Tag: energy security

  • Clarivo Refinery Set to Drastically Cut Nigeria’s Fuel Imports

    Clarivo Refinery Set to Drastically Cut Nigeria’s Fuel Imports

    Reporting by Vanguard indicates that the management of Clarivo Refinery has announced a strategic roadmap to significantly reduce Nigeria’s dependence on imported petroleum products by the year 2035. The refinery, which is part of a new wave of private energy investments, aims to scale its production capacity to meet both domestic demand and export requirements. This announcement comes as the federal government continues to encourage private modular and large-scale refineries to stabilize the energy sector.

    The management emphasized that the refinery will focus on high-efficiency output and local value addition, ensuring that crude oil produced in Nigeria is refined within the country. This move is expected to save the nation billions in foreign exchange and create thousands of direct and indirect jobs in the downstream sector. The project is seen as a major win for the “Renewed Hope” economic agenda which prioritizes domestic energy security.

    The development was also validated by The Nation and Leadership. The Nation mentioned that “Clarivo is seeking further partnerships for its petrochemical wing,” while Leadership noted that “the refinery’s first phase is already 60% complete.”

    Echotitbits take:

    With the Dangote Refinery already operational, the addition of Clarivo suggests Nigeria is finally moving toward becoming a net exporter of refined products. Watch for the competition between these private giants to potentially drive down local pump prices through increased supply.

    Source: Vanguard – https://www.vanguardngr.com/2026/01/clarivo-oil-plans-world-class-refinery-in-nigeria-ceo-obidike/, January 31, 2026

    Photo credit: Vanguard

  • NNPCL Says Escravos–Lagos Gas Line Restored After December Explosion

    NNPCL Says Escravos–Lagos Gas Line Restored After December Explosion

    2025-12-30 11:00:00

    In an update published by Punch, NNPCL announced the restoration of the Escravos–Lagos Pipeline System (ELPS) after the December 10 explosion that disrupted a major gas corridor feeding Lagos and parts of the South-West.

    The company said repairs included containment, pressure testing and safe recommissioning of the affected section, with operations returned to service.

    ELPS is crucial for power generation and industrial gas supply, and downtime often amplifies electricity instability when the grid is already fragile.

    Vanguard quoted NNPCL saying, “Today, the pipeline is fully operational, reaffirming our resilience and commitment to energy security.” Punch also quoted NNPCL stating, “Today, the pipeline is fully operational,” in its confirmation of ELPS restoration.

    Echotitbits take: The headline is restoration; the real test is sustained reliability. Watch for follow-on reporting on pipeline security, surveillance and whether gas delivery volumes normalise for power plants and big industrial users.

    Source: The Punch — December 30, 2025 (https://punchng.com/nnpc-restores-escravos-lagos-gas-pipeline-after-explosion/)

    The Punch 2025-12-30

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • FG says power supply should rebound within 48 hours after gas pipeline disruptions

    FG says power supply should rebound within 48 hours after gas pipeline disruptions

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-24 07:44:00

    According to PUNCH, the Federal Government says the latest dip in electricity supply is temporary and should improve within 24–48 hours as repairs progress on disrupted gas infrastructure.

    The report links the supply drop to an explosion on the Escravos–Lagos Gas Pipeline and additional vandalism affecting gas delivery to thermal plants, reducing generation across the grid.

    Officials say the system operator is monitoring repairs by NGPTC (an NNPC subsidiary), and that restoration timelines have been communicated across the value chain.

    In the system operator update referenced, NISO said restoration works are “nearing completion and… full operations are expected to resume within 24 to 48 hours.” The minister’s team also said: “The situation is expected to be resolved within the next 24 to 48 hours.”

    Echotitbits take: Even if supply returns, the bigger issue is resilience. Watch for stronger pipeline protection, redundancy in gas supply routes, and faster balancing capacity on the grid so single incidents don’t crash supply.

    Source: The Punch— December 23, 2025 (https://punchng.com/power-outage-temporary-supply-to-return-in-48-hours-adelabu/)
    The Punch 2025-12-23

  • NNPCL Imports Lift Petrol Supply to 71.5m Litres/Day as Demand Softens in November

    NNPCL Imports Lift Petrol Supply to 71.5m Litres/Day as Demand Softens in November

    Photo Credit: The Nation
    2025-12-10

    Figures cited by The Nation show average petrol supply rose to 71.5 million litres per day in November 2025, up from 46.0 million litres per day in October.

    The report, citing the NMDPRA downstream fact sheet, also suggested consumption eased, with average daily use falling to about 52.9 million litres/day from 56.7 million litres/day the month before.

    Regulators linked the stock build to meeting peak festive demand and covering prior months’ shortfalls, describing NNPCL as the supplier of last resort.

    The Nation quoted the regulator: “The significant increase in PMS supply in November 2025 was on account of…” inventory and import reasons. The same report stated: “Imports by the NNPC, the supplier of last resort… to build inventory and supply further guarantee supply…”.

    Echotitbits take: Higher supply doesn’t automatically mean stable pump prices—distribution, FX and smuggling dynamics still matter. Watch whether queues truly disappear beyond major cities and whether local refining materially cuts imports in early 2026.

    Source: The Nation — December 10, 2025 (https://thenationonlineng.net/nnpcl-imports-boost-national-petrol-stock-to-71-5ml-d-in-november/)
    The Nation 2025-12-10

  • Nigeria’s Petrol Supply Jumps to 71.5m Litres Daily as Imports Rise

    Nigeria’s Petrol Supply Jumps to 71.5m Litres Daily as Imports Rise

    Photo Credit: Vanguard
    2025-12-23 09:00:00

    Figures cited by Vanguard show Nigeria’s petrol supply rose sharply in November 2025, climbing to 71.5 million litres per day from 46 million litres per day in October.

    The report attributes the spike largely to import volumes—especially shipments linked to NNPC—aimed at rebuilding inventory and preventing scarcity during end-of-year peak demand.

    At the same time, regulators’ data suggest consumption also rose, reinforcing the view that the market remains supply-sensitive despite “price war” headlines and the gradual scaling of local refining.

    The broader implication is that import dependence is still doing the heavy lifting whenever domestic production or distribution falls below demand thresholds.

    Validation: The Punch notes, “The sharp increase… in November helped push total national PMS supply to a record 71.5 million litres per day.” Daily Post similarly reports that “total petrol supply in Nigeria rose to 71.5 million litres per day in November…”

    Echotitbits take: Watch December/January inventory and whether supply stability translates into sustained pump-price discipline nationwide. Also watch refinery utilisation—because a supply surge powered by imports is not the same as energy security.

    Source: Vanguard — December 23, 2025 (https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/12/petrol-supply-rises-55-to-71-5m-litres-daily/)
    Vanguard 2025-12-23

  • Gas constraints squeeze power plants again, raising blackout fears nationwide

    Gas constraints squeeze power plants again, raising blackout fears nationwide

    Photo Credit: Punch
    2025-12-17

    Premium Times reports that the Nigerian Independent System Operator says electricity generation dipped after gas supply constraints linked to pipeline vandalisation reduced fuel availability to several plants.

    In parallel, Vanguard quotes Enugu Electricity Distribution Company attributing reduced supply across the South‑East to “low system frequency resulting from gas constraints” affecting generation companies.

    Together, the updates point to a familiar bottleneck: Nigeria’s grid remains highly sensitive to gas disruptions, so even a localized upstream incident can cascade into national load‑shedding and lower customer allocations.

    As the festive season drives higher demand, distribution companies are likely to continue issuing notices on reduced load allocation, while grid managers lean on hydro dispatch and contingency measures to keep frequency stable.

    Premium Times (NISO statement): “electricity generation on the national grid has dropped due to gas supply constraints arising from… gas pipeline vandalisation…”

    Vanguard (EEDC): EEDC blamed the drop on “low system frequency resulting from gas constraints affecting electricity generation companies.”

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: The short-term fix is operational (gas restoration + grid re-dispatch), but the longer game is investment and security for gas infrastructure. Watch for repair timelines, any further sabotage reports, and whether TCN publishes updated allocation figures.

    Source: Punch — December 17, 2025 — https://punchng.com/blackout-looms-as-gas-shortfall-hits-power-stations/