President Bola Tinubu has approved the cancellation of a substantial portion of the debts owed by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited to the Federation Account, wiping off about $1.42bn and N5.57tn after a reconciliation of records between both parties.
This is contained in a document prepared by the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission and presented at the November meeting of the Federation Account Allocation Committee.
The report, titled “Report of October 2025 Revenue Collection Presented at the Federation Account Allocation Committee Meeting Held on 18th November 2025,” was obtained by The PUNCH on Sunday.
In the section headed “Recovery from NNPC Ltd Outstanding Obligations,” the commission said the debts earlier reported at the October 2025 FAAC meeting stood at “$1,480,610,652.58 and N6,332,884,316,237.13 for PSC, DSDP, RA & MCA Liftings and JV & PSC Royalty Receivables respectively.”
It disclosed that the Presidency had now approved that most of those balances be removed from the Federation’s books.
The document stated, “However, the commission recently received a Presidential Approval to nil off the outstanding obligations of NNPC Ltd as at 31st December 2024 as submitted by the Stakeholder Alignment Committee on the Reconciliation of Indebtedness between NNPC Ltd and the Federation.”
Providing a breakdown of the affected balances, the NUPRC added, “Consequently, out of $1,480,610,652.58 and N6,332,884,316,237.13, the affected outstanding obligations that have been nil off are $1,421,727,723.00 N5,573,895,769,388.45. The commission has passed the appropriate accounting entries as approved.”
An analysis of the figures shows that the presidential directive wiped out about 96 per cent of the dollar-denominated debt and about 88 per cent of the naira-denominated obligations previously reported as outstanding.
The document indicates that the approval followed the recommendations of the Stakeholder Alignment Committee on the Reconciliation of Indebtedness between NNPC Ltd and the Federation, which reviewed the company’s royalty and lifting-related liabilities up to December 31, 2024.
Despite the cancellation of the legacy balances, fresh debts built up in 2025 remain. In a separate section titled “NNPC Ltd Outstanding Obligations,” the regulator disclosed that statutory obligations arising between January and October 2025 still stood at “$56,808,752.32 and N1,021,550,672,578.87 for PSC & MCA Liftings and JV Royalty Receivables respectively.”
The commission added that part of the dollar component was recovered in the month under review, stating: “However, the commission received $55,003,997.00 in the month under review from the outstanding, leaving a balance of $1,804,755.32 and N1,021,550,672,578.87. The amount of $55,003,997.00 received is part of the total collection reported above for sharing by the Federation this month.”
The NUPRC confirmed that it had already implemented the directive in the Federation Account, noting that “the Commission has passed the appropriate accounting entries as approved.”
The approval effectively resolves long-running disputes over NNPC’s legacy indebtedness to the Federation, while current liabilities from ongoing operations continue to be tracked for future recovery.
However, the debt cancellation comes at a time when the commission is struggling to meet its revenue projections for the year, The PUNCH learnt. Data from the NUPRC document seen by The PUNCH showed that against a 2025 approved monthly revenue target of N1.204tn, the commission recorded N660.04bn as actual collection for November 2025, leaving a shortfall of N544.76bn for the month.
Royalty payments on oil and gas, which account for the bulk of upstream revenues, fell sharply below target. The approved monthly royalty projection was N1.144tn, compared to N605.26bn actually collected in November, indicating a deficit of N538.92bn.
Cumulatively, as of November 30, 2025, the NUPRC’s total approved revenue stood at N13.25tn, while actual cumulative collections were N7.60tn, representing a revenue gap of N5.65tn. For royalties alone, cumulative approved collections stood at N12.59tn against N6.96tn actually received, leaving a shortfall of N5.63tn.
The document further showed a drop in revenue collections compared to the previous month. While N873.10bn was collected in October 2025, the figure declined to N660.04bn in November.
The PUNCH earlier reported that there was a clash between the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited and Periscope Consulting, the audit firm hired by the Nigeria Governors’ Forum to examine an alleged under remittance of oil revenue totalling $42.37bn (about N12.91tn) to the Federation Account between 2011 and 2017.
The dispute, revived by fresh submissions from both sides, forced the Federation Account Allocation Committee to mandate a joint reconciliation session to determine the true state of remittances and resolve the long-running impasse.















































