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Dangote Pledges 50m Litres Daily Amid N17.5 Trillion Probe Call

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The stability of Nigeria’s energy supply has been thrown into sharp focus by two contrasting, high-stakes announcements on Monday, December 1, 2025. While the Dangote Petroleum Refinery is set to begin supplying 50 million litres of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) daily to meet the nation’s demand, a massive political scandal has erupted over the alleged N17.5 trillion spent on pipeline security and associated costs by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) in a single year.

The dual developments expose the massive financial risks underpinning Nigeria’s oil supply chain, even as domestic production ramps up. The N17.5 trillion expenditure, contained in NNPCL’s 2024 financial disclosures, has been described by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as one of the nation’s “biggest financial scandals,” demanding an urgent forensic audit.

In a statement released yesterday, Sunday, November 30, 2025, Atiku Abubakar called for an independent probe, alleging that the N17.5 trillion spent on pipeline security and energy costs in 2025 nearly equals the total N18 trillion spent on fuel subsidies over the preceding twelve years. He described the expenditure, which includes N7.13 trillion for energy-security costs and N8.67 trillion for under-recovery (the difference between import costs and regulated prices), as “grand larceny” and a “moral indictment.”

The controversy centers on the opacity surrounding the contracts, with critics alleging that the huge sums have benefited political associates and cronies under the guise of pipeline protection. For the business community, this opaque spending directly impacts the cost of doing business, as it indicates rampant inefficiency and systemic leakage in the sector meant to power the nation.

News: Dangote Refinery Partners With Honeywell International

Experts have demanded an immediate disclosure of the companies awarded these contracts, questioning the rationale for such high costs when crude oil production remains suppressed due to persistent theft and vandalism. Contrasting this scandal is the proactive step taken by the Dangote Refinery, which has formally pledged to stabilize the domestic fuel market immediately.

The refinery has committed to supplying 1.5 billion litres of PMS (equivalent to 50 million litres per day) throughout December 2025 and January 2026, with plans to increase this to 1.75 billion litres monthly from February 2026. This announcement, designed to avert the fuel scarcity often experienced during the festive season, is crucial for maintaining the nation’s economic activities.

In an unprecedented move for transparency, the refinery has written to the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), inviting the regulator to deploy officials onsite starting today, December 1, to validate and publicly publish the refinery’s daily production and stock levels. This commitment to openness is a direct response to prevailing speculations and supply concerns within the domestic market.

The refinery has also requested the NMDPRA’s support to ensure the seamless clearance of crude vessels and lifting of finished products, noting that delays in vessel clearance are currently adding unnecessary costs and operational inefficiencies—costs that eventually burden the Nigerian consumer.

The dual nature of these stories highlights a Nigerian energy market battling for supply stability while simultaneously struggling with internal accountability that threatens to drain public resources.

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