The latest monthly oil and gas report of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited has revealed that the combined deficit of the headquarters of the NNPC and the three refineries under its management from January to September 2021 is N123.64bn.
Figures contained in the September 2021 report indicated that while the cumulative deficits of the three refineries during the period were N46.52bn, the cooperate headquarters of the oil firm posted a deficit of N77.12bn.
The report, however, stated that the budgeted deficits for the corporate headquarters and the refineries during the nine months were N151.12bn and N49.8bn respectively.
The three refineries identified in the report include the Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company, Port Harcourt Refining Company, and Warri Refining and Petrochemical Company.
In the report, the NNPC stated that the deficit posted by its corporate headquarters in September 2021 alone was N5.956bn, down from the N10.226bn recorded in August same year.
The report showed that while the corporate headquarters made revenue of N11.101bn in September, its expenses were valued at N17.057bn.
For the refineries, the facilities made revenue of N207m in September 2021, while they incurred a cumulative expense of N6.059bn in the same month.
Nigeria’s refineries have been dormant for several years. However, the Federal Government in 2021 approved funds for the rehabilitation of the facilities and promised to get the PHRC running before the end of the current administration.
The September 2021 report released by the NNPC came as motorists still struggled to get Premium Motor Spirit, popularly called petrol, in parts of Abuja and neighboring Nasarawa and Niger states on Friday.
For about one month now, motorists searching for petrol have continued to besiege the two filling stations, Conoil and Total, in front of the corporate headquarters of the NNPC in Abuja.
The same scenario played out on Friday at the stations and in the few other outlets that dispensed petrol in Abuja and neighboring states, though the NNPC stated that it had provided hundreds of millions of liters of PMS to address the scarcity.