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Nigerian News, Politics, Business, Economy, Investment, Entertainment and Sports. > Blog > Economy > Energy > From Secrecy to Openness: Why 2025 Actually Meant Something for NNPCL
Energy

From Secrecy to Openness: Why 2025 Actually Meant Something for NNPCL

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Last updated: December 29, 2025 6:44 am
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5 months ago
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Engr. Bashir Bayo Ojulari, NNPCL Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO)
Engr. Bashir Bayo Ojulari, NNPCL Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO)
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For most Nigerians, the old NNPC was a black box.

Money went in. Crude came out. Losses were explained away. Profits, when they appeared, were never quite clear. And no one outside the building really knew what was going on inside.

That history matters, because it explains why 2025 felt different.

Not because everything suddenly worked, Nigerian oil has never worked that way, but because, for the first time in a long while, the Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) behaved less like a government department hiding behind silence and more like a business willing to show its workings.

Production Finally Stopped Being a Mystery

For years, the headline around oil production was always the same: theft, sabotage, decline. This year, that script changed.

By December, NNPCL’s exploration arm, NEPL, recorded peak daily production of about 355,000 barrels per day, a level not seen in decades. More importantly, national output settled into a steady 1.6–1.7 million barrels per day range.

That stability mattered more than the record itself. Nigeria has spent years missing OPEC targets and explaining why. In 2025, the explanations gave way, at least partly, to results.

Was everything independently verified down to the last barrel? No. But the consistency of the data, month after month, was a noticeable improvement over the erratic, often contradictory figures of the past.

The Profit Headline: and What Sat Behind It

NNPCL’s announcement of ₦5.4 trillion in profit naturally raised eyebrows. Critics were quick to point out that a weaker naira made the numbers look bigger than they might otherwise have been.

That criticism isn’t wrong. But it’s also not the whole story.

What made this different from previous years was not just the profit figure, but the detail that came with it: revenues north of ₦45 trillion, clearer cost breakdowns, and open acknowledgment of FX exposure and legacy subsidy distortions.

For an institution long known for saying as little as possible, saying this much was progress. Transparency doesn’t mean everyone agrees with your numbers, it means people can finally argue about them.

Gas: Less Noise, More Substance

While attention stayed fixed on petrol prices, NNPCL quietly made some of its most important moves in gas.

The AKK pipeline crossed the River Niger. The long-delayed OB3 pipeline finally linked eastern gas to western and northern markets. And in a subtle but significant shift, NNPCL opened up third-party access to NLNG feedstock, easing its grip on export routes.

These weren’t flashy announcements. But they signaled something new: a willingness to loosen control and let infrastructure work for the wider market, not just the company.

In a system built on discretion and gatekeeping, that kind of openness is reform.

Refining: Saying the Quiet Part Out Loud

If there was one moment that captured NNPCL’s changing posture, it was the refinery conversation.

After years, and trillions of naira poured into Port Harcourt, Warri, and Kaduna Refineries with little to show for it, the company stopped pretending that sentiment could replace economics. Instead of promising yet another “near completion,” management admitted the obvious: some of these assets may simply not be worth reviving.

The decision to review them honestly, even if that means converting some into storage or blending hubs, didn’t deliver fuel independence. What it delivered was something rarer: honesty.

Did Any of This Matter to Regular Nigerians?

Early in the year, it didn’t feel like it.

Petrol prices surged, hitting ₦1,200 per litre and beyond in some areas after full deregulation. For months, it looked like the pain had no upside.

Then, slowly, things eased.

As crude production stabilized and the Dangote Refinery ramped up, supply pressures softened. By December, prices in major cities dropped into the ₦850–₦950 range, with differences driven more by transport costs than scarcity.

Fuel wasn’t cheap, but it stopped being unpredictable. And in Nigeria’s fragile economy, predictability is relief.

Why 2025 Actually Matters

NNPCL didn’t transform Nigeria’s oil sector in one year. What it did was more basic and more important.

It spoke more openly.
It published more data.
It made choices that could be questioned, and questioned publicly.

For a company once defined by silence, that alone is a shift.

The real test is still ahead. Transparency has to deepen. Audits must stay credible. And none of this can disappear when politics heats up or oil prices fall.

But for the first time in a long time, NNPCL ended a year not asking Nigerians to trust it
but giving them something to examine.

And that’s how institutions stop being myths and start becoming accountable.

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TAGGED:accountabilitycorporate governancederegulationenergy economicsfinancial performancenational oil companyNigeria oil sectorNNPCLOIL AND GASprofitabilityreformtransparency
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