Business
NNPCL invites Obasanjo to tour PH, Warri Refinerie
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo received a special invitation yesterday: a tour of the Port Harcourt and Warri refineries to confirm their operational status.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) assured Obasanjo the days of inefficiency were gone and that the one-time corporation is now a profit-driven company.
NNPCL was reacting to an interview Obasanjo granted Channels Television, in which he said Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) told him that the NNPCL could not run a refinery.
According to him, SPDC was invited to buy equity in the plant but complained that corruption would never allow it to function.
Obasanjo expressed the view that NNPCL had been very deceptive about the functionality of the refineries.
The Port Harcourt Refinery started working in November, while Warri began operation last month.
NNPCL Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Mr. Olufemi Soneye, extended the company’s invitation to the former president for a tour of the refineries.
He said: “We extend an open invitation to President Obasanjo for a tour of the rehabilitated refineries to witness firsthand the progress made under the new NNPC Limited.
“We invite our esteemed former president to join us in this effort as we continue to deliver energy security for our nation and provide tangible benefits to Nigerians.
“His wisdom and experience are invaluable, and we assure him that his advice will always be welcomed and appreciated.
”According to Soneye, NNPCL did not merely carry out turnaround maintenance but did a complete overhaul of the refineries.
He said: “As part of this transformation, NNPC Limited has gone beyond oil and gas to become an integrated energy company.
“One of our notable achievements is the complete rehabilitation of the Port Harcourt Refining Company (PhRC) and Warri Refinery.
“This process was not merely the Turnaround Maintenance (TAM) of the past but a full-scale overhaul designed to meet world-class standards.
“Similarly, we are currently conducting the same comprehensive rehabilitation of the old Port Harcourt Refinery and Kaduna Refinery.”
The spokesman said NNPCL has also moved on from being a loss-making organisation to profit -driven international energy firm.
The new NNPC Limited, Soneye said, is committed not only to enhancing the refineries but also to maintaining them to global standards.
He said: “The NNPC has undergone a transformative journey, evolving from a government corporation into a private entity—NNPC Limited.
“This transition has marked a significant shift from being a loss-making organisation to a profit-oriented global energy company.
“We deeply respect and hold President Obasanjo in the highest regard as a distinguished statesman who has contributed significantly to the progress of our nation.
“He has every right to share his perspectives on national issues, and we value his insights and counsel.
“We remain grateful for his leadership and enduring commitment to the growth and development of Nigeria.
“Together, we can continue to build a brighter future for our great nation.”
Obasanjo said his successor, the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, rejected a $750 million offer from Aliko Dangote to manage the Port Harcourt and Kaduna refineries in 2007.
Speaking on the television programme, the former president said he sought external help to rehabilitate and manage the facilities but faced resistance.
“When I was president, I wanted to do something about the three refineries: Port Harcourt, Warri, and Kaduna.
“Aliko got a team together after I asked Shell to come and run it for us. And Shell said they wouldn’t.
“Later on, I called them. I called the boss of Shell to come and tell me what the problem was and he gave me four or five reasons.
“He (Shell boss) said, first of all, they make a major profit from upstream, not from downstream. He said they run downstream just to keep their head above water.
“Two, our refineries were too small: 60,000 barrels, 100,000 barrels and I think 120,000 barrels. He said that at that time, the average refinery was going for 250,000 barrels.
“Three, he said our refineries were not well maintained. Four, he said there was too much corruption around the activities of our refinery and they would not want to get involved in that.
“After that, Aliko got a team together and they paid $750million to take part in PPP (Public–Private Partnership) in running the refineries.
“My successor refunded their money and I went to my successor and told him what transpired.
“He said NNPC said they wanted the refineries and they could run it. “I said: ‘But you know they cannot run it.’
”Obasanjo was confident in Dangote’s ability to manage his refinery effectively, unlike those of the NNPCL.
“I was told not too long ago that since that time, more than $2 billion have been squandered on the refineries and they still will not work.
“If a company like Shell tells me what they told me, I will believe them.
“But here we are, over $2 billion squandered, and the refineries still won’t work,” Obasanjo said.
Business
Government Can’t Run Business Effectively – Dele Oye
We all know the failed history of government being involved in business. Ajaokuta… they have blown $8 billion and have not produced one steel; they blew $3 billion on refineries rehabilitation… and nothing happened. We are not having any fuel from them
Barr Dele Oye, the former president of NACCIMA, at the Vanguard Economic Discourse 2026 edition in Lagos on Wednesday, advised the federal government to limit its role to policy support and facilitation rather than involvement in commercial business activities.
Oye, now the Chairman of Alliance for Economic Research and Ethics (AERE) , cited past failures such as the Ajaokuta Steel Company and refineries rehabilitation projects.
He said: ” We all know the failed history of government being involved in business. Ajaokuta… they have blown $8 billion and have not produced one steel; they blew $3 billion on refineries rehabilitation… and nothing happened. We are not having any fuel from them.”
Oye maintained that government lacks the capacity to run businesses effectively.
” You have no track record in running any business… you cannot be government and also be private sector,” he said.
Business
John Ternus is Apple’s incoming CEO
John Ternus, Apple’s longtime hardware boss, is taking over as CEO, becoming just the second leader since Steve Jobs departed in 2011, less than two months before he died from cancer.
• John Ternus / CNBC / Getty Images
Tim Cook’s 15-year tenure as Apple CEO comes to an end on Sept. 1, the company announced on Monday.
John Ternus, Apple’s longtime hardware boss, is taking over as CEO, becoming just the second leader since Steve Jobs departed in 2011, less than two months before he died from cancer.
CNBC reports that as Cook exits, Apple faces numerous challenges, including an intricate supply chain that’s complicated by geopolitical tensions and soaring prices for memory due to unprecedented demand from the AI buildout.
But for Ternus, perhaps the most critical aspect of his new job will be pushing the company deeper into AI, where it’s lagged many of its megacap peers.
It said that so far, Apple’s AI strategy has involved avoiding hefty capital expenditures while Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Metacommit to hundreds of billions of dollars a year in combined capex to fund new data centers and fill them with pricey AI chips.
Business
NCC, CBN launch telecom industry portal to track fraudulent phone lines
“This means banks and other financial institutions can determine whether a line is active, swapped, disconnected, or reassigned to another subscriber.”
The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), and the Central Bank of Nigeria ( CBN), have launched a portal that enables financial institutions to track fraudulent and suspicious phone lines across the country.
It is called the Telecoms Identity Risk Management System (TIRMS) portal , aimed at providing financial institutions with real-time visibility into the status of phone numbers used for transactions.
“The portal aggregates data on churned or recycled lines and numbers flagged for suspicious activities.
“This means banks and other financial institutions can determine whether a line is active, swapped, disconnected, or reassigned to another subscriber,” said the Executive Vice Chairman of NCC, Dr. Aminu Maida.
Speaking during the MoU signing event, Maida said that the agreement provides a structured framework for cooperation in critical areas, including payment system integrity, fraud mitigation, digital inclusion, and consumer protection.
On his part, Governor of CBN, Mr. Olayemi Cardoso, said the MoU would strengthen coordination on regulatory approvals, technical standards, and innovation initiatives, including sandbox testing.
He noted that the partnership aligns with the apex bank’s commitment to promoting a secure, resilient, and inclusive financial system.
-
Politics3 days agoAPC pegs presidential ticket at N100 million, governorship N60 million
-
News3 days ago536 blind candidates participate in 2026 UTME
-
Business3 days agoNCC, CBN launch telecom industry portal to track fraudulent phone lines
-
Business3 days agoJohn Ternus is Apple’s incoming CEO
-
News2 days agoKaduna High Court Denies El-Rufai Bail
-
Sports3 days agoGovernor Adeleke Remodelling Osogbo Stadium to 15,000 Sitting Capacity
-
Health3 days agoUK GMC confirms more than 4,600 Nigerian doctors migrate to UK in three years
-
News2 days agoEdun, Dangiwa quit Tinubu’s cabinet * Oyedele becomes Finance Minister
