February 28, 2026
11 11 11 AM
NSCDC RAIDS KWARA, ARRESTS 12 SUSPECTED ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS
REPS SUMMON REA MD, DEMAND URGENT ACCOUNTABILITY
NAMA MOVES FAST, RESTORES SAFETY AFTER LAGOS AIRPORT FIRE
EL-RUFAI TO FACE CYBERCRIME CHARGES APRIL 23
TINUBU TASKS ACTING IGP DISU TO RESTORE PEACE, BOOST SECURITY
REP SLAMS ALLEGED ATTACK ON PETER OBI, DEMANDS FULL PROBE
FG RELEASES ₦5BN, MOVES TO STOP KANO MARKET FIRES
FIRE RAZES NIMET EQUIPMENT AT LAGOS AIRPORT
TRANSFORMER BLAST KILLS SUSPECTED POWER VANDAL IN AWKA
KANO ASSEMBLY SEEKS OFFICIAL RESPONSE TO US CLAIMS AGAINST KWANKWASO

DOMESTIC CRUDE SUPPLY: NUPRC WARNS PRODUCERS AND REFINERS AGAINST DIVERSION   

Share

DOMESTIC CRUDE SUPPLY: NUPRC WARNS PRODUCERS AND REFINERS AGAINST DIVERSION                                                                                                                               02-02-25

By Sadiq Aminu                                                                  The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) has warned that it will henceforth deny export permits for crude oil cargoes intended for domestic refining, if oil companies do not fulfill their domestic crude obligations.

The commission insists that any changes to cargoes designated for domestic refining must receive express approval from the Commission Chief Executive.

In a letter dated February 2, 2025, addressed to exploration and production companies and their equity partners, the Commission Chief Executive (CCE), Gbenga Komolafe reiterated that diverting crude oil meant for local refineries violates the law.

At a meeting last weekend, attended by more than 50 critical industry players, both the refiners and producers blamed each other for the inconsistencies in the implementation of the Domestic Crude Supply Obligation (DCSO) policy. They, however, agreed that the regulator has put in place appropriate measures for effective implementation.

“While the refiners claimed that producers were not meeting supply terms and preferred to sell their crude outside, forcing them to look elsewhere for feedstock, the producers countered that refiners hardly met commercial and operational terms, forcing them to explore other markets elsewhere to avoid unnecessary operational bottlenecks.”

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Home
Our Channel
About Us
Contact Us
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x