Home Latest Insights | News Ojulari Unveils $60bn Investment Plan for NNPC, Promises a Turnaround After Years of Losses and Mismanagement Under Kyari

Ojulari Unveils $60bn Investment Plan for NNPC, Promises a Turnaround After Years of Losses and Mismanagement Under Kyari

Ojulari Unveils $60bn Investment Plan for NNPC, Promises a Turnaround After Years of Losses and Mismanagement Under Kyari

Barely weeks into his appointment, the new Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd.), Bashir Ojulari, is already sketching out what could be the most transformative roadmap in the company’s troubled history. In a town hall meeting with NNPC staff in Abuja, Ojulari pledged to attract $60 billion in investments into Nigeria’s oil and gas sector by 2030, with $30 billion projected within the next three years.

The plan, which is seen as more than a mere vision statement, is expected to mark a departure from the failed promises of his predecessor, Mele Kyari, who repeatedly faced criticism for presiding through sharp operational decline, prolonged financial losses, and widespread opacity in the management of the state-run company.

“We stand at the gateway of a new era, one that demands courage, professionalism, and a relentless drive for excellence,” Ojulari declared. “Now is the time to turn our transformation promise into performance.”

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Ojulari’s vow to reform NNPC Ltd. comes against a backdrop of mounting public frustration over years of operational inefficiency and financial bleeding under Kyari. Despite the company’s transition into a limited liability company in 2021, NNPC continued to underperform financially.

While Kyari occasionally declared paper profits, a closer look at the books often revealed creative accounting and heavy reliance on forex revaluations rather than real operational growth. Independent analysts and civil society organizations consistently challenged these declarations, citing discrepancies in subsidy payments, unpaid dividends to the federation account, and bloated overheads that consumed potential earnings.

In fact, under Kyari’s leadership, NNPC was widely viewed as a fiscal black hole—one that gulped billions in oil revenues with very little accountability or reinvestment. The years 2021 through 2023 saw the company struggle to meet its cash call obligations to joint venture partners, while fuel imports drained foreign reserves, often under controversial opaque subsidy arrangements.

The losses were staggering. NNPC’s financial statements prior to its 2021 transformation showed the company posting losses for several years, including a historic N803 billion loss in 2018. Even when reforms were introduced, they did little to address systemic corruption, political interference, and a lack of performance metrics. Kyari, critics argued, had allowed the transformation agenda to drift into a public relations campaign rather than enforce real structural reform.

Ojulari now carries the burden of rewriting that legacy.

Scaling Crude Production: A Recovery Plan or Wishful Thinking?

Ojulari aims to push Nigeria’s crude oil production beyond 2 million barrels per day (bpd) by 2027, with an even more ambitious goal of 3 million bpd by 2030. It is a tall order in an environment where oil theft, pipeline vandalism, and declining foreign investments have kept production levels below 1.5 million bpd for much of the past three years.

For many industry watchers, these figures represent a statement of intent rather than a forecast. But Ojulari insists the targets are achievable with the right performance culture, renewed partnerships, and operational discipline.

“The difference this time will be execution,” he said while promising a corporate restructuring that places agility, data, and accountability at the center of operations.

Ojulari also outlined a target to grow domestic refining capacity to 200,000 bpd by 2027, with the goal of hitting 500,000 bpd by 2030. The logic is that without functioning refineries, Nigeria will continue to burn its oil wealth importing refined fuel at a premium, an economic paradox that has endured for decades.

Past administrations, including Kyari’s, made repeated commitments to fix the country’s refineries in Port Harcourt, Kaduna, and Warri. Yet those facilities remained dysfunctional, often guzzling public funds through “turnaround maintenance” contracts with no tangible outcomes.

Ojulari’s plan signals a new approach, one that emphasizes performance contracts, public-private partnerships, and independent value assessments for every project.

“The targets we’ve set are indicators of hope, jobs, industrial growth, and energy security for millions of Nigerians,” Ojulari said.

The new GCEO projects that gas production will rise to 10 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d) by 2027 and reach 12 bcf/d by 2030. These figures align with Nigeria’s Decade of Gas initiative but also reflect Ojulari’s understanding of the global energy transition, where gas will remain critical in the shift from fossil fuels to cleaner alternatives.

For years, Nigeria has underutilized its vast gas reserves. While export projects like NLNG flourished, domestic utilization for power, cooking, and industry lagged behind. Ojulari says his strategy will reverse this trend, especially by improving pipeline infrastructure and removing bottlenecks that discourage private sector participation.

Building a Performance-Driven Culture

Ojulari’s transformation pitch goes beyond figures. He is promising to overhaul NNPC’s corporate culture—something critics say was sorely lacking under Kyari. According to him, the company will embrace a robust performance management framework, emphasize independent data assessments, and empower staff to lead with integrity.

“Transparency and accountability will be our anchors,” he said, adding that partnerships going forward must be aligned with value creation and shared prosperity.

Ojulari’s appointment by President Bola Tinubu on April 2, 2025, came after a boardroom purge that swept out Kyari and board chairman Pius Akinyelure, among others. It was a clean break meant to signal a new direction for the state oil giant, which continues to play an outsized role in Nigeria’s economy, accounting for over 80 percent of government export revenues.

Before joining NNPC, Ojulari built a distinguished career at Shell and later moved to the private sector, where he gained a reputation for investment strategy and operational efficiency. Analysts say his success at NNPC will depend not only on his vision but also on his ability to resist political pressures and enforce corporate discipline.

While the new CEO’s vision is plausible, energy experts note that the challenge isn’t just about targets, it’s about turning NNPC Ltd. into the kind of organization where performance, not proximity to power, drives decision-making.

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