment because the GCEO has demonstrated commitment to drive revenue growth and fortify the resilience of the economy in the Petroleum industry.

    “Before his appointment, Nigeria fell far below their OPEC quota of crude oil production for over eight years. But the award of pipeline surveillance contract to Tantita pipeline security outfit, owned and controlled by Tompolo, has caused over 70% of the oil criminals in the Niger Delta region to quit operations.

    “This has increased the number of barrels produced per day (bpd), giving Nigeria a huge boost to be able to meet her OPEC quota.

    “Apart from recording profits for the company, Kyari has also led the NNPCL to resolve age-old disputes with its business partners, notably the International Oil Companies (IOCs).

    “The Kyari-led NNPCL also paid Nigeria’s joint venture cash call arrears to the IOCs totaling $5.1Billion. This was made possible through the introduction of the Alternative Funding Approach (AFA), which replaced the erstwhile cash call payment.

    “The AFA model has allowed for the utilization of NNPCL’s to finance its share of joint venture operations, thereby reducing the country’s reliance on external borrowing and increasing the flow of investment into the industry.”

    The group expressed its support for the President and his administration.

  • NNPCL rejects senate’s bid to raise oil production benchmark to 1.8m

    NNPCL rejects senate’s bid to raise oil production benchmark to 1.8m

    • Says there are N4,800 illegal connections to pipelines

    • Firm remitted N4.4tr to Federation Account from January to October

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, (NNPCL), yesterday turned down a proposal by the Senate to increase President Bola  Tinubu’s crude oil  production benchmark in the 2024 Appropriation Bill from 1.78million barrels per day to 1.8mbpd.

    The Group Chief Executive Officer of NNPCL, Mele Kyari, told the Senate Committee on Appropriations during an interactive session  Abuja that the benchmark of 1.78 bpd was realistic enough and did not require any upward review.

    The review was proposed by the  Chairman of the Committee, Solomon Adeola (APC – Ogun West), when the NNPCL management led by Kyari appeared before the panel.

    The Federal Government in the Appropriation Bill had pegged average crude oil production at 1.78mbpd and crude oil price benchmark of $77.96 for the 2024 fiscal year.

    The  NNPCL GCEO told the Committee to stick to the benchmark proposed by the President in the 2024 Appropriation Bill,stressing that the crude oil price and production benchmarks were based on dynamics in the global oil market.

    The NNPCL boss said the oil component of the budgetary projections were realistic and realisable despite the fact that the country currently  produces average of 1.5million barrels of oil per day.

    He said: “On the question around whether we adjust the oil production benchmark from 1.78mbpd to 1.8million, I still advise that we stay with the submissions by Mr. President.

    “There is no way we will get crude oil for less than $70.  Once economies are growing, there will be sustained demands for crude oil in our country and other countries.

    “The estimates supplied  by Mr. President are  realistic. When we say production, we mean total production of crude  oil and condensates.

    “So we combine condensates  and crude oil as total marginal production. So we know our estimates are  realistic. There is no curtailment on condensates from OPEC.”

    However, Kyari warned that security challenge,particularly crude oil theft in the Niger Delta Region, could frustrate the projections of the Federal Government.

    The NNPCL GCEO described the level of  illegal crude oil bunkering in the oil producing states as alarming.

    He alleged that there  are over 4,800 illegal connections on crude oil pipelines.

    His words:”The situation we have in Niger Delta in terms of security is a calamity. We don’t have that anywhere in the world. To engage non-state actors as last resort as solution is abnormal.

    “But we have to respond  abnormaly. You have over 4,800 illegal connections on our pipelines. That  means, within every kilometer, you have an insertion.

    Read Also: Furore over Portable, Pasuma’s invitation to church concert

    “Even if you seal all the insertions, you can’t get what you want in terms of production.

    “In the Niger Delta, people are coming from all parts of the country to do illegal refining. That’s why we engage locals to deal with it.

    “We will contain this challenge. We are doing everything possible to restore sanity. What is happening is a colossal damage to the environment and the host communities.”

    Kyari also gave an update on the Turn Around Maintenance  (TAM) of the nation four refineries.

    He insisted that the Port Harcourt refinery would come on stream later this month  while  Warri Refinery is expected to resume production in the first quarter of next year.

    The NNPCL GCEO gave December 2024 as production target of the Kaduna Refinery.

    The Senators frowned at the N406 billion to Federation Account as dividend between July and  November from the NNPCL as they dismissed it as  nothing  to cheer about.

    The lawmakers tasked the management of the oil giant to strive to be like its global peers like  Saudi Aramco and the Petrobas of Brazil.

    Kyari, in his defence,  declared that until the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) into law, the company was not run like a profit driven enterprise.

    Senator Konbowei Friday Benson (PDP – Bayelsa Central) said during the interactive session that  himself like every other Niger Deltan, could  distill oil.

    To this  Kyari told the committee that the situation in Niger Delta in terms of security, is a calamity.

    In his remarks at the end of the interface, the Chairman of the Committee, Senator Adeola, said Kyari had strenghtened their conviction on workability of the assumptions and projections of the 2024 budgetary proposals by President Tinubu..

  • NNPCL rejects moves by Senate to increase Tinubu’s 1.78mbpd oil production benchmark to 1.8m

    NNPCL rejects moves by Senate to increase Tinubu’s 1.78mbpd oil production benchmark to 1.8m

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, (NNPCL), on Friday, rejected moves by the Senate to increase President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s crude oil production benchmark in the 2024 Appropriation Bill from 1.78million barrels per day to 1.8mbpd.

    The Group Chief Executive Officer of NNPCL, Mele Kyari, kicked against the plan during an interactive session with the Senate Committee on Appropriations in Abuja.

    The Chairman of the Committee, Senator Solomon Adeola (APC – Ogun West), made the proposal when the NNPCL management led by Kyari appeared before the panel.

    The Federal Government in the Appropriation Bill had pegged average crude oil production at 1.78mbpd and crude oil price benchmark of $77.96 for the 2024 fiscal year.

    However, NNPCL GCEO told the Committee to stick to the benchmark proposed by President Tinubu in the 2024 Appropriation Bill.

    Kyari insisted that the crude oil price and production benchmarks were based on dynamics in the global oil market.

    Read Also; Sultan vows justice for victims of Kaduna error bombing

    The NNPCL boss said the oil component of the budgetary projections are realistic and realisable despite the fact that the country presently produces average of 1.5million barrels of oil per day.

    He said: “On the question around whether we adjust the oil production benchmark from 1.78mbpd to 1.8million, I still advise that we stay in the submissions by Mr. President.

    “There is no way we will get crude oil less than $70.  Once economies  are growing, there will be sustained demands for crude oil in our country and other countries.

    “The estimates supplied  by Mr. President is realistic. When we say production, we mean total production of crude  oil and condensates.

    “So we combine condensates  and crude oil as total marginal production. So we know our estimates is realistic. There is no curtailment on condensates from OPEC.”

    Supporting his stance on realistic estimates by President Tinubu, Kyari however warned that security challenge in the Niger Delta Region could frustrate the projections of the Federal Government, citing crude oil theft.

    The NNPCL GCEO also told Senators that illegal crude oil bunkering in the oil producing states are alarming as he revealed that there are over 4,800 illegal connections on crude oil pipelines.

    “The situation we have in Niger Delta in terms of security is a calamity. We don’t have that anywhere in the world. To engage non-state actors as last resort as solution is abnormal.

    “But we have to respond  abnormally. You have over 4,800 illegal connections on our pipelines. That  means, within every kilometer, you have an insertion.

    “Even if you seal all the insertions, you can’t get what you want in terms of production.

    “In the Niger Delta, people are coming from all parts of the country to do illegal refining. That’s why we engage locals to deal with it.

    “We will contain this challenge. We are doing everything possible to restore sanity. What is happening is a colossal damage to the environment and the host communities.”

    Kyari also gave an update on the Turn Around Maintenance  (TAM) of the nation four refineries.

    He insisted that the Port Harcourt refinery would come on stream in December 2023 while  Warri Refinery would resume production in the first quarter of 2024.

    The NNPCL GCEO gave December 2024 as production target of the Kaduna Refinery.

    The Senators frowned at the N406 billion to Federation Account as dividend between July to November from the NNPCL as they dismissed it as  nothing  to cheer about.

    The lawmakers tasked the management of the oil giant to strive to be like its global peers, citing Saudi Aramco and the Petrobas of Brazil.

  • Diligence, result, reward: A diary of Kyari’s midas touch at NNPCL -Skymark Energy and Power Ltd

    Diligence, result, reward: A diary of Kyari’s midas touch at NNPCL -Skymark Energy and Power Ltd

    If the names of technocrats,  pace setters, track record performers and people of integrity, diligence and transparency whose midas touch in the country’s social political and economic firmaments are to be written for record purpose, the name of the Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO) of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation Limited (NNPCL), Malam Mele Kyari, would be written in gold. 

    If a roll call of  the Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) who had served at the NNPC (now NNPCL) were to be taken by a fact check,  the first name that would ring bell is Malam Mele Kyari. Reason? His doggedness, tenacity, integrity, diligence, transparency, foresight, patriotism, professionalism and landmark achievements since he came on board as the Group Managing Director (GMD) and now  (GCEO) of the conglomerate  stand him out.

    Following his background as a czar in oil and gas technology and management, the company had continued to witness transformation until it hit the limelight as a Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation Limited to drive  profits for the nation as a private company. 

    It is unarguable that Kyari is a goal getter whose voice is as firm as an ink cartridge and a spindle whose decisions and policies continue to engender profitable transformation in the oil company. 

    He does not only blaze the trail in his transformation agenda for the company, but has also broken many jinxes in proffering solutions to the challenges faced by the company to bring it to the current Olympian height. 

    There is always a reward for good stewardship. One of the remarkable rewards that Kyari has received is his recent reappointment as the

    GCEO of the corporation by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in defiance of cheap blackmail and unconstructive criticisms of his performance by people who seem not to appreciate good work.

    President Tinubu deserves an applause for his courage to reward good work by reappointing Kyari. His reappointment of Kyari which is based on his good performance portrays the fact that the appointments he has made so far are not lopsided but based on merit. The gesture is a clear testament that the president is here to do whatever is good for the country and not to satisfy any particular person, race or tribe.

    Read Also: Skymark Energy & Power chairman lauds Tinubu over Kyari’s reappointment

    Kyari has continued to walk the talk so much that he has recorded a plethora of unprecedented achievements since he started holding sway at the NNPCL. Against this backdrop, I consider it imperative to present a diary of his commitment and midas touch so far in the nation’s oil industry.  

    The avalanche of his achievements out of which I can only mention a few in this piece does not only  speak volume but has also entered the Guinness Book of Records.

    Before  July 7, 2019, when Kyari assumed the position of GCEO, the company had been in a near comatose state. It was faced with many challenges which included oil pipeline vandalism, corruption, incessant oil theft, low production levels and the lack of transparency. But through his professionalism and commitment, he proffered solutions to all the problems.

    Kyari’s magic wand at the corporation  manifested, following his initiatives that transmogrified the NNPC from a loss status to a profitable entity in 2020 when, for the first time in its 44 years history, NNPCL declared a profit after tax of N287 billion. This figure later increased to N674 billion in 2021. The profit has since hit trillion naira capacity since then. 

    Under Kyari’s administration,  the company has started paying dividends to its shareholders since July and now controls more than 30 per cent of the nation’s petroleum retail market.

    Through his management skills, the corporation has continued to witness rise in crude oil production despite the numerous challenges facing the sector.  As at September this year, the NNPC’s production capacity  transcended 1.7 million barrels per day of crude oil,  condensate combined.

    He  played active roles in the passage of Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) by former president, Muhammadu Buhari,  on August 16, 2021. The PIA empowered NNPCL to operate like every private company in Nigeria, with exemption from the Fiscal Responsibility Act, Public Procurement Act and TSA, in order to discourage excuses for failure. The passage of the PIA gave birth to the rejuvenated NNPCL. 

    The ongoing rehabilitation of the nation’s three refineries in Warri, Kaduna and Port Harcourt, is also an outcome of Kyari’s initiative and commitment to find solution to the perennial fuel scarcity and price hike in the country. 

     He was also instrumental in the removal of petrol subsidy which was announced on May 29, 2023, by Tinubu’s administration. The subsidy removal was initiated and  encouraged by Kyari. After the  proposal,  it was removed by the immediate past president, Muhammadu Buhari as it was not captured in the 2023 budget.

    As a result,  Tinubu inherited a budget without the subsidy because the provision was not to exceed May 2023. Kyari, therefore takes the credit for the subsidy removal which proceeds are expected to be channelled into infrastructure, health, education and job creation. 

    The subsidy removal was intended by the Federal Government to save Nigeria about N7tn annually. The initiative has started yielding dividends in staggering proportions. 

    Kyari  is also  the first NNPC’s CEO to go all the way to the creeks in Niger Delta to monitor oil theft and pipeline vandalisation. His war against crude oil theft and illegal refineries have led to a significant increase in oil production. 

     His doggedness also curbed oil theft through the introduction of Saudi Aramco’s model, using video surveillance to monitor pipelines carrying crude oil from wells to flow stations in the Niger Delta. 

    Before he transformed the NNPC to NNPCL, Kyari had also introduced automated  monitoring of pipelines in the country’s oil sector. Through the technology, many suspects have been arrested, while vehicles, speed boats, wooden boats, and trucks have been seized and destroyed. That is why there is no more pipeline vandalisation.

    In September last year, the NNPCL acquired  OVH and added it to its assets reception jetty (ASPM) with a 240,000MT monthly capacity, eight LPG plants, 12 warehouses, three lubes blending plants and three aviation depots. 

    Kyari also demonstrated his investment-friendly interest in the oil and gas sector when  the NNPCL secured $7 billion fresh investments from India for Nigeria’s petrochemical industry. The deal was sealed when he  accompanied President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to India. 

    With Kyari’s focused leadership, the NNPCL has also signed a deal with  Saudi Aramco to renovate the Nigerian refineries. The collaboration was an outcome of Buhari’s visit to Saudi Arabia where he met with Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the Chairman of Aramco and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

    He also successfully renegotiated the Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano (AKK) Gas Pipeline contract. The AKK Gas Pipeline is an integral part of the Trans-Nigeria Gas Pipeline (TNGP), with a capacity to transport about 2.2 billion cubic feet of gas per day. Report said that the contract was renegotiated from the initial $2.8 billion to $2.5 billion. It attracted cost savings of $300 million in favour of the Nigerian government. Construction work on the project was flagged off in June 2020.

    Obviously, Kyari’s contributions to national development and economic prosperity have transcended the NNPCL.

    Recently, the NNPCL secured a $3 billion facility from Afreximbank to enable the Federal Government  stabilise the foreign exchange market and boost the value of the naira against the dollar.

    The emergency loan was intended to reduce pressure on the naira through incremental releases based on government’s fiscal needs.

    Recently, the NNPCL sealed a deal with Fox Petroleum Group to obtain $7.5 billion dollars to overhaul its operations across the upstream, mainstream and downstream petroleum sector. 

    Fox said its consent to inject the whopping amount into the NNPCL was due to Kyari and President Tinubu’s efforts to increase Nigeria’s oil and gas production reserves, boost the federation’s revenue base, create employment as well as development of the host communities. Fox also believes that the fund would support NNPCL’s growth strategy under the enacted PIA.

    Kyari’s acumen has also gone a long way in attracting oil and gas investments into the country.

    Under his management the NNPCL recently signed an MOU with a Chinese company to develop an LNG project that would deliver gas to industries nation wide. 

    NNPCL said the project would ensure efficient supply of LNG to the outgas and CNG. 

    The project is to deliver on President Tinubu’s gas and power aspiration across the country.

    Considering the quantum of achievements by Kyari and a lot more ideas that he still has up his sleeve to better the fortunes of the country’s oil conglomerate as well as socio-economic and national development, Kyari remains the best phenomenon in the field and a blessing to the nation’s oil industry. 

    Muhammad Saleh Hassan, the Chairman/CEO of Skymark Energy and Power Ltd and National President of One Nigeria Group (ONG) writes from Abuja.