• About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
Saturday, May 9, 2026
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
Reporters At Large
  • Home
  • News
    • World
    • For The Record
    • Metro
    • Opinion
    • Press Releases
  • Business
    • Auto Trend
  • Politics
  • Tourism
  • Lifestyle
    • People & Events
    • Health
  • RAL TV
    • Video
    • Video News
  • More
    • Advertisement
    • Privacy
    • Disclaimer
    • Contact Us
  • Home
  • News
    • World
    • For The Record
    • Metro
    • Opinion
    • Press Releases
  • Business
    • Auto Trend
  • Politics
  • Tourism
  • Lifestyle
    • People & Events
    • Health
  • RAL TV
    • Video
    • Video News
  • More
    • Advertisement
    • Privacy
    • Disclaimer
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Reporters At Large
No Result
View All Result
Home News Opinion

NNPC Ltd And The Future Of Nigeria

by Dan D Kunle
April 22, 2026
in Opinion
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
NNPC Foundation - NNPC Ltd
Share on WhatsappShare on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linkedin

Like many citizens, I remain optimistic about the possibilities of a better tomorrow for our country. Hope is deeply embedded in our national character. We endure setbacks, yet we continue to believe that renewal is possible. However, optimism should never replace reality; it must be tested against evidence and performance. It is from this standpoint that I reflect on the NNPC Ltd and its critical role in our national energy security.

Few institutions matter more to the Nigerian state. Recent developments show how strategic energy institutions can be when they are properly managed. The emergence of the Dangote Refinery has already altered the local energy calculus. Despite well-known controversies, the commissioning of a large, integrated refinery helps reduce Nigeria’s exposure to external shocks and improves fuel availability. Its impact illustrates what clarity of purpose and scale can achieve. It also serves as a reminder that institutional performance, not intent, is what ultimately reshapes outcomes.

ADVERTISEMENT

Structural Hurdles in the Nigerian Energy Sector

NNPC Ltd sits at the centre of public finance, foreign exchange earnings, and investor confidence. For decades, petroleum revenues have provided the fiscal oxygen on which the government depends. Agriculture no longer carries the economy as it once did, and manufacturing remains weak. In practical terms, Nigeria remains heavily dependent on hydrocarbons. That is why the future of this company is inseparable from the future of Nigeria itself.

When the current leadership team, led by Group Chief Executive Officer Bayo Ojulari and the board chaired by Musa Ahmadu-Kida, assumed office, many expected a decisive break from the past. The hope was that a commercially run company, backed by the Petroleum Industry Act, would finally emerge from the ruins of bureaucracy and political patronage. I shared that hope. After observing developments over the past year, however, I have become more cautious.

The issue is not about personalities; it is structural. Nigeria has attempted to create a modern company while preserving an old political control model. That contradiction lies at the heart of the company’s difficulties.

RelatedPosts

Nigeria Refinery Rehabilitation: Breaking The Cycle Of Repeating Failure

The Tinubu Enigma: The Test Of Nigerian Democratic Legitimacy

When Evidence Meets The Gun: A Case Of Extrajudicial Killing In Delta State

Governance and Petroleum Reform

In theory, the institution belongs to Nigerians. In practice, governing authority rests largely with the presidency. This creates layered ownership and diffused accountability. Such a model rarely produces transformational institutions. Boards struggle to exercise independent authority when ultimate political power lies elsewhere. Management teams find themselves constrained by political calculations and administrative caution.
This helps explain why many operational weaknesses remain. Joint ventures are often less effective than they should be, and asset optimisation remains slow.

The greatest tragedy is that Nigeria is not suffering from a lack of resources; it is suffering from underperformance.
The appointment of Mr Fola Adeola to lead a presidential task force on the Nigerian energy sector is telling. A task force is rarely convened where systems are working. Yet, the composition of this group raises questions about the continuity of petroleum reform. Institutions require memory, precedent, and hard-won experience. How this task force will reconcile competing interests and translate its diagnosis into execution remains unclear. It is an experiment that warrants close observation.

Moving Beyond Personalities

Nigeria should be targeting higher crude production while aggressively expanding gas supply for domestic power and exports. Yet, ambition without institutional capacity is merely rhetoric. To succeed, governance must be clarified. Ownership and accountability cannot remain blurred. The board must have genuine authority, and management must be empowered to act commercially, insulated from routine political intrusion.
I am not an incurable pessimist. From all available records, one year is too short a period to objectively assess the performance of Bayo Ojulari and his team. The scale of dysfunction inherited means no serious transformation could have been completed in such a short time. To his credit, there are signs of pragmatism, specifically in the willingness to address the burden of stranded downstream assets.

Yet, realism alone is not enough. The progress visible so far is insufficient to justify high praise, but it is also too early to pronounce failure. My greater concern is whether the approaching political cycle will deny management the focus required to succeed. NNPC Ltd remains too important to be trapped between old inefficiencies and new distractions. Its success will strengthen national stability; its failure will deepen the pressures already facing the country. For now, judgment should remain reserved, but performance must remain the only true measure.

*Dan D Kunle writes from Abuja

Tags: National Energy SecurityNigeriaNigerian Energy SectorNNPCNNPC LtdPetroleum Reform
SendShareTweetShare
Dan D Kunle

Dan D Kunle

More

Port Harcourt Refinery - Nigeria refinery rehabilitation
Opinion

Nigeria Refinery Rehabilitation: Breaking The Cycle Of Repeating Failure

by Dan D Kunle
May 9, 2026
0

Nigeria is once again prioritising refinery rehabilitation by engaging foreign partners to boost domestic refining capacity. Lanre Ogundipe explores whether...

Read moreDetails
President Bola Tinubu - Nigerian Democratic Legitimacy
Opinion

The Tinubu Enigma: The Test Of Nigerian Democratic Legitimacy

by Dan D Kunle
May 3, 2026
0

An in-depth analysis of Nigerian democratic legitimacy and the necessity of institutional accountability in Nigeria. Discover how the Tinubu administration...

Read moreDetails
Nigeria Police Force - Extrajudicial Killing In Delta State
Opinion

When Evidence Meets The Gun: A Case Of Extrajudicial Killing In Delta State

by Dan D Kunle
May 2, 2026
0

This report examines the recent extrajudicial killing in Delta State and its implications for Section 33 of the 1999 Constitution....

Read moreDetails
Load More

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Zambia Team

World Cup Qualifier: Zambia Names Squad

10 years ago
End SARS Protesters at Iwo-road Ibadan

BREAKING: Gridlock As #EndSARS Protesters Shut Down Ibadan

6 years ago

Popular News

  • Port Harcourt Refinery - Nigeria refinery rehabilitation

    Nigeria Refinery Rehabilitation: Breaking The Cycle Of Repeating Failure

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Hon Adedeji Dhikrullahi Stanley Olajide Joins APM

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Oyo State Development: Makinde Urges Unity Ahead of 2027

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Oyo League Of Veteran Journalists: Oluwadamilare, Animasaun Jostle For League Chairmanship

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Cyril Ramaphosa Impeachment Looms After Landmark Court Ruling

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Connect with us

ADVERTISEMENT

About Us

Reporters At Large is the world’s fastest-growing online news platform and public service broadcaster. We’re impartial and independent, and every day we create distinctive, world-class programmes and content which inform, educate and entertain millions of people in Nigeria and around the world.

With a high level of professionalism, fairness, objectivity, accuracy and speed, we publish Breaking News Nigeria Today Headlines and International news on Politics, Tourism and Travel, Entertainment, Sports, Business Lifestyle and Sports.

Category

  • Auto Trend
  • Breaking Bones
  • Business
  • Columns
  • Entertainment
  • Featured
  • For The Record
  • Health
  • Innovation
  • Lifestyle
  • Metro
  • News
  • Opinion
  • People & Events
  • Politics
  • Press Releases
  • Science & Technology
  • Sponsored
  • Sport
  • Tourism & Culture
  • Video
  • Video News
  • World News

Recent Posts

  • Nigeria Refinery Rehabilitation: Breaking The Cycle Of Repeating Failure May 9, 2026
  • Hon Adedeji Dhikrullahi Stanley Olajide Joins APM May 9, 2026
  • Oyo State Development: Makinde Urges Unity Ahead of 2027 May 9, 2026
  • Cyril Ramaphosa Impeachment Looms After Landmark Court Ruling May 8, 2026
  • Limpopo Tourism Agency: Leading The New African Safari May 8, 2026
May 2026
S M T W T F S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  
« Apr    
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Tourism
  • Lifestyle
  • RAL TV
  • More

© 2016-2026 RAL - Guided by professionalism

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • World
    • For The Record
    • Metro
    • Opinion
    • Press Releases
  • Business
    • Auto Trend
  • Politics
  • Tourism
  • Lifestyle
    • People & Events
    • Health
  • RAL TV
    • Video
    • Video News
  • More
    • Advertisement
    • Privacy
    • Disclaimer
    • Contact Us

© 2016-2026 RAL - Guided by professionalism

Verified by MonsterInsights