Categories: BusinessNews

NUPRC: Nigeria cuts crude oil losses by 90%, from $7m daily to $700,000

The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) says crude oil losses in Nigeria have dropped by about 90 per cent in the past four years, falling from an estimated $7 million per day in 2021 to about $700,000 daily in 2025.

NUPRC Chief Executive, Gbenga Komolafe, disclosed this during an interview on ARISE News, where he credited a mix of security measures and regulatory reforms for the turnaround in tackling oil theft, pipeline vandalism, and metering lapses.

“As of 2021, Nigeria was losing about 100,000 barrels of crude daily, translating to $7 million at the prevailing exchange rate then.

“Today, we are recording an average loss of about $700,000 daily,” Komolafe said.

He dismissed claims in a recent report that Nigeria lost N8.4 trillion worth of crude in four years, arguing that the figures were based on faulty methodology.

He stressed that the NUPRC is the sole statutory body mandated to provide production data relied upon globally, including by OPEC.

Komolafe said President Bola Tinubu had, on assumption of office, directed the commission to drastically cut leakages in crude oil revenue, a directive that intensified joint operations by security forces.

Beyond security interventions, Komolafe highlighted two new policies of the Upstream Measurement Regulation and the Advanced Cargo Declaration Regulation designed to track every barrel of crude from Nigeria’s terminals to discharge points abroad.

“These are novel, non-kinetic measures.

“For the first time, we carried out integrity tests on nearly 700 metering points across flow lines.

“Our objective is simple: ensure every molecule of crude is digitally tracked in real time, from loading to delivery,” he explained.

He noted that the first phase of implementation has already taken effect, boosting transparency and plugging loopholes in the system.

Commenting on the ongoing face-off between the Dangote Refinery and oil workers, Komolafe clarified that the issue falls within the midstream and downstream sectors.

However, he urged both parties to resolve their differences amicably to avoid disruptions in fuel supply.

For decades, Nigeria has struggled with massive crude oil losses due to theft, vandalism, weak oversight, and infrastructural decay.

The losses have crippled revenue, stifled production growth, and increased repair costs, undermining the oil-dependent economy.

LUKMAN ABDULMALIK

Recent Posts

Bandits kill abducted NYSC member despite N10m ransom payment

Family members of an abducted member of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), identified as…

3 hours ago

FG makes NERD compliance mandatory for NYSC participation

The Federal Government has announced that compliance with the Nigeria Education Repository and Data Bank…

4 hours ago

EFCC arrests man for naira abuse at birthday party in Enugu

The operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) have arrested Iziga Ikechukwu, popularly…

5 hours ago

El-Rufai threatens ICPC with N15.6bn lawsuit

Former Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai has threatened to file a N15.6bn lawsuit against the…

5 hours ago

Tinubu promotes Masari to SA on political affairs

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has elevated Ibrahim Masari from Senior Special Assistant to Special Adviser…

5 hours ago

Tinubu brokers historic truce on OPL 245 to boost Nigeria’s oil output

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has announced the resolution of the long-running dispute over Oil Prospecting…

7 hours ago

This website uses cookies.