People & Money

NNPC Pays IOCs $3 Billion in Partial Settlement of Past Operational Dues

Published by
Abimbola Agboluaje

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) recompensed oil supermajors including Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Exxon Mobil Corp. around $3.02 billion, drifting nearer to clearing a heap of accumulated operating expenses owed since a decade ago.

The payment is being made via a five-year crude oil sales pact negotiated in 2016 by Nigeria’s sometime Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Ibe Kachikwu, state-owned NNPC said in its October 2020 Federation Account Allocation Committee report.

Granted that a substantial sum has been paid as of August, around $1.7 billion remains to be settled. Exxon has received $2.3 billion, clearing all dues. Shell is in receipt of $455 million. Yet, it is still owed $917 million.

Also Read: NNPC, Sterling Global Ink Deal for OML 143 Monetisation

The state oil firm runs joint ventures with energy giants like Chevron Corp., Shell, Exxon Mobil, Eni SpA and Total SE which pump almost 80% of Nigeria’s output.

Weaker income and demand for other payments have imperilled NNPC’s capacity to contribute its share of costs from 2010 to 2015, resulting in the arrears.

It is still indebted to Eni to the tune of $385 million, Total $304 million and Chevron $55 million, the report said.

Nigeria had consented to a $5.1 billion settlement with the supermajors in 2016. NNPC had cleared $2.3 billion as of last July.

Also Read: Buhari’s PIB to Open NNPC to Nigerian and Foreign Investors

Last week, it published the NNPC audited financial statements, its second time in its 43-year history. It reported a reduction of its annual loss to only some million dollars in 2019 from around $2 billion in 2018 as it pared down costs across its operations.

Like oil companies globally, NNPC is also confronting a feeble global demand because of the coronavirus pandemic outbreak. The payment to the oil companies may boost commitment to further exploration activities in Nigeria.

 

Abimbola Agboluaje

Abimbola is the Managing Director of WNT Capitas, specializing in consulting on strategic communications, investment risk analysis, and policy reform. He holds a PhD from the University of Cambridge, where his dissertation focused on development aid conditionality.

Recent Posts

Dangote Cement Q2 2025 Profit Soars 230% to ₦418bn

Dangote Cement Plc has reported a 230.35% year-on-year surge in pre-tax profit to ₦418.06 billion… Read More

16 hours ago

Nigeria Overcome 2 goal Deficit to Seal 10th WAFCON Title in Morrocco

Nigeria came back from two goals down to defeat hosts Morrocco by 3 goals to… Read More

1 day ago

Ministry Clarifies JSS1 Entry Age Remains 10 Years, University at 16

The Federal Ministry of Education has debunked claims that the Federal Government has introduced a… Read More

1 day ago

BUA Cement Profits Soar 513% to ₦99.77 Billion in Q2 2025

BUA Cement Plc has reported a 513% year-on-year increase in post-tax profit to ₦99.77 billion… Read More

2 days ago

Business File: Trade Minister inaugurates Governing Board of NADDC in Abuja

The Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment (FMITI), Sen. John Enoh, recently inaugurated… Read More

3 days ago

EKEDC announces 25-day blackout Starting on Monday

Residents of Lagos State are to brace for a 25-day power outage as the Eko… Read More

3 days ago