“The situation of vandals’ action on our pipelines and generality of crude oil theft has reached the point that it needs all to react,” declared Mr Kyari.
“In our country today, we have so much energy, 80 per cent of the population can now boast of electricity,” Mr Kyari claimed.
The group CEO of NNPC, Mele Kyari, accused entire communities in the affected areas of involvement in the theft of the country’s oil.
The combined output of Nigeria’s refineries and the Dangote refinery is expected to be enough to stop importation.
Mr Kyari explained that the platforms were created for members of the communities and other Nigerians to report incidences of theft and be rewarded.
“We went through situations where gaps were created between host communities and oil companies, and unfortunately, criminality set in,” Mr Okowa disclosed.
As the state-run oil firm and its private partners trade blames, the economic toll of the adulterated products has continued to aggravate poverty in the nation’s commercial capital.
The marketers tasked NNPC to be competitive and efficient in its operations to achieve the aim of the transition.
Mr Barkindo’s term as secretary-general was to end on July 31.
Mr Johnson said that the company had failed to execute the contract properly as the state of the refineries were not verified.
