The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd.) delivered a rebound in financial performance in April 2026, as higher crude oil production and improved operational efficiency pushed revenue and profit to their strongest monthly levels so far this year.
In its April 2026 operational and financial report released over the weekend, the national oil company posted a 79 percent month-on-month jump in revenue to N4.97 trillion, compared with N2.77 trillion recorded in March.
Profitability also strengthened during the month, with profit after tax rising to N481 billion, up from N276 billion in March, highlighting the direct earnings impact of improved production volumes and revenue realisation.
The latest figures point to a notable recovery in crude oil and condensate production, which increased to 1.68 million barrels per day in April, compared with 1.56 million barrels per day in March.
The output gain reflects incremental improvements in pipeline availability, security interventions in key oil-producing corridors, and enhanced operational coordination across joint venture and production-sharing arrangements.
For Nigeria, where crude oil remains the dominant source of foreign exchange earnings and fiscal revenue, the production increase represents a major step toward stabilising output levels closer to the country’s OPEC quota and restoring lost production capacity.
Between January and April 2026, NNPC reported N3.71 trillion in statutory remittances to the federal government, up from N2.89 trillion in the first quarter of the year.
While crude oil output provided the main earnings catalyst, natural gas operations remained stable, with production recorded at 7.7 billion standard cubic feet per day (bscf/d) in April.
Gas sales averaged 4.65 bscf/d, indicating continued demand support from domestic power generation and industrial users, even as Nigeria works to expand monetisation of its vast gas reserves.
Upstream pipeline availability was maintained at 79 percent, reflecting relative operational stability in gas transmission infrastructure.
More significantly, the company reported milestone progress on key national gas infrastructure projects.
NNPC confirmed the successful completion of the River Niger crossing segment of the OB3 gas pipeline project, a major engineering achievement that had previously been a bottleneck in the project’s execution timeline.
The company also reported sustained progress on the Ajaokuta–Kaduna–Kano (AKK) Gas Pipeline Project, a flagship infrastructure development designed to transport natural gas from the Niger Delta to northern industrial corridors.
The AKK project remains central to Nigeria’s long-term industrialisation agenda, with the potential to unlock new manufacturing hubs, power generation capacity, and regional energy integration once completed.
The increase in April revenue underscores the continued importance of oil and gas earnings to Nigeria’s fiscal stability, particularly at a time when the government is intensifying efforts to boost non-oil revenues and stabilise foreign exchange inflows.
With revenue rising from N2.77 trillion in March to N4.97 trillion in April, the performance signals how sensitive Nigeria’s fiscal position remains to fluctuations in crude production volumes and operational efficiency across upstream assets.
Despite the positive April performance, structural risks continue to weigh on Nigeria’s long-term production outlook.
The country has struggled for years to consistently meet its OPEC production quota due to crude theft, pipeline vandalism, and infrastructure constraints across key oil-producing regions.
While recent security interventions and operational reforms have helped stabilise output, sustaining production above current levels remains a key challenge for the industry.
NNPC itself acknowledged ongoing efforts to expand production capacity, improve pipeline integrity, and enhance upstream efficiency as part of its broader strategy to boost national output and revenue generation.
Beyond crude oil performance, the company is increasingly positioning gas as a strategic growth pillar within Nigeria’s energy transition framework.
NNPC has outlined ambitious plans to expand gas reserves from approximately 210 trillion cubic feet to 600 trillion cubic feet, reflecting a long-term strategy to monetise Nigeria’s abundant gas resources.
Earlier in the year, the company unveiled its Gas Master Plan 2026, which targets daily gas production of 10 billion cubic feet, aimed at supporting industrial growth, power generation expansion, and export diversification.
The plan is also expected to strengthen Nigeria’s energy security by reducing dependence on imported refined products and improving domestic energy availability.






