The Group Chief Executive Officer of NNPC Limited, Engr. Bayo Ojulari, has explained the reason why he shut down the Port Harcourt Refinery and Petrochemical Company.
Speaking at the ongoing 2026 Nigerian International Energy Summit,on Wednesday,Ojulari said that a detailed review of the refinery’s operations revealed that it was running at a significant loss.
“The first thing that became clear was that we were running at a monumental loss to Nigeria. We were just wasting money. I can say that confidently now.
“We were pumping cargo into the refinery every month, but utilisation was around 50 to 55 per cent. Those cargoes have value, and we were losing that value. We were spending a lot of money on operations and contractors.
“But when you look at the net outcome, we were just leaking value, and there was no clarity on how to turn those losses into positive returns.
“So the first decision I had to make was to stop the rot by shutting it down and then quickly recalibrating to see what could be done”, he stated.
He described the reoperationalisation of the refinery as a huge waste of resources and admitted that the national oil company currently lacks the capacity to run refineries profitably.
He pointed out that effective refinery operations require adequate financing, competent Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) contractors, as well as strong operational and maintenance capacity.
These conditions, he said NNPC presently does not meet.
“To make a refinery work, you need three things. First, financing to support operations. Second, a competent EPC contractor. Third, world-class operational capacity to run the refinery.”
Ojulari said NNPC is now seeking reliable partners with proven experience in refinery management to operate the country’s refineries.
“We are not looking for contractors. We are not looking for O&M service providers. We are looking for an entity that actually runs refineries,” he said.
He added that the successful operation of the Dangote Refinery had reduced the urgency to rush decisions on reviving government-owned refineries.
“There was a lot of pressure about continuity, but we were not under that pressure. And thank God for Dangote Refinery. Thank God. Whether you love Dangote or hate him, thank God.
“Thank God he is a Nigerian and not someone from another continent. Despite everything, that gave us breathing space because we now have a refinery that is working,” he said.
The Port Harcourt Refinery, rehabilitated at the cost of about $1.5 billion under the leadership of former NNPC GCEO, Mele Kyari, was reopened in November 2024 after nearly three years of rehabilitation. However, it was shut down again in May 2025 following sustained financial losses.













