Oil & Energy
Pipelines Transport 2bn Litres Of Petroleum Products – NPSC
Over two billion litres of petroleum products have been transported through the pipeline since 2016, Mr Luke Anele, The Managing Director of Nigerian Pipelines Storage Company (NPSC), has said.
Anele, who made the fact known in an interview with newsmen in Abuja, last said the country had enough stockpile of products being distributed through the pipelines.
“By estimate, we have transported millions of products, in fact over two billion litres of products have been moved through the pipelines since inception.
“Our major stockpile now is the Mosimi Depot and at any point in time, we have a little above 100 million litres.
“And we have the other depots — we have in Satellite, we have in Ibadan; if you add up Ibadan, add up Satellite, and our depot at Atlas Cove, add Aba depot, we will have about 200 million litres at this point, excluding the ones at our day tanks in Warri Refinery and Port Harcourt Refinery,” he said.
Commenting on effect of vandalism to transportation of products, Anele said that bulk of the vandalised point was from Aba and Enugu.
He said that in the process of reactivating the pipelines some of them were ruptured and were difficult to weld.
“We will continue to prepare them anytime because we cannot afford to shut down for a very long time, so, we will continue to make repairs any time we find a window that is down,” he said.
He noted that the country lost reasonable volume of products resulting from vandalism and ageing of the lines.
Anele noted that in 2018, the company engaged National Engineering Technology Company (NETCO) to carry out a study and check the state of the facilities.
He said the step was for it to serve as an in-house estimate for proposals to get in third parties to put the pipelines under Public Private Partnership to change them.
According to him, most of the ruptured pipes are old and located in areas that are prone to attack.
“So what NETCO did was to develop an in-house estimate which will serve as our in-house estimate to benchmark whatever a third party brings forth when we open up the issues of pipelines and other critical infrastructure.
“They have finished the work and have given us preliminary report and then what we will take up from them is the final report, full and final presentation for us to study,” he added
He said that with viable pipelines, the country would realise huge revenue through transportation of products.
“If we have new pipelines, well protected, we will have what is called open access, so many companies will like to move their products through our pipelines.
“And with our depots revamped, you might decide to have your product berth at Port Harcourt and we pump into the line to Makurdi or any place of destination and you pay us for the service.
“If you want your product in, Minna, Suleja etc, we can pump through Warri with those facilities, “ he said.
He noted that a major challenge was the issue of trust and reliability.
“By the time this is done, we have now regenerated confidence in investors and users, also, the issue of clustering around Lagos will reduce,” Anele said
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Dangote Refinery Resumes Gantry Self-Collection Sales, Tuesday
This is revealed in an email communication from the Group Commercial Operations Department of the company, and obtained by Newsmen, at the Weekend.
The company explained that while gantry access is being reinstated, the free delivery service remains operational, with marketers encouraged to continue registering their outlets for direct supply at no additional cost.
The statement said “in reference to the earlier email communication on the suspension of the PMS self-collection gantry sales, please note that we will be resuming the self-collection gantry sales on the 23rd of September, 2025”.
Dangote Petroleum Refinery also apologised to its partners for any inconvenience the suspension may have caused, while assuring stakeholders of its commitment to improving efficiency and ensuring seamless supply.
“Meanwhile, please be informed that we are aggressively delivering on the free delivery scheme, and it is still open for registration. We encourage you to register your stations and pay for the product to be delivered directly to you for free. We sincerely apologise for any inconvenience this may cause and appreciate your understanding,” it added.
It would be recalled that in September 18, 2025, Dangote refinery had suspended gantry-based self-collection of petroleum products at its depot. The move was designed to accelerate the adoption of its Free Delivery Scheme, which guarantees direct shipments of petroleum products to registered retail outlets across Nigeria.
The refinery stressed that the earlier decision was an operational adjustment aimed at streamlining efficiency in the downstream supply chain.
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