Senate Summons Kyari, Ojulari, Others Over Alleged ₦210trn Unaccounted For In NNPCL Report

The Senate committee on public accounts has summoned a former Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited, NNPCL, Mele Kyari, for explanation over an alleged ₦210 trillion, which was not properly accounted for between 2017 and 2023.

Mar 6, 2026 - 14:22
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Senate Summons Kyari, Ojulari, Others Over Alleged ₦210trn Unaccounted For In NNPCL Report
...Rejects N5 billion reportedly used to change the company’s name from  Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation to Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited unacceptable 

The Senate committee on public accounts has summoned a former Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited, NNPCL, Mele Kyari, for explanation over an alleged ₦210 trillion, which was not properly accounted for between 2017 and 2023.
Kyari was summoned alongside a former chief financial officer, Umar Ajia Isa, and former group general manager of National Petroleum Investment Management Services, Bala Wunti.
Kyari led the national oil company from 2019 to 2025.
Chairman of the Committee, Senator Aliyu Wadada, issued the summons on Thursday following a review of audit reports of the NNPCL, warning that it could issue warrants of arrest against the former officials if they failed to appear before it, on a date to be communicated soon.
Wadada spoke while briefing reporters on the committee’s resolutions after its meeting.
He noted that, the former management team was expected to appear before the committee alongside the current leadership of the NNPCL, led by the incumbent GCEO, Bayo Ojulari, as well as external auditors who worked with the company during the period under review.

‘Sundry Receivables’

The chairman also stated that the committee resolved that the NNPCL must account for the ₦210 trillion flagged in audit reports, comprising ₦103 trillion and ₦107 trillion that were allegedly not properly explained in the company’s financial records, stressing that the committee had asked NNPCL 19 questions arising from the audit findings last year, but was not satisfied with the responses provided.
According to him, the company claimed that the ₦103 trillion represented cumulative spending by its joint venture partners through JV cash calls since 2017, a response the committee rejected.
The committee also raised concerns about ₦107 trillion recorded as “sundry receivables” in NNPCL’s audited financial statements as of December 2023, which the company said was owed by several banks and other entities.
“When the two figures are combined, NNPCL needs to properly account for ₦210 trillion,” the committee said.

‘Explanations Must Be Given’

The committee also questioned the expenditure of ₦5 billion reportedly used to change the company’s name from the former Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation to the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited.
“This to us in the committee is unacceptable, and satisfactory explanations must be given,” Wadada added.
Also, in another resolution, the committee directed the NNPCL to refund to the treasury all production costs charged against crude oil revenue within the period under review, arguing that the company and its subsidiaries do not directly produce crude oil.
The committee also recommended that the Office of the Auditor-General for the Federation conduct a forensic audit of NNPCL’s financial statements for the period in line with Section 85 of the 1999 Constitution.

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