The Group Chief Executive Officer of Nigerian National
Petroleum Company Limited, Mele Kyari, has said that investors are returning to
Nigeria because they are getting their return on investment in the country’s
oil and gas sector.
Mele disclosed this in his remarks at the opening ceremony
at this year’s Nigeria International Energy Summit in Abuja.
He emphasised that the implementation of the Petroleum
Industry Act and executive orders by President Bola Tinubu’s administration has
made Nigeria an investment designation in the oil and gas sector.
According to him, investments are not corporate social
responsibility (CSR), rather than a profit enterprise in which investors in
Nigeria are getting their returns.
He also assured that NNPCL would continue to guarantee
energy security and would not hesitate to close the gap whenever the need
arises in line with the mandate of the PIA.
“Investors are not CSR. There is no shame in saying this.
Investors have seen that when they put their money in the country, in our
businesses, particularly the oil and gas sector, they can get back their money.
“That is why you investors are returning to the country. All
these will have no meaning to ordinary Nigerians if you do not guarantee energy
security. The PIA has said one thing: that the NNPCL is required by law to
ensure energy security in the country.
“Delivering automobile fuel of any sort, CNG or PMS, to
close that space. Stabilise the market and fill any gap. There are a lot of
open conversions out there.
“We are required by law to fill this gap. Whenever it is
necessary, we take every step to ensure energy security for our country.
“That comes at a cost. Reputation cost. One viral video out
there that took two small generators and claimed NNPC lasted for 15 minutes and
the other 30 minutes. This is a joke. This is taking competition too far. The
market will stabilise itself,” Kyari stated.
Recall that in the last week, the subject of continued fuel
imports inspite of domestic capacity at local refineries such Dangote Refinery
has been a subject of debate.
Meanwhile, the Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory
Authority has insisted that local refineries has only met 50 percent of petrol
product demands.
However, Aliko Dangote, the President of Dangote Refinery,
has said his refinery can meet Nigeria’s petrol demand.
Earlier, NNPCL has denied importing petrol in 2025, contrary
to reports suggesting the state-owned firm imported 200,000 million litres of
PMS in February alone.