Manny Ita –
The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has announced a revenue of N60.5 trillion for the 2025 fiscal year and a profit after tax of N5.7 trillion, marking one of the strongest financial performances in the history of the state-owned energy firm and underscoring a significant turnaround following years of losses and opaque accounting. The company said the results reflect higher crude production levels, improved operational efficiency, exchange-rate gains and the ongoing commercialization reforms that transformed the former corporation into a limited liability company.
In a statement released at the weekend, the company described the figures as evidence that recent restructuring efforts are yielding results, noting that disciplined cost control and new revenue streams contributed to the profit surge. “This performance demonstrates that NNPC Limited is operating as a commercially driven entity focused on value creation,” the company said, adding that transparency and accountability remain central to its post-reform strategy.
Industry analysts said the earnings could bolster public finances in Nigeria, where oil revenues remain a critical source of government income despite efforts to diversify the economy. They noted that higher remittances from the national oil company may help ease fiscal pressures, support foreign-exchange stability and strengthen investor confidence. However, experts also cautioned that the sustainability of the performance will depend on global oil prices, production stability and continued reforms in the downstream sector.
The announcement comes amid ongoing efforts to increase crude output after years of disruptions caused by pipeline vandalism, oil theft and underinvestment. NNPCL said security improvements in key producing regions and partnerships with private operators have helped stabilize production levels, while refinery rehabilitation projects and fuel supply initiatives are expected to reduce import dependence over time.
Energy economists welcomed the profit declaration but emphasized the need for independent verification and consistent disclosure standards. “Sustained transparency will be crucial to building trust in the company’s financial reporting,” one Lagos-based analyst said, noting that historically limited public insight into the firm’s finances has fueled skepticism.
The company also indicated that it plans to reinvest a portion of the profits into upstream expansion, gas infrastructure and renewable energy projects as part of a long-term strategy to transition toward a more diversified energy portfolio. Officials said the goal is to balance immediate revenue generation from hydrocarbons with future-oriented investments aligned with global energy transition trends.
Market observers said the record revenue and profit figures could strengthen the company’s position ahead of any potential public listing in the future, a step envisioned under the Petroleum Industry Act to further commercialize the national oil firm. For now, stakeholders say the 2025 results represent a pivotal milestone, suggesting that the once loss-making state enterprise may be evolving into a profitable national champion if current reforms are sustained.

