But in an important sense, the return of fuel scarcity is no more than a testimony to the continuing complete failure of Nigeria’s national oil company as a business, which it now claims to be, or as a public entity, which it was for so long. It would be difficult to find any Nigerian organization that has failed Nigeria more than the NNPC. In fact, the NNPC is a failure even to itself. Even at the current drastically reduced production levels of about 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd), Nigeria is still the largest oil-producing country in Africa, and the 15th in the world. But the NNPC Ltd is not listed among the world’s largest national oil companies (NOCs) in total assets, whereas, Sonagol, the Angolan national oil company places ninth with total assets worth over $51 billion, according to ranking by Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute (SWFI).
BOL and Sonatrach, the Botswanan and Algerian national oil companies place 13th and 16th on that list respectively, even though Algeria produces much less crude than Nigeria and Botswana almost none. Petronas, the Malaysian national oil company is 3rd on the same ranking, with total assets worth over $144 billion, even though Malaysia produces just about half of Nigeria’s total output, even at current levels. Moreover, the NNPC receives about 400,000 bpd of crude from the federal government supposedly for domestic consumption, making it the sixth largest oil producer in Africa in its own right, after Nigeria, Libya, Angola, Algeria and Egypt. Yet, all four of NNPC’s refineries are currently moribund, and none of them has functioned beyond 50 per cent capacity in the past 10 years, or more.
All four of Nigeria’s refineries in Port Harcourt (two), Warri and Kaduna, with only a combined capacity to refine about 450,000bpd, have gulped N4.15trn in the name of maintenance since 2015, yet, not one of them currently refines even a litre of petrol or diesel, according earlier published investigations by this newspaper. A further N7.9trn has been spent on petrol subsidy during the same period, due to NNPC’s litany of failures, chief among them the moribund refineries. Meanwhile, Egypt, which produces 560,000 bpd, or just about one third of Nigeria’s total daily output on a good day, has nine functional refineries with a combined refining capacity of over 800,000 bpd.