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Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation
Type Public
Founded 1977
Headquarters Flag of Nigeria Abuja, Nigeria
Key people Edmund Daukoru, (Chairman)
Abubakar Lawal Yar'Adua, (Group Managing Director NNPC)
Industry Oil and gas
Products Petroleum & Petrochemicals
Website www.nnpcgroup.com

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) is the state oil corporation through which the federal government of Nigeria regulates and participates in the country's petroleum industry.

Contents

History

NNPC was established in April 1, 1977 as a merger of the Nigerian National Oil Corporation and the Federal Ministry of Mines and Power. NNPC by law manages the joint venture between the Nigerian federal government and a number of foreign multinational corporations, which include Royal Dutch Shell, ExxonMobil, Agip, TotalFinaElf, Chevron, and Texaco (though now merged with Chevron). Through collaboration with these companies, the Nigerian government conducts petroleum exploration and development. The head of the Nigerian wing of Transparency International says salaries for workers are too low to prevent graft.[1]

As of September 2007, Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua plans to unbundle the company into five new companies.[1]

The NNPC Towers in Abuja is the Headquaters of NNPC. It is made up of four identical towers. It is located on Herbert Macaulay Way, Central Business District Abuja. NNPC also has zonal offices in Lagos, Kaduna, Port Hacourt and Warri. There is also an International office located in London, United Kingdom

Installations

NNPC Towers, Headquarters of NNPC in Abuja

NNPC has sole responsibility for upstream and downstream developments, and is also charged with regulating and supervising the oil industry on behalf of the Nigerian Government. In 1988, the corporation was commercialised into 12 strategic business units, covering the entire spectrum of oil industry operations: exploration and production, gas development, refining, distribution, petrochemicals, engineering, and commercial investments. The subsidiary companies include:

  • National Petroleum Investment Management Services (NAPIMS)
  • Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC)
  • The Nigerian Gas Company (NGC)
  • The Products and Pipelines Marketing Company (PPMC)
  • Integrated Data Services Limited (IDSL)
  • Nigerian LNG limited (NLNG) in joint venture
  • National Engineering and Technical Company Limited (NETCO)
  • Hydrocarbon Services Nigeria Limited (HYSON)
  • Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Co. Limited (WRPC)
  • Kaduna Refinery and Petrochemical Co. Limited (KRPC)
  • Port Harcourt Refining Co. Limited (PHRC)
  • Eleme Petrochemicals Co. Limited (EPCL) Not part of subsidiary due to privatization.

Legal premise

According to the Nigerian constitution, all minerals, gas, and oil the country possesses are legally the property of the Nigerian federal government. As such, the oil corporations operating in Nigeria appropriate portions of their revenue to the government, which accrues nearly 60% of the revenue generated by the oil industry in this manner. The revenue gained by the NNPC accounts for 76% of federal government revenue[1] and 40% of the entire country's GDP. As of 2000, oil and gas exports account for 98% of Nigerian export earnings.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Reforming the oil industry", The Economist, The Economist Newspaper Limited (2007-09-29). Retrieved on 29 September 2007. 

External links

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