Oil & Energy
NNPC Puts Domestic Gas Usage At 1500bcf
Nigerian National Petro
leum Corporation (NNPC) has within four years helped to double domestic utilization of natural gas from 400 mcf standard to 1500bcf.
The Group Managing Director of NNPC, Engr Andrew Yakubo linked the increase in domestic use of gas to the reforms by the President Goodluck Jonathan administration which also added additional 500km of gas pipeline to the national grid.
Speaking at the University of Lagos, during his investiture as Fellow of the Nigeria Academy of Engineering, the GMD said NNPC had connected gas from Southern to Northern part of the country.
Yakubu said that the full implementation of National Gas Master Plan is expected to convey gas from Oben to Geregu, enroute Kaduna to Kano and Maiduguri, among others.
He noted that Nigeria’s power sector as well as industries and other manufacturing concerns in the country have been positioned as major beneficiaries of the reforms in the gas sector.
Commenting on the downstream sector of the oil and gas industry, he said, “You have to know where we are coming from, when Jonathan administration came on board, the refineries were not working. For two years government arrested the menace of fuel scarcity, the scourge of fuel scarcity is now past event.”
He said, we restored the refineries in a record time of four months. We started with the topping and reforming the refineries. All the refineries are working. Today, we have revamped two refineries to profitability”.
On security challenges facing pipelines used to convey fuel, he said the corporation controlled the menace on the Aba-Port Harcourt route, which has one of the highest records of pipeline breakage, remarking that the pipeline was revamped and fixed in 2012.
Yakubu also stated that NNPC has fixed Kano, Gombe and Kaduna pipelines and that Kaduna refinery supplies maximum of one million litres of petrol to suleja depot alone, which has met the need of end users in the troubled north east geo-political zone of the country, adding that all the jobs were done by Nigerian Engineers.
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Digital Technology Key To Nigeria’s Oil, Gas Future

Experts in the oil and gas industry have said that the adoption of digital technologies would tackle inefficiencies and drive sustainable growth in the energy sector.
With the theme of the symposium as ‘Transforming Energy: The Digital Evolution of Oil and Gas’, he gathering drew top industry players, media leaders, traditional rulers, students, and security officials for a wide-ranging dialogue on the future of Nigeria’s most vital industry.
Chairman of the Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN), Wole Ogunsanya, highlighted the role of digital solutions across exploration, drilling, production, and other oil services.
Represented by the Vice Chairman, Obi Uzu, Ogunsanya noted that Nigeria’s oil production had risen to about 1.7 million barrels per day and was expected to reach two million barrels soon.
Ogunsanya emphasised that increased production would strengthen the naira and fund key infrastructure projects, such as railway networks connecting Lagos to northern, eastern, and southern Nigeria, without excessive borrowing.
He stressed the importance of using oil revenue to sustain national development rather than relying heavily on loans, which undermine financial independence.
Comparing Nigeria to Norway, Ogunsanya explained how the Nordic country had prudently saved and invested oil earnings into education, infrastructure, and long-term development, in contrast to the nation’s monthly revenue distribution system.
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Executive Secretary of the Major Energies Marketers Association of Nigeria (MEMAN), Clement Using, represented by the Secretary of the Association, Ms Ogechi Nkwoji, highlighted the urgent need for stakeholders and regulators in the sector to embrace digital technologies.
According to him, digital evolution can boost operational efficiency, reduce costs, enhance safety, and align with sustainability goals.
Isong pointed out that the downstream energy sector forms the backbone of Nigeria’s economy saying “When the downstream system functions well, commerce thrives, hospitals operate, and markets stay open. When it fails, chaos and hardship follow immediately,” he said.
He identified challenges such as price volatility, equipment failures, fuel losses, fraud, and environmental risks, linking them to aging infrastructure, poor record-keeping, and skill gaps.
According to Isong, the solution lies in integrated digital tools such as sensors, automation, analytics, and secure transaction systems to monitor refining, storage, distribution, and retail activities.
He highlighted key technologies including IoT forecourt automation for real-time pump activity and sales tracking, remote pricing and reconciliation systems at retail fuel stations, AI-powered pipeline leak detection, terminal automation for depot operations, digital tank gauging, and predictive maintenance.
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