Tag: Nigeria oil and gas

  • NUPRC Opens Bidding for 50 New Oil Blocks to Boost Production

    NUPRC Opens Bidding for 50 New Oil Blocks to Boost Production

    Channels TV reports that the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) opened the 2026 bidding round for 50 oil blocks as part of efforts to lift crude oil output and revenues.

    The commission says it has lowered entry barriers to attract local and international independent players and has pledged transparency under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

    The Punch and Vanguard also highlighted the economic implications, including a focus on blocks with proven reserves and the investment rationale behind lowering barriers for capable operators.

    Echotitbits take: After years of output pressure from divestments and operational disruptions, this bid round will be a credibility test. The decisive variable is security—oil theft and pipeline sabotage still distort project economics. Expect strong interest from indigenous operators and smaller international independents if the fiscal and security signals hold.

    Source: The Punch – https://punchng.com/nuprc-opens-50-oil-blocks-for-bidding-bars-weak-firms/ 2026-01-30

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • Presidential Incentives Target Multibillion-Dollar Shell Bonga Southwest Project

    Presidential Incentives Target Multibillion-Dollar Shell Bonga Southwest Project

    Presidential Incentives Target Multibillion-Dollar Shell Bonga Southwest Project

    Reporting by The Nation indicates that President Bola Tinubu has approved a suite of targeted fiscal incentives to catalyze investment in major deep offshore oil projects, specifically focusing on Shell’s Bonga Southwest development. The move is intended to unlock thousands of jobs and ensure a steady inflow of foreign exchange. The President emphasized that these are “disciplined and globally competitive” measures rather than blanket tax holidays.

    The incentives are structured to make Nigeria’s energy sector more attractive to international oil companies (IOCs) who have recently pivoted toward other African frontiers. During a meeting with Shell’s Global CEO, Wael Sawan, the Presidency highlighted that Shell and its partners have already committed nearly $7 billion to various Nigerian projects over the past 13 months. This new policy framework is expected to accelerate the Final Investment Decision (FID) for Bonga Southwest.

    Validation from Vanguard shows that industry analysts see this as a turning point for the petroleum sector, with one expert stating that policy stability is critical for restoring long-term upstream confidence. Additionally, Channels TV reported that the government expects the project to generate sustained revenue over the life of the asset. Shell’s CEO remarked that Nigeria’s investment climate has improved, giving the company confidence to evaluate longer-term horizons.

    Echotitbits take: After years of divestment talk, this is a major signal to Nigeria’s upstream sector. The focus on targeted rather than blanket incentives suggests a more sophisticated approach to balancing investor needs with national revenue. The immediate impact will be on FX stability if these projects move from paper to production.

    Source: The Punch — https://punchng.com/shells-5bn-bonga-swest-project-gets-presidential-support/ (2026-01-23)

    Photo Credit: The Punch 2026-01-23

  • Strategic Appointments Target Stability in Nigeria’s Energy Sector

    Strategic Appointments Target Stability in Nigeria’s Energy Sector

    According to The Punch, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has nominated 21 individuals to the boards of the nation’s primary energy regulators, the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA). Leading the nominations is Senator Magnus Abe, who has been tapped as the NUPRC chairman, a move intended to bring political experience and technical oversight to the oil and gas sector.

    The President’s request for Senate confirmation emphasizes the need for a professional and transparent regulatory environment. By appointing seasoned figures like Adegbite Ebiowei Adeniji to lead the NMDPRA, the administration hopes to accelerate the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) and attract significant foreign direct investment to the energy sector.

    Validation for these appointments was found in Leadership and ThisDay. Leadership confirmed that ‘Tinubu names Magnus Abe, 20 others to NUPRC, NMDPRA boards,’ while ThisDay highlighted that the President ‘seeks Senate’s swift confirmation’ to ensure there is no vacuum in the oversight of Nigeria’s most critical revenue-generating sector.

    Echotitbits take: These appointments are a clear signal that the government wants to move beyond the transition phase of the PIA. Magnus Abe’s appointment is particularly strategic, combining his previous experience on the NNPC board with his political clout. The immediate priority for these boards will be resolving the lingering bottlenecks in local refining and increasing crude output.
    Source: Guardian – https://guardian.ng/energy/macroeconomic-stability-will-increase-energy-sector-investment/ January 6 2026

    Photo Credit: Guardian

  • Fresh Leadership Nominated for Nigeria’s Petroleum Regulatory Agencies

    Fresh Leadership Nominated for Nigeria’s Petroleum Regulatory Agencies

    Reporting by Leadership indicates that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has formally requested the Senate to confirm 21 nominees to the boards of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA). Leading the list for the NUPRC is Senator Magnus Abe, a former NNPC board member, while Adegbite Ebiowei Adeniji, an energy lawyer with over three decades of experience, has been tapped to chair the NMDPRA board. The nominations aim to provide stable regulatory oversight as Nigeria seeks to increase its daily crude oil production and modernize its midstream infrastructure. The President urged the nominees to maintain professional standards and act as transparent regulators to attract much-needed foreign investment into the energy sector. The development was also corroborated by The Punch and Tribune Online. The Punch confirmed that ‘Tinubu nominates Magnus Abe, 20 others to NUPRC, NMDPRA boards,’ while Tribune Online noted that the request seeks ‘Senate’s swift confirmation’ to avoid regulatory gaps in the oil sector.

    Echotitbits take: The appointment of Magnus Abe and other industry veterans suggests a desire for political and technical synergy in the oil sector. With Nigeria aiming for a 1.8 million bpd target, these regulators will face immediate pressure to resolve pipeline security issues and finalize long-standing investment agreements.

    Source: TheCable – https://www.thecable.ng/senate-panel-screens-tinubus-nominees-for-nmdpra-nuprc-leadership/ January 6 2026

    Photo Credit: Facebook

  • NNPC stays in the black as price war pushes pump price under ₦800

    NNPC stays in the black as price war pushes pump price under ₦800

    2026-01-01 06:05:00
    According to Punch, NNPC Ltd reported ₦502bn profit after tax for November 2025, extending its profitability streak amid shifting market conditions.

    Reporting by the outlet indicates gas output and infrastructure availability supported performance, even as upstream volumes remained constrained.

    The same report linked the downstream “price war” to NNPC retail cuts that pushed PMS prices below ₦800/litre in some locations, intensifying competition.

    TheCable also reported the monthly performance, quoting the profit figure and noting output movement in November 2025.

    APA News similarly referenced the update and quoted language attributing results to improved gas production and stronger trading performance.

    Echotitbits take:

    If NNPC keeps pricing aggressively to defend market share, watch for tighter station supply cycles, margin compression across marketers, and renewed debate on how “deregulated” pricing should work when the biggest player also plays stabilizer.

    Source: The Punch — January 1, 2026 (https://punchng.com/nnpc-posts-n502bn-profit-cuts-petrol-below-n800-litre/)

    The Punch 2026-01-01

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • Fuel Marketers Push Privatisation of NNPC Refineries, Want Deadline by Q1 2026

    Fuel Marketers Push Privatisation of NNPC Refineries, Want Deadline by Q1 2026

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-26 06:40:00

    According to *PUNCH*, petroleum retail outlet owners are renewing pressure on the Federal Government to privatise Nigeria’s state-owned refineries, arguing that repeated public-funded rehabilitation has not produced stable output and has left the country reliant on imports.

    The association’s argument is framed around competition, efficiency, and investment: private capital and technical expertise, it says, could make refining assets commercially viable and reduce fiscal drain.

    If implemented, the policy shift could reshape downstream dynamics—product supply stability, pricing logistics, and FX demand—though labour, asset valuation, and governance terms would be fiercely contested.

    Energy-sector analysts will watch whether government moves from “rehabilitation” language to clear transaction milestones, and how any privatisation aligns with local content and security realities.

    *The Guardian* reported that PETROAN “renewed its call for the privatisation of Nigeria’s four state-owned refineries,” while *SweetCrudeReports* added that “timely privatisation would eliminate recurring fiscal burdens” and attract capital and expertise.

    Echotitbits take: This is the downstream debate Nigeria keeps postponing. The make-or-break factor is credibility: transparent bidding, clear performance obligations, and a governance framework that prevents a new cycle of capture and underperformance.

    Source: Punch — Dec 26, 2025 (https://punchng.com/petroan-pushes-nnpc-refineries-privatisation-by-q1-2026/)

    Photo credit/source: The Punch
    The Punch 2025-12-26

  • NNPC Directors’ Pay Jumps to N4.1bn, Renewing Corporate Governance Questions

    NNPC Directors’ Pay Jumps to N4.1bn, Renewing Corporate Governance Questions

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-26 07:20:00

    In a report published by *PUNCH*, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited’s directors’ fees and expenses reportedly increased sharply, reigniting scrutiny of cost discipline and transparency at the state-backed energy giant.

    The report is likely to energise debate around value-for-money, board oversight standards, and how corporate governance practices are evolving under the “commercial” NNPC Limited framework.

    For citizens, the optics matter: in a period of tight public finances and cost-of-living strain, governance headlines at strategic national companies quickly turn into political accountability tests.

    Market watchers will look for clearer disclosure context—what drove the increase, how it compares to peer benchmarks, and whether board performance metrics are publicly defensible.

    *PUNCH* reported directors’ pay “soars 58% to N4.1bn.”

    Echotitbits take: Governance credibility is part of energy-sector reform. Watch for fuller annual-report disclosures, audit commentary, and whether oversight bodies demand stronger explanations for board-related cost movements.

    Source: The Punch — Dec 26, 2025 (https://punchng.com/nnpc-directors-pay-soars-58-to-n4-1bn/)

  • ICPC confirms receipt of Dangote petition against NMDPRA chief, says it will investigate

    ICPC confirms receipt of Dangote petition against NMDPRA chief, says it will investigate

    NMDPRA (as credited by Punch)
    2025-12-17

    The anti‑corruption agency ICPC says it has received a formal petition from billionaire industrialist Aliko Dangote against the chief executive of Nigeria’s downstream regulator, the NMDPRA, amid an intensifying dispute over fuel imports and regulation.

    The petition escalates a broader public battle between Dangote’s refinery interests and the regulator over licensing and market rules, with significant implications for Nigeria’s fuel pricing, import dependence and local refining strategy.

    Regulatory credibility is on the line: allegations of misconduct, if substantiated, could trigger leadership changes and policy shifts; if unproven, the episode could still deepen mistrust in the governance of the downstream sector.

    The coming days will likely feature competing narratives, lobbying from marketers, and calls for transparent disclosure around licences, volumes and pricing benchmarks.

    ICPC: “it received a formal petition… The ICPC wishes to state that the petition will be duly investigated.”

    Reuters: “You don’t use imports to checkmate domestic potential,” Dangote told reporters.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: This is now bigger than personalities — it’s a test of Nigeria’s downstream reform story. Watch for ICPC’s investigative steps, any interim actions, and whether government moves to calm market nerves around supply and pricing.

    Source: Punch — December 17, 2025 — https://punchng.com/petrol-battlefield-icpc-plans-nmdpra-boss-probe-after-dangote-petition/

     

  • Reps Give NNPCL Dec. 15 Deadline on 2021 Audit Queries

    The House of Representatives Public Accounts Committee has given NNPCL a final December 15, 2025 deadline to respond to 2021 audit queries, citing repeated non-appearance and incomplete documentation.

    Lawmakers warned that continued disregard for oversight could trigger stronger legislative action as scrutiny of national oil-sector governance intensifies.

    2025-12-08

    The Nation

    2025-12-08