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Dangote Refinery Must Be Protected From Economic Saboteurs – CSOs Urge Tinubu
Bloggers and Vloggers, Content Creators Association in Nigeria (BAVCCA) and the Coalition of Civil Society Organisations in Nigeria (COCSON) have sounded the alarm on attempts to sabotage the Dangote Refinery by individuals and entities who are hell-bent on dragging Nigeria back into the dark ages of fuel importation,and artificial scarcity.
At a press conference in Abuja on Tuesday, National Presidents of BAVCCA and COCSON, Ikechukwu Chukwunyere and Husseini Abubakar, respectively, revealed that the Nigeria’s flagship oil refinery has achieved full energy independence, while condemning the suspension of the 15% import duty on petroleum products, calling it a deliberate attempt to undermine local refining capacity and protect the interests of fuel importers.
The groups described recent claims by Festus Osifo, President of PENGASSAN, suggesting that Dangote refinery’s output meets only about 40% of national needs as misleading and absolute falsehood, while stating that the refinery as This is simply not true. As of November 2025, the Dangote Refinery’s production is at 100% or more of Nigeria’s requirements, rendering such assertions outdated and inaccurate. We urge all parties, including labor unions, to align with facts and support this achievement rather than undermine it for narrow agendas.
The organizations further issued those they described as saboteurs a seven-day ultimatum to cease their activities, threatening a naming and shaming campaign if they fail to comply, while calling on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to intervene by banning fuel importation, and set up a task force to investigate economic saboteurs.
BAVCCA and COCSON vowed to defend the Dangote Refinery as a national asset against any attempts to undermine it, while revealing
the refinery’s achievement is a significant milestone for Nigeria, as it is saving the country $1 billion in demurrage annually.
Additionally, they have scheduled a National Summit for November 22, 2025, and aims to expose the truth about the oil sector and promote accurate information.
The Statement reads:
We have called this emergency press conference today, not to celebrate alone, but to sound a loud and unmistakable alarm, and to issue a final warning to a small but powerful group of economic saboteurs who are hell-bent on dragging Nigeria back into the dark ages of fuel importation, artificial scarcity, and perpetual poverty.
The Undeniable Reality: Nigeria Has Achieved Full Energy Independence
As of today, 18th November, 2025, the Dangote Refinery is loading and dispatching more than 104 million litres of refined petroleum products daily, over 57 million litres of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), Jet fuel 20 million litres and 27 million litres of Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) totaling 104 million litres of petroleum products. This volume exceeds Nigeria’s total national daily consumption of approximately 70–75 million litres.
In plain language: We have more than enough locally refined fuel for every car, truck, generator, and factory in Nigeria. Fuel importation is no longer a necessity, it is now a choice. And that choice is being made only by those who profit from our collective suffering.
Furthermore, we must address and debunk recent misleading claims, such as those from Festus Osifo, President of PENGASSAN, suggesting that the refinery’s output meets only about 40% of national needs. This is simply not true. As of November 2025, the Dangote Refinery’s production is at 100% or more of Nigeria’s requirements, rendering such assertions outdated and inaccurate. We urge all parties, including labor unions, to align with facts and support this achievement rather than undermine it for narrow agendas.
The Suspicious Suspension of the 15% Import Duty, A Direct Attack on Local Refineries
Just when Nigerians should be enjoying the fruits of self-sufficiency, we woke up to the shocking news that the federal government has suspended the recently imposed 15% import duty on petroleum products until the first quarter of 2026.
This is not policy, this is sabotage disguised as relief.
This suspension effectively makes imported fuel cheaper than locally refined fuel, thereby creating an artificial price advantage for importers and rendering modular and large-scale local refineries uncompetitive.
Ask yourselves:
• Why are importers still bringing in hundreds of thousands of metric tonnes of PMS and diesel when Dangote alone is producing surplus?
• Who benefits when the government quietly removes a policy that was designed to protect local refining capacity?
• Why are we subsidizing foreign refineries in Europe and America with Nigerian crude and Nigerian forex when our own refinery is begging to supply the entire nation at a lower cost?
The answer is clear: a powerful cartel of fuel importers, oil trading cabals, and their collaborators inside and outside government are terrified that their decades-long multi-trillion-naira racket is collapsing before their very eyes.
Who Are These Saboteurs and Why Are They Angry?
They are the same cabals who, for over 40 years, turned fuel importation into the biggest fraud in Nigeria’s history.
They are the importers who smile to the bank while Nigerians sleep in petrol stations.
They are the marketers who create artificial scarcity to inflate prices.
They are the highly placed officials who receive kickbacks for every litre imported.
Their only crime against these people? Aliko Dangote built a world-class refinery that has ended their monopoly and is now alleviating the suffering of over 200 million Nigerians.
They are bitter. They are desperate. And they are dangerous.
That is why they sponsor false stories, twisted statistics, and outright lies claiming Dangote produces only “40%” when the facts show 100%+. That is why they pressure for policies that kill local refining. That is why they want importation to continue at all costs.
Our Ultimatum to the Saboteurs
Today, on behalf of millions of suffering and now hopeful Nigerians, BAVCCA and COCSON jointly issue a SEVEN-DAY ULTIMATUM to every individual, group, or cartel still engaged in this campaign of calumny, blackmail, and economic sabotage against the Dangote Refinery and Nigeria’s energy independence:
i) Cease immediately every form of negative propaganda, false data dissemination, and sponsorship of anti-Dangote Refinery narratives across traditional and social media.
ii) Stop lobbying for the continuation of fuel importation and the suspension or reversal of protective policies for local refineries.
Hands off our national asset!
If, by 12:01 am on Tuesday, 25th November 2025, you have not desisted, we will have no choice but to begin a phased naming and shaming campaign at our National Summit scheduled for Saturday 22nd November, 2025. We will release names, photographs, companies, bank records where necessary, and documented evidence of individuals and entities involved no matter how highly placed.
For those of you hiding inside government circles, know this: President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has shown in words and deeds that he is a President who positively impacts the lives of Nigerians and has zero tolerance for corruption and sabotage. We have already submitted detailed petitions to the Presidency, the EFCC, the ICPC, the DSS, and the National Assembly demanding immediate investigation into this conspiracy. Those found culpable will be removed, prosecuted, and made to face the full wrath of the law.
The National Summit themed “Energy Truth Summit: Empowering Nigerians with Facts”
The National Summit will hold in Abuja on 22nd November 2025, it is designed to expose the wrath in the oil sector and why petroleum importers wants to strangulate the local refiners, it also seeks strengthen public understanding of the energy sector through data presentations, practical content creation workshops, and an interactive town hall. Its key outputs, including a digital toolkit for creators, the Energy Truth Badge, and a live fact checking app, will equip thousands of online influencers to promote accurate information. Supported by strong media partnerships and attracting over a million virtual participants, the summit aims to reshape national conversations with verified facts.
Our Pledge to Nigerians
The Dangote Refinery is not Aliko Dangote’s personal property, it is a national asset. We, the people, will defend it with everything we have. Through our platforms, our voices, our protests if necessary, and our votes, we will ensure that no cabal succeeds in turning back the clock on Nigeria’s progress.
We call on President Tinubu to personally intervene by:
a) We seek an out right ban on Fuel importation not just suspension of the 15% import duty.
b) Directing that only locally refined products be sold in Nigeria as long as local production exceeds demand.
c) Setting up a special task force to investigate and prosecute economic saboteurs in the downstream sector.
Fellow Nigerians, the battle for affordable fuel, stable economy, and true independence has entered its final stage. This is not Dangote’s fight alone.
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NUPRC’s Digital Compliance Systems, Licensing Reforms Positioning Nigeria for Stronger Energy Investment, says BusinessMetrics
BusinessMetrics, an independent industry performance evaluator, says the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) is delivering sustained progress in the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), with reforms that are strengthening investor confidence, deepening transparency and repositioning the upstream industry for long-term growth.
In a statement released on Monday, BusinessMetrics said its latest sector review shows that NUPRC’s regulatory measures over the last year “reflect a deliberate shift toward predictable, technology-driven and investment-friendly governance,” noting that these improvements are already reshaping Nigeria’s competitiveness in the global energy market.
According to the statement, one of the Commission’s most significant achievements is the rapid digitisation of oversight systems that monitor production, metering accuracy, fiscal obligations and environmental performance.
BusinessMetrics said these digital tools have “reduced reporting delays, improved data integrity and enhanced the global credibility of Nigeria’s upstream statistics”.
“The availability of reliable, real-time data is one of the strongest indicators of a trustworthy investment climate,” the organisation said.
“NUPRC’s digital reforms are raising confidence among operators and international financiers who rely on transparent information before committing capital to new field developments.”
The evaluator also noted improvements in licensing and regulatory approval processes, describing the Commission’s approach as more structured, rules-based and commercially coherent compared to previous years.
“Clearer timelines for approvals, structured consultations with operators and the alignment of regulatory decisions with PIA provisions have created a more efficient operating environment,” the firm said.
“This is enabling quicker movement on projects, reducing administrative bottlenecks and giving investors greater clarity on regulatory expectations.”
The organisation said fiscal clarity under the PIA, implemented through NUPRC, has equally enhanced the attractiveness of Nigeria’s upstream assets, leading to renewed activity around marginal fields, reactivation of dormant licences and fresh commitments from both indigenous and international operators.
“The fiscal certainty introduced by the PIA continues to incentivise capital deployment. We are seeing a gradual resurgence in upstream investment appetite, driven by the clarity and predictability that investors have long demanded,” the statement added.
On gas development and decarbonisation, BusinessMetrics commended NUPRC’s enforcement of domestic gas delivery obligations and its frameworks for flare-gas commercialisation, saying these efforts are opening new growth corridors for Nigeria’s energy transition.
“The Commission’s work in gas monetisation is particularly impactful. It supports industrial expansion, contributes to power stability and positions gas as a central pillar of Nigeria’s economic transformation,” the statement added.
The evaluator further highlighted progress in customer-facing reforms, including the strengthening of the One-Stop Regulatory Centre, which it described as a crucial tool for reducing red tape and improving the ease of doing business in the upstream sector.
“This approach aligns with global best practices and signals institutional willingness to reduce friction for investors,” BusinessMetrics noted.
While acknowledging the complexity of Nigeria’s upstream environment, the organisation said the Commission’s consistent delivery on its mandate is helping restore confidence in the sector.
“With sustained implementation of the PIA, Nigeria is better positioned to compete for global capital, increase production capacity and advance long-term energy security,” the organisation said.
BusinessMetrics concluded that NUPRC’s progress “sets a solid foundation for deeper reforms” and urged continued institutional discipline, innovation and investor-focused regulation to fully unlock Nigeria’s upstream potential.
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Forgive your blackmailers and focus on helping Mr. President deliver on his security agenda, group tells Minister Matawalle
The Ambassadors for Peace and Progress (APP) has appealed to the Minister of State for Defence, Dr. Bello Mohammed Matawalle, to forgive the five individuals who publicly confessed to running a N500 million smear campaign against him while he was governor of Zamfara State.
Addressing journalists at a press conference in Abuja on Sunday, the National Coordinator of the group, Rev. Matthew Adejoh, urged the minister not to allow the painful betrayal to distract him from the critical national assignment entrusted to him by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
“We followed with deep emotion the courageous confession made by Comrade Aryan Abdul Kareem and his colleagues. Their admission has exposed the depth of political desperation in Zamfara State, but it has also opened a rare door for healing and reconciliation,” Rev. Adejoh said.
Describing Dr. Matawalle as “a peaceful, kind and large-hearted leader who is a friend to everyone,” the cleric appealed to him to extend the same hand of fellowship he has always shown to people of all faiths.
“Dr. Bello Matawalle is known across the North as a man who builds bridges, not walls,” he said. Quoting Colossians 3:13, he added: “Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you.
“These young men have fallen on their knees in public and begged for mercy. As believers and as patriots, we plead with His Excellency to forgive them and everyone who was paid to destroy his name.
The bandits ravaging our region do not read sponsored articles — they only respect superior resolve and unity of purpose.”
The Ambassadors praised President Tinubu for appointing Matawalle, saying the elevation was divine recompense for years of wicked blackmail.
“Your enemies spent over half a billion naira to pull you down, yet Allah raised you to the very centre of Nigeria’s war against terror. Let this confession be the final burial of that evil plot,” Rev. Adejoh declared.
While calling on the EFCC, ICPC and security agencies to immediately investigate the allegation that Zamfara State funds were used to sponsor media attacks, the group insisted that Dr. Matawalle himself should choose the path of forgiveness.
“Let justice run its full course, but let our dear Minister show the maturity, kindness and large-heartedness that made President Tinubu bring him to Abuja. Forgive them, Your Excellency. Focus all your energy on helping Mr. President end insecurity forever. That is the greatest victory.”
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Accountability Centre Lauds NNPC’s N5.4trn Profit, Says Ojulari Has Set New Benchmark for Public Sector Performance
A policy advocacy group, the Centre for Energy Accountability and Reform (CEAR), has commended the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited for declaring a Profit After Tax of N5.4 trillion for the 2024 financial year.
The Centre described the performance as “an unmistakable affirmation that Nigeria’s oil industry is finally responding to disciplined management and modern commercial reforms”.
In a statement issued on Friday in Abuja and signed by CEAR’s Executive Director, Dr. Ibrahim Ahmed, the centre said the latest results released by GCEO Bayo Ojulari represent the strongest demonstration yet that the company’s drive toward operational efficiency, transparency and investment expansion is yielding measurable outcomes.
NNPC recently announced the 2024 Profit After Tax during a briefing in Abuja, confirming a 64 percent year-on-year jump from the N3.297 trillion recorded in 2023. Revenue also rose sharply to N45.1 trillion, reflecting an 88 percent surge, supported by higher production volumes and strengthened downstream reforms.
CEAR said the results validate the company’s transformation since it became a limited liability company, crediting Ojulari’s leadership for stabilising operations, tightening cost structures and restoring investor confidence at a time when global capital is increasingly sensitive to governance standards.
“This profit performance is not accidental. It reflects a deliberate, disciplined shift in how NNPC Limited is run—one that prioritises efficiency, transparency and commercial viability. Under Bayo Ojulari’s watch, the company has shown that a national oil company can be profitable, globally competitive and strategically aligned with national development goals,” the statement reads.
The Centre said the ongoing reforms across the upstream, midstream and downstream sectors are beginning to correct years of inefficiency, vandalism, under-investment and regulatory conflict.
Ahmed noted that the financial results align with the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Tinubu, particularly the push for fiscal sustainability and improved sectoral governance.
While acknowledging the decline in foreign exchange earnings reported in the 2024 statement, the Centre said the shortfall underscores the need for sustained reforms to boost production, expand gas output and deepen value-addition rather than crude export dependency.
“The path to long-term stability must be investment-led and production-driven. NNPC Limited’s plan to raise crude output to two million barrels per day by 2027 and three million barrels per day by 2030 is the type of ambition the sector requires. Likewise, the move to scale gas production to 12 billion standard cubic feet per day by 2030 shows strategic foresight,” the statement added.
CEAR also praised the company’s plan to mobilise $60 billion in new investments across the value chain, saying such an expansion will be critical for job creation, revenue growth and anchoring Nigeria’s energy transition.
“With this performance, NNPC Limited has sent a clear message that Nigeria’s energy sector can work, and work profitably, when guided by clear vision and competent management,” Ahmed said.
The Centre urged regulators, industry players and political actors to avoid distractions and continue supporting the reforms that are restoring credibility to Nigeria’s petroleum value chain.
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