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Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt - Politics - Nairaland

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Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by iwaeda(op): 8:51am On Dec 01, 2025
The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited is burdened with crude-backed loan obligations estimated at N8.07tn, according to an analysis of its 2024 financial statements and capital-commitment disclosures.

The liabilities stretch across multiple forward-sale and project-financing arrangements that are expected to be serviced through substantial crude oil and gas deliveries. The commitments have become a major pillar of NNPCL’s funding structure following years of fiscal pressure, volatile crude production, and declining upstream investment.

Several of the facilities were used to refinance older debts, fund refinery rehabilitation, support cash flow, and meet government revenue obligations.

One of the major exposures is tied to the Eagle Export Funding arrangement. Although the 2024 financial statement notes that “at least 1.8 million barrels” must be delivered per cycle, earlier reporting by The PUNCH shows the facility consists of three separate loan tranches.

The first, a $935m loan obtained in 2020 and backed by 30,000 barrels per day, was fully repaid by September 2023. A second tranche of $635m was also cleared within the same period. The only outstanding portion is the Project Eagle Export Funding Subsequent 2 Debt, a $900m facility secured in 2023 and pledged against 21,000 barrels per day.

Repayment is scheduled to begin in June 2024, with final maturity expected in 2028. As of December 2024, the outstanding balance stood at N1.1tn, making Eagle one of the company’s significant forward-sale exposures.

“The Company had capital commitments of N1.1tn as at the year ended 31 December 2024 (31 December 2023: N1.2tn). This relates to the forward sale agreement with Eagle Export Funding Limited for the delivery of Crude Oil.

“Under the contract, Eagle Export Funding Limited will make an upfront payment to NEPL for crude in a Forward Sale Agreement. The payment received is required to be settled with the delivery of crude oil volumes, i.e., NEPL sells crude to Eagle Export Funding Limited based on a delivery schedule.

“Based on the agreement, at least 1,800,000 barrels of Crude oil must be nominated and scheduled by NEPL (and delivered at the relevant delivery terminal to Eagle Export Limited in every delivery period commencing on 28 August 2020,” the company’s financial statement read.

Another major obligation arises from the incremental gas-supply financing arrangement with the Nigeria LNG Limited. Under the agreement, NLNG provided upfront funding of N772bn for gas supplies to be delivered over time.

By the close of 2024, gas worth N535bn had been drawn and N312bn recovered by NLNG, leaving N460bn yet to be supplied. A financing charge of N12bn also accrued in the period, bringing the total outstanding balance to N472bn.

The refinery rehabilitation programme accounts for some of the largest crude-secured debt commitments. Project Yield, the financing structure backing the Port Harcourt Refinery upgrade, had an outstanding drawdown of N1.4tn at the end of 2024.

The agreement requires NNPCL to deliver refined-product-equivalent volumes of 67,000 barrels per day, with repayment scheduled to begin in June 2025 after a two-and-a-half-year moratorium.

“This is a 7-year N1.5tn PxF loan obtained in October 2022 for general corporate purposes with the ultimate use being the execution of the EPC Contract between PHRC and Tecnimont for the rehabilitation of Port Harcourt Refinery.

“It is secured with a forward sale of refined product equivalent of 67kbpd of crude oil. As of 31 December 2024, the amount drawn is N1.4tn with principal repayment to commence in June 2025 after a moratorium period of 2 years and 6 months.

Therefore, loan commitment as of 31 December 2024 is N1.4tn,” the financial statement read.

Similarly, Project Leopard, another crude-backed forward-sale facility, carried an outstanding balance of N1.3tn. The five-year financing agreement commits the company to deliver 35,000 barrels of crude oil per day, with repayments expected to commence in mid-2025 following a six-month moratorium.

The most significant exposure is tied to Project Gazelle, a large crude-for-cash arrangement used to finance advance tax and royalty payments on Production Sharing Contract assets.

NNPCL had drawn N4.9tn out of the total N5.1tn facility by December 2024. Crude valued at N991bn had been delivered, leaving an outstanding N3.8tn. The agreement requires sustained deliveries of 90,000 barrels per day until the liability is fully extinguished.

When assessed together, the company’s major crude-for-loan facilities—Eagle Export Funding (21,000 bpd), Project Yield (67,000 bpd), Project Leopard (35,000 bpd), and Project Gazelle (90,000 bpd)—represent a combined commitment of 213,000 barrels per day, in addition to separate gas-delivery obligations under the NLNG arrangement.

The volume equates to a sizeable share of Nigeria’s daily crude output, underscoring the long-term implications of these arrangements for government revenue, export allocation, and operational flexibility.

The PUNCH excluded non-debt commitments such as equity stakes in refinery projects and callable capital, which do not qualify as loan obligations. Industry analysts warn that the weight of the obligations leaves NNPCL exposed to fluctuations in crude production and earnings.

The PUNCH earlier reported that Nigeria’s gross profit from crude oil and gas sales plunged by N824.66bn in 2024 despite a rebound in oil production, according to figures from the latest Budget Implementation Report for the fourth quarter of 2024 released by the Budget Office of the Federation.

Data from the report revealed that gross profit from crude and gas sales fell to N1.08tn during the year, from N1.90tn in 2023, representing a 43.32 per cent decline.

The 2024 performance was also 26.3 per cent below the government’s budgeted target of N1.46tn, underscoring the persistence of weak fiscal inflows from the petroleum sector despite policy reforms aimed at boosting revenue.

Nigeria’s crude output fluctuated between 1.4 and 1.6 million barrels per day, below the 1.78 million barrels per day target used in the 2024 budget.

Despite being the country’s traditional fiscal anchor, gross profit from crude oil and gas sales accounted for only about eight per cent of total oil and gas revenue in 2024, highlighting the structural shift in government earnings toward taxes, royalties, and penalties.

The PUNCH also observed that Nigeria’s crude-oil production inched up in 2024, with data from the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission showing that output rose to 442.21 million barrels, compared with 392.66 million barrels in 2023.

The increase of 49.55 million barrels, or 12.62 per cent, marked a modest recovery in upstream performance following three years of volatility and output disruptions. On a daily-average basis, Nigeria pumped about 1.43 million barrels per day in 2024, up from 1.27 million barrels per day the previous year.

The gradual improvement reflected reduced vandalism along major crude-evacuation corridors, improved coordination among joint-venture partners, and incremental barrels from marginal-field operators licensed under the Petroleum Industry Act.

Despite the increase, Nigeria’s output still lagged its fiscal target of 1.78 million bpd, reflecting lingering infrastructure constraints, under-investment, and crude theft. The shortfall means that actual production achieved only about 80 per cent of the government’s projection, a key reason oil-revenue inflows missed the 2024 budget despite nominal gains from exchange-rate revaluation.

Meanwhile, NNPC’s remittances to the government have repeatedly come under scrutiny by local and international organisations. Earlier this year, the World Bank said NNPC was remitting only half of the financial gains from the removal of petrol subsidies due to debt arrears. It said that, out of the N1.1tn revenue from crude sales and other income in 2024, NNPC remitted only N600bn, leaving a deficit of N500bn unaccounted for.

“Despite the subsidy being fully removed in October 2024, NNPCL started transferring the revenue gains to the Federation only in January 2025. Since then, it has been remitting only 50 per cent of these gains, using the rest to offset past arrears,” the World Bank noted.

The Chief Executive Officer of AHA Strategies and oil and gas expert, Mr Ademola Adigun, earlier linked Nigeria’s declining oil earnings to opaque crude-for-cash agreements and undisclosed loan repayments that have tied up part of the country’s crude output.

He said some of the government’s oil barrels were already committed to debt settlements and forward-sale contracts, reducing the actual volume that brought fresh revenue into the Federation Account.

In October 2024, The PUNCH reported that the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited pledged 272,500 barrels per day of crude through a series of crude-for-loan deals totalling $8.86bn.

Pledging 272,500 barrels daily means that about 8.17 million barrels of crude are diverted monthly for various loan arrangements, based on an analysis of a report by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative and the NNPCL’s financial statements.

Adigun said, “Some of our crude is already tied up in loan agreements. The problem is that Nigeria doesn’t know the full details of these transactions because there’s little transparency around them.”

He explained that several crude-backed projects, such as Project Gazelle, were carried out without proper public disclosure or parliamentary scrutiny. He added that the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative should strengthen its audits to determine how much of the country’s crude is being used for debt repayment or swap transactions.

Development economist and Chief Executive Officer of CSA Advisory, Dr Aliyu Ilias, said Nigeria’s crude trading structure had become increasingly complex, involving swaps and oil-to-naira exchanges that might not be fully accounted for. He urged the government to commission a study on how such short-term crude transactions affect fiscal performance.

The Director of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, Dr Muda Yusuf, recalled that during the tenure of the former Central Bank Governor, Godwin Emefiele, several forward-sale deals were signed to raise emergency funds when the government faced fiscal pressure.

“During the Emefiele years, Nigeria committed a lot of its crude up front,” he said. “Those forward sales are still eating into our current earnings.”

He explained that the combination of forward sales, opaque trading, and off-balance-sheet transactions had distorted the relationship between production and earnings.

Yusuf, however, noted that transparency and professionalism within the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited had improved under the current administration of Bayo Ojulari. “Under the new management of the NNPCL, there’s better professionalism and openness,” he said.

He added that the government must disclose the full details of its crude swap and forward-sale agreements to restore confidence in oil revenue reporting.
https://punchng.com/crude-for-loans-nnpcl-battles-n8-07tn-outstanding-debt/

Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by iwaeda(op): 9:16am On Dec 01, 2025
A government and organisation, immense in heavy debt, solution is to sell off, but not. Boda Bayo declared N4 trillion profit recently, but who is deceiving who. grin grin grin
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by CodeTemplarr: 9:19am On Dec 01, 2025
iwaeda:
A government and organisation, immense in heavy debt, solution is to sell off, but not. Boda Bayo declared N4 trillion profit recently, but who is deceiving who. grin grin grin
NNPCL can never be in debt. Just a steategy to secure the bag and keep ND in perpetual slavery. Is like saying Tinubu in debt when he will soon leave Nigerians to face the music of loan repayment.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by adetoya234: 9:25am On Dec 01, 2025
NNPC has always been a cesspit of corruption.
The cult like corporation lacks transparency and accountability, its transactions are done in secret.
Only a government with integrity and strong will can clean up the mess in Nnpc.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by ratcock: 9:30am On Dec 01, 2025
Can anything good ever come out of this Nnpc?
Always enmeshed in one controversy or another.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by iwaeda(op): 11:23am On Dec 01, 2025
Nlfpmod, what is the real state of NNPCL book. grin cheesy grin grin grin
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by Racoon(m): 11:28am On Dec 01, 2025
The crooked criminals up there in the NNPCL have cooked it up. Meanwhile, Bayo Ojulari was declaring profits in recent times. Govt of lies and propaganda.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by iwaeda(op): 7:40pm On Dec 01, 2025
Nlfpmod nobody knows true state of oil and gas in Nigeria. grin grin grin grin
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by Memphis357(m): 8:34am On Dec 02, 2025
Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his band of thieves don do damage pass the ones wey Ali Baba and im 40 thieves ooooooooo!
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by bigdammyj: 8:38am On Dec 02, 2025
Noted.

Please post all threads in the right section, and
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by sonnie10: 8:41am On Dec 02, 2025
When Buhari was mortgaging the future of Nigeria, we warned them but they call us names. It is like killing the goose that lays the golden egg. How were they expecting to service their huge debt when the major source of revenue has been squandered?

Them go explain tire.!
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by larryUG(m): 8:43am On Dec 02, 2025
CodeTemplarr:
NNPCL can never be in debt. Just a steategy to secure the bag and keep ND in perpetual slavery. Is like saying Tinubu in debt when he will soon leave Nigerians to face the music of loan repayment.
Bros, This is a public forum and your submissions should be informed. Nigerian government took a loan with crude. So the NNPC is obliged to pay back the loan using crude oil. It is a well known fact. Coming publicly to say there is no Loan and it is a guise from NNPC to siphon funds is just BS and totally uninformed.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by chukiz(m): 8:45am On Dec 02, 2025
Another useless and waste organization. Spits
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by Gotocourt: 8:53am On Dec 02, 2025
Tinubu is still pushing hard with his tax reforms undecided.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by Yankee101: 9:06am On Dec 02, 2025
Yet they’re paying 17trillion for oil pipeline security contracts
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by Olatundex22(m): 9:16am On Dec 02, 2025
Buhari and his team do us nonsense with this loan deal
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by oalandAgents2: 9:32am On Dec 02, 2025
Whilst other countries sell crude for cash, Tinubu is giving away our crude for free in exchange of loans.

You can't make this nonsense up!
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by CodeTemplarr: 10:39am On Dec 02, 2025
larryUG:
Bros, This is a public forum and your submissions should be informed. Nigerian government took a loan with crude. So the NNPC is obliged to pay back the loan using crude oil. It is a well known fact. Coming publicly to say there is no Loan and it is a guise from NNPC to siphon funds is just BS and totally uninformed.
Juxtapose the two bold parts. The joke is on you.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by larryUG(m): 10:53am On Dec 02, 2025
CodeTemplarr:
Juxtapose the two bold parts. The joke is on you.
No, The Joke is actually on you. You have not seen the terms of the loan and you are not aware of it. If you are aware, you will know that the conditions for securing the money was tied to commitment from NNPC to deliver certain barrels of crude daily for certain period of time.

Why am i even having this conversation with you? Believe whatever you want. Honestly, how can a grown person believe that NNPC will insert a fictional Loan into the books just to siphon money? Believe it.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by CodeTemplarr: 11:03am On Dec 02, 2025
larryUG:
No, The Joke is actually on you. You have not seen the terms of the loan and you are not aware of it. If you are aware, you will know that the conditions for securing the money was tied to commitment from NNPC to deliver certain barrels of crude daily for certain period of time.

Why am i even having this conversation with you? Believe whatever you want. Honestly, how can a grown person believe that NNPC will insert a fictional Loan into the books just to siphon money? Believe it.
If your skull is not so thick, ask yourself why is there a separate parastatal for crude oil/petroleum and we do not borrow with gold still in the ground in Zamfara or Osun state to at least reduce the pressure in oil money. So as it stands, the ND oil is the repayment source of loans used to service insecurity and avoidable poverty in Zamfara n Kebbi while they waste allocation and pocket gold proceeds.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by teepain: 11:04am On Dec 02, 2025
iwaeda:
A government and organisation, immense in heavy debt, solution is to sell off, but not. Boda Bayo declared N4 trillion profit recently, but who is deceiving who. grin grin grin
It is possible to declare profit and have a terrible balance sheet. I believe that the declared profit is for the most recent financial year supervised by Ojulari. Now, the problem with the NNPC financials is the balance sheet items, especially the outstanding liabilities. So, Ojulari may not be deceiving anyone.

However, like you said selling the refineries as scrap makes a whole lot of sense as the turn around maintenance schemes provides an avenue for endless looting for people at the NNPC.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by Nostalemate: 11:15am On Dec 02, 2025
Nigeria is so blessed but led with viciously callous leaders.


Shout-out to nairalanders earning via chess online.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by SpaceX: 12:07pm On Dec 02, 2025
When they are chopping it's them but when they are in debt, it's Nigerians. Perfect
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by atobs4real(m): 1:24pm On Dec 02, 2025
Memphis357:
Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his band of thieves don do damage pass the ones wey Ali Baba and im 40 thieves ooooooooo!
Buhari started this one and left with it.
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by Northsouth(m): 1:42pm On Dec 02, 2025
Crude for loan...
Sounds like there shouldn't be any debt
They just gotta keep pumping their ass out for the raba.
No need to tell us about any debt, no need for us to even ponder about it
Re: Crude-for-loans: NNPCL Battles N8.07tn Outstanding Debt by anonimi: 10:12pm On Dec 02, 2025
iwaeda:
“During the Emefiele years, Nigeria committed a lot of its crude up front,” he said. “Those forward sales are still eating into our current earnings.”
Why are APC people lying against themselves?

Was it during Emefiele years that Tinubu used SPV to get money from Afreximbank against future oil sales huh


ijustdey:
Nigeria will pay an interest of 11.85 percent per annum on the $3.3 billion “pre-export finance facility” (PxF) facilitated by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Ltd and arranged by Afrexim Bank, TheCable can report.

Until now, the fine details of the transaction, which has a five-year tenor, had been withheld by all parties involved.

A similar cocoa-backed $800 million facility arranged for Ghana by its cocoa marketing board attracts an interest of 8 percent per annum.

Bilateral lenders, such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), would typically charge 1-3 percent with a longer tenor.

In the details seen by TheCable, Nigeria pledged a total of 164.25 million barrels of crude oil — at 90,000 barrels per day — starting from 2024 to repay the loan through Project Gazelle Funding Ltd, an “orphan” special purpose vehicle (SPV) incorporated in Bahamas for the PxF.

Effectively, the NNPC has pledged 38.58 percent of five years’ worth of tax and royalty oil to secure the loan.

Nigeria pledges over $12 billion worth of oil
At the beginning of 2024, a barrel of Nigerian oil was sold at the international market at $77.93 per barrel, according to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) data.

At $77.93 per barrel, the 164.25 million barrels of oil pledged by Nigeria equals $12.8 billion — about three times more than the facility taken.

Pre-2014, the national oil company used to remit an average of $3 billion from oil sales every month.

Officially, Project Gazelle Funding Ltd (PGFL) is the borrower while the NNPC is the “sponsor” and will pay with oil to the SPV to liquidate the loan.

To make the repayment, the NNPC will forward-sell 90,000 barrels per day of Nigeria’s share of offshore crude oil under the production sharing contract (PSCs) with the oil companies.

Under PSCs, the companies usually pay royalties and taxes by giving the oil equivalent to the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) and the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) respectively.

The NNPC in turn exports the oil on behalf of NUPRC and FIRS and remits the proceeds to the agencies.

This is part of the revenues paid into the federation account and shared by the three tiers of government.

But under the PxF, the revenue from 90,000 barrels per day will be used to service the loan in the next five years.

The loan arrangers will get a commission of $66 million or 2% of the facility, TheCable further learnt.

Nigeria will pay 2 percent penalty per annum in the event of a default.


‘DOLLAR LIQUIDITY TO STABILISE THE NAIRA’

The national oil company announced in August 2023 that the PxF was to support the federal government “in its ongoing fiscal and monetary policy reforms aimed at stabilizing the exchange rate market”, describing it as “a relief for the naira”.

It called the facility “crude oil repayment” with an upfront cash loan “against proceeds from a limited amount of future crude oil production”.

At the time, the dollar exchanged for an average of N775 in the official market and N885 on the streets.

The rates have now moved to N1,035/$ (official) and N1,230/$ (parallel).

Nigeria’s outstanding forex liabilities are currently thought to be over $7 billion.

In an explainer after announcing the PxF last year, the NNPC said its exposure is very limited, “covering just a fraction” of their entitlements and that “there are no sovereign guarantees tied to it”.

It said it “will also equip the Federal Government with the necessary dollar liquidity to stabilize the Naira, with limited risk”.

A strengthened naira as a result of the initiative, it said, “will lead to a reduction in fuel costs. This means that if the Naira appreciates in value, the cost of fuel will drop and further increases will be halted”.

It also ruled out subsidies, maintaining that a stronger naira “will result in lower prices from the current level, making subsidies unnecessary. The deregulation policy remains unchanged”.

Critics questioned NNPC’s involvement in getting loans to boost forex reserves when it should be concentrating its efforts on bringing in more oil revenues.

There were also questions over the decision to pledge the tax and royalty oil belonging to the entire federation to secure the loan.

Analysts also queried why the details of the deal were never made public.

https://www.thecable.ng/exclusive-nigeria-to-pay-11-85-interest-on-3-3bn-afriexim-nnpc-loan-pledges-164m-barrels-as-security/amp
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