Tag: refineries

  • Marketers push for forensic probe into ₦11.35tn refinery rehab spending and funding trail

    Marketers push for forensic probe into ₦11.35tn refinery rehab spending and funding trail

    2026-01-02 06:00:00
    Punch reports petroleum marketers are urging the federal government to open a forensic investigation into about ₦11.35 trillion reportedly spent on rehabilitation of Nigeria’s state-owned refineries, arguing that the scale of spending demands public accounting.

    The call focuses on transparency: who approved what, which contracts were awarded, how funds were drawn, and what deliverables were actually achieved across Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna facilities.

    Marketers warn that continued opacity undermines public trust and makes future turnaround plans harder to finance credibly—especially as Nigeria still leans on imports and faces pricing volatility.

    Leadership reports marketers “seek investigation into ₦11.36trn spent on refineries,” calling for transparent tracking of borrowed and spent funds. A BusinessDay analysis notes the long-running nature of the claim and says Nigeria’s legislature previously alleged “N11.35 trillion… spent on the rehabilitation of the refineries” with little to show.

    Echotitbits take: This isn’t just a numbers fight—it’s about credibility for Nigeria’s energy transition and downstream pricing. If an audit happens, watch for contract disclosures, recovery actions, and whether future refinery policy leans more decisively toward privatisation or performance-based concessions.

    Source: The Punch — January 2, 2026 (https://punchng.com/probe-n11-35tn-spent-on-refineries-marketers-tell-fg/)
    The Punch 2026-01-02

    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