The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has recorded a sharp leap in earnings, with its August 2025 profit surging by 91.3 per cent to ₦539 billion, up from ₦185 billion posted in July. The rise, captured in the company’s latest Monthly Report Summary, underscores NNPCL’s growing influence in Nigeria’s oil and gas value chain despite persistent production challenges.
Revenue Strength Amid Production Slips
According to the report, NNPCL’s total revenue climbed to ₦4.655 trillion in August, an increase from ₦4.406 trillion recorded in July. Between January and July 2025, the company remitted a total of ₦8.86 trillion to the Federation Account, reinforcing its critical role in stabilising government finances amid tight fiscal conditions.
However, production figures reflected headwinds in the upstream segment. Crude oil output averaged 1.65 million barrels per day (bpd) in August, down 2.9 per cent from the 1.7 million bpd pumped in July. Gas production also fell by 10 per cent to 6,949 million standard cubic feet per day (mmscf/d), compared to 7,722 mmscf/d in the previous month.
NNPCL attributed the decline to scheduled maintenance at key upstream facilities, particularly linked to the Nigeria LNG Turn Around Maintenance (TAM).
Gas Infrastructure Nears Delivery
Despite shortfalls in crude and gas output, NNPCL highlighted strong progress in critical gas infrastructure projects designed to reshape Nigeria’s energy future.
The Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano (AKK) Gas Pipeline, a flagship project for domestic gas transportation and industrialisation, has now reached 84 per cent completion. Simultaneously, work on the Obiafu-Obrikom-Oben (OB3) Gas Pipeline has advanced to 96 per cent, with 113 kilometres already commissioned.
According to the report, the commissioned section of OB3 currently supplies about 300mmscf/d of gas from producers including AHL (250mmscf/d), as well as Platform, Chorus, and Xenergi (50mmscf/d).
Balancing Profitability with National Energy Goals
Industry analysts note that while NNPCL’s profitability is commendable, sustaining crude oil and gas production levels remains vital for Nigeria’s energy security and fiscal stability. The ongoing push to complete AKK and OB3 pipelines signals the company’s determination to anchor the federal government’s ‘Decade of Gas’ initiative, aimed at deepening domestic utilisation and reducing reliance on oil exports alone.
For ordinary Nigerians, these figures go beyond boardroom achievements. Higher NNPCL profits mean more funds available for government budgets, infrastructure development, and public services though citizens remain concerned about how effectively such funds will translate into tangible improvements in daily life.


