A Review Of Nigeria's Energy Sector In 2024 | 2024 In Review

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  • Опубликовано: 17 янв 2025

Комментарии • 12

  • @gaaseche500
    @gaaseche500 11 дней назад

    Prof Wumi was my lecturer for Petroleum Economics when he just came from the UK, good to see his still passionate about Nigeria. ThankGod is the Elon of O&G in Nigeria, I worked for his Mentor Prof Mike. It’s good to see them at the forefront of the Nigeria Energy thought

  • @t.a.kareemandco-chartereda4152
    @t.a.kareemandco-chartereda4152 18 дней назад

    Olu has developed technical competence on plant operations. When you start a plant, you have to improve the efficiency gradually from about 60% . Gradually you improve the operational efficiency of the plant. You cannot have 100% efficiency immediately. It's a gradual process and is even subject to raw materials and chemicals

  • @LedaCassi
    @LedaCassi 14 дней назад

    Thanks for sharing such valuable information! I have a quick question: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?

  • @Frank-Bediko62
    @Frank-Bediko62 18 дней назад

    Because global crude oil price has dropped far below the $77 dollar bench mark Nigeria budgeted. This means less FX for the Nigerian government. Nigeria has always had the lowest PM price in ECOWAS because of subsidies.

  • @celestineazukanwaokobia8064
    @celestineazukanwaokobia8064 17 дней назад

    Do we need soothsayers to tell Nigerians that our refineries were being sabotaged? These refineries are coming back because Dangote refineries spoilt their evil plans.

    • @olajideoriade7463
      @olajideoriade7463 16 дней назад

      No it has nothing to do with dangote, these refineries are working today because the handed over the funding and monitoring of the repairs to the private sector. Also the main reason our refineries have failed to work is subsidy on imported fuel. Because if subsidy was still being paid the sabotage of these refineries would have continued. So it is largely due to subsidy removal, petroleum act and also the exclusion of public civil servants from handling the repairs

    • @celestineazukanwaokobia8064
      @celestineazukanwaokobia8064 15 дней назад

      @ How did fuel subsidy removal affect their kickbacks? Is it not same commissioned private sector that failed to deliver despite various given delivery time frames before the coming of Dangote refineries?“The witch cried in the night and the baby died in the morning “. Hmmm

  • @asgby585
    @asgby585 18 дней назад

    Is he an NNPC spokesperson or a journalist? Even his colleagues are skeptical of his report. I will take whatever he says with a pinch of salt.

  • @mainstriimmedia4980
    @mainstriimmedia4980 17 дней назад

    Mr. Man, what did you see? You are speaking gibberish. How many trucks did you see leave the refineries. Olu, be professional. Give empirical reports. Not stories. Rhetoric.

  • @kingsleyogbuka9963
    @kingsleyogbuka9963 18 дней назад

    Olu,,you sound like a compromised man.