Energy

Nigeria Most Reliable Destination For Energy Investment -Ojulari

By Sunday Etuka

The Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Limited), Engr. Bayo Ojulari, has declared that Nigeria is the most reliable destination for energy investment the world needs.

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Noting that the country has positioned itself as a dependable supplier, riding on the established legacies of stable policies, improved energy infrastructure security, partnerships, and the orientation of the government.

Speaking at the opening of CERAWeek 2026, world’s premier energy gathering, held under the theme “Convergence and Competition: Energy, Technology and Geopolitics,” Ojulari disclosed that the President has given NNPC the autonomy to act on its behalf and consolidate commercial solutions that are long-lasting.

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According to him, the country’s fundamentals are strong, its value proposition clear, and its focus now squarely on execution.

The Chief Corporate Communications Officer of the NNPC Limited, Andy Odeh, in a statement on Tuesday, quoted the national oil boss to have told the global audience of energy leaders, including C-suite executives, energy secretaries and government ministers, that Nigeria’s strategy was grounded in realism, partnership, and disciplined delivery.

He stated that “capital goes where value is clear, and Nigeria has that value,” setting the tone for a leadership dialogue that outlined a pragmatic approach to balancing the country’s immediate energy needs with its long-term transition ambitions.

The GCEO articulated NNPC’s core philosophy with characteristic clarity: “We are not choosing between today and tomorrow; we are funding the future with the present.”

At the fireside chat anchored by Dan Pratt, S&P Global’s Senior Vice President, Upstream Solutions, Ojulari explained that Africa remains dependent on hydrocarbons for revenue and foreign exchange, making sustained upstream production non-negotiable. Additionally, with over 600 trillion cubic feet of proven reserves, gas represents not merely a transition fuel but a strategic economic lever for industrialisation and energy security across the continent.

He highlighted the critical role of partnerships in de-risking Nigeria’s deepwater assets, noting that global players like Shell and Eni bring not only capital but execution capability, technology, and project discipline—particularly for assets like OPL 245 and other deepwater developments.

According to the oil executive, the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) has now firmly established regulatory certainty, while infrastructure gaps are being closed through targeted investments and security is being strengthened through a more robust architecture. “When the fundamentals are right, partnerships scale naturally,” he added.

Addressing Nigeria’s long-discussed gas potential, the GCEO noted that what is different now is execution discipline. Three key enablers are receiving focused attention: commercial pricing across the value chain, critical infrastructure like the AKK (Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano) pipeline, and bankable contracts that provide investor certainty.

On the balance between domestic gas needs and LNG exports, Engr. Ojulari described a dynamic approach of portfolio optimisation—allocating gas where it delivers the highest combined national and commercial value.

The GCEO articulated a clear strategic shift, moving from resource ownership to resource monetisation. He emphasized that unlocking Nigeria’s significant proven but undeveloped reserves requires commercial discipline, competitive fiscal frameworks, and strong partnerships. Deepwater remains a priority because it offers scale, it is less exposed to onshore challenges and attracts global capital.

CERAWeek 2026, hosted by S&P Global, runs from March 23–27 in Houston, Texas, bringing together over 10,000 global energy leaders, executives, and officials to explore the convergence of energy, technology, and geopolitics.

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