Author: Enam Obioso

  • Cross River Assures Readiness for 2025 Carnival Calabar

    Cross River Assures Readiness for 2025 Carnival Calabar

    The Cross River State Tourism Bureau (CRSTB) has assured stakeholders and visitors of the state’s full preparedness for the hosting of the 2025 Carnival Calabar.

    The Managing Director of CRSTB, Mr. Ojoi Ekpenyong, gave the assurance in a statement on Monday as the state marked 20 years of sustaining Carnival Calabar as an international cultural brand.

    Ekpenyong said the state government had put in place expanded hotel capacity, improved airlift, enhanced security, and upgraded tourism infrastructure ahead of the annual event, widely regarded as Nigeria’s biggest street party.

    According to him, Carnival Calabar remains the flagship of the state’s tourism calendar, attracting thousands of local and international tourists every December, with spillover events extending to destinations such as the Obudu Mountain Resort.

    “The government and people of Cross River are celebrating 20 years of sustaining an international brand — Carnival Calabar and Festival,” he said.

    As part of preparations, Ekpenyong noted that the state had strengthened air connectivity through CallyAir with the acquisition of two new aircraft to ease access to Calabar during the festive period.

    He added that about 4,000 hotel rooms had been prepared, while grants were approved to assist hospitality facility owners in upgrading and cleaning their facilities.

    The state, he said, had also invested in beautification and urban renewal, including early festive lighting along major roads and the unveiling of one of the tallest Christmas light towers in Nigeria.

    “Our roads are wearing new looks with fresh asphalt. There is the introduction of VIP seating for visitors during the carnival, and the opening of a cinema this month at the Calabar Marina Resort,” Ekpenyong said.

    He assured tourists of their safety, stressing that security remains a top priority before, during, and after the carnival.

    Ekpenyong also noted that Cross River’s version of “Detty December” commenced on Nov. 1 at the Christmas Village and would run across multiple locations in Calabar until the end of the year.

    He disclosed that the grand finale of the 2025 Carnival Calabar would take place on Dec. 29.

  • Fact Over Assumption: NNPC’s New Drive for Openness and Reform

    Fact Over Assumption: NNPC’s New Drive for Openness and Reform

    By Enam Obioso

    For years, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd)  lived at the intersection of perception and reality, its reputation shaped as much by public sentiment as by its internal dynamics. That tension lingered in the air on Monday evening when Mr. Andy Odeh, Chief Corporate Communications Officer, addressed a select audience of journalists and industry experts in what he described as a long-overdue engagement, one designed to confront a problem that has followed the national oil company for decades: assumptions.

    ‘Reducing the Quantity and Quality of Assumptions’

    Odeh spoke with the candor of someone who knows the industry’s sensitivities from within. Drawing on his two and a half decades at Nigeria LNG Limited (NLNG), he admitted that he too once shared many of the misconceptions about NNPC, until firsthand experience revealed the complexity behind its operations.

    “Any opportunities we have to reduce the quantity and quality of assumptions are important,” he said.
    The event, he explained, stemmed from an internal reflection two weeks earlier as the company prepared to release its 2024 audited financials. The goal was to open the books and the thinking behind them to a small circle of informed professionals. “For those who know the sector, you are actually the first advocates,” he told the room.

    Representing the Group Chief Executive Officer, Odeh emphasized that the session was not about defending NNPC, but about building a fact-based dialogue that narrows the gap between perception and reality.

    Numbers That Tell a Story

    The numbers unveiled that evening were striking:

    • Revenue: ₦45.1 trillion
    • Profit After Tax: ₦5.4 trillion
    • Revenue Growth: 88% year-on-year
    • Profit Growth: 64%
    • Earnings per Share: ₦27.07

    In a year marked by market volatility, exchange rate instability, and inflationary pressure, the results pointed to a resilient organization executing with steadiness and discipline.

    But beyond the celebration of figures, the night invited scrutiny, a conversation between facts and perspectives.

    The Professors Weigh In

    The first to speak was a Professor Emeritus, Wunmi Iledare who urged the company to focus more on cost efficiency. “Price is market-determined and volume is geological. Cost is the only lever NNPC can truly control,” he said.
    He likened Nigeria’s relationship with NNPC to a football field where “every citizen feels like a petroleum expert,” a sentiment he said often fuels misunderstanding.

    He also cautioned against expecting perfect outcomes overnight, given the company’s ongoing transition under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) of 2021. What matters, he said, is measurable progress, and on that score, NNPC had indeed advanced in six key areas.

    Next came Professor Uche Uwaleke, a former state Commissioner of Finance and member of the FAAC Post-Mortem Committee. He recalled years when FAAC meetings stalled over NNPC’s reports. “This year is different,” he noted, pointing to PwC’s unqualified audit opinion and a profit increase from ₦3.3 trillion to ₦5.4 trillion.

    He credited the performance to improved crude volumes, cost optimization, and stronger procurement processes. “This is a full year we can compare. This is an improvement,” he said, though he added that the company’s ambitious targets must be examined carefully.

    The Questions That Remain

    Uwaleke’s remarks cut to the heart of future expectations:
    Can NNPC truly achieve 2 million barrels per day by 2026, and 3 million barrels per day by 2030?
    Can gas production expand to 10–12 billion cubic feet per day within that timeframe?
    And how soon will the refineries and the $60 billion investment pipeline become reality?

    The questions were not confrontational but constructive, mirroring the company’s own acknowledgment that transparency is an ongoing process, not a one-time declaration.

    A Company in Transition

    NNPC’s 2024 strategy reflects its broader ambition:

    • Increased upstream production
    • Expanded gas infrastructure
    • Continued capital expenditure (₦8.9 trillion for the year)
    • Reduced routine flaring
    • Growth in crude and LNG trading volumes

    The session ended as it began, with candor and curiosity. For NNPC, it was an invitation to let experts and the public judge its progress through evidence rather than rumor. For the experts, it was an opportunity to test the company’s story against reality.

    What emerged was not a debate over perfection, but a measured conversation about progress, accountability, and the long path ahead for Nigeria’s most consequential energy enterprise.