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LATEST ARTICLES
Nigeria: Dangote Refinery Raises Petrol Price To N1,175 Per Litre, Diesel To N1,620 Per Litre
Tanzania: Energy Minister Orders Contractor To Resume Songea–Mahumbika Power Project Within 14 Days
He explained that the ministry had previously met with the company’s leadership in Dodoma, where they agreed that work would resume within 25 days after the contractor received the payment they had been demanding since December 2025.
However, he noted that the contractor has not yet returned to the project site or resumed work.
Nigeria: NNPC Records N385bn Profit As Oil Output Rises To 1.64mbpd
The state-owned oil firm generated N2.571 trillion in revenue during the month while remitting N726 billion as statutory payments to the Federation.
Despite the profit, monthly revenue declined 47 percent, falling from N4.82 trillion in December 2025 to N2.57 trillion in January 2026.
According to the report, the increase in production was largely driven by the completion of maintenance activities at key offshore assets, particularly the Agbami Field, alongside operational improvements across other upstream facilities.
However, the company noted that operational challenges still affected crude delivery volumes. “Despite the improved production profile, planned deliveries for January were reduced due to adverse weather conditions, evacuation constraints, and asset integrity challenges across some production corridors,” the report said. Natural gas production also rebounded to 7,283 million standard cubic feet per day, up from 6,914 mmscf/d in December, reflecting improved upstream performance.The company reported 24.75 million barrels of combined crude and condensate sales during the month, compared with 22.79 million barrels recorded in December 2025.
Nigeria continues to push to stabilise crude output above 1.5 million barrels per day amid ongoing challenges including oil theft, pipeline vandalism and infrastructure constraints.
G7 Nations Delay Strategic Oil Reserve Release Decision
Ghana: Fuel Lifting Challenge Faced By OMCs Resolved; Normal Loading Resumed- COMAC
Ghana: Police Arrest 8 Chinese Nationals, 2 Ghanaians Over Alleged ECG Cable Theft
The Ghana Police Service has arrested eight Chinese nationals holding managerial roles at Sentuo Steel Limited and two Ghanaians over their alleged involvement in a cable theft and metal export syndicate involving cables belonging to the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG).
The suspects are Yuxiaoting, He Jing, Xu Changjiu, Li Lei, Chen Jin, Zheng Ma, Wang Jian, and Bin Bin — all Chinese nationals — while the Ghanaian nationals are Samuel Ekpe and Priscilla Padu.
The arrests followed a police intelligence operation at the Kpone Industrial Area near Tema on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, at about 3:30 p.m. The operation was carried out by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) in collaboration with officials from the Ministry of Energy and Green Transition.
Addressing a section of journalists in Accra on Monday, March 9, 2026, the Director-General of the CID, Lydia Yaako Donkor, said that upon arrival at Sentuo, the team found about 70 employees allegedly cutting ECG service cables into pieces and stripping metal components from the insulation.
She said the extracted bare wires were being compressed into metal blocks believed to be intended for export.
“The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) Headquarters Operations Unit, in collaboration with officials of the Ministry of Energy, has uncovered a large cache of stolen Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) service cables and arrested 10 suspects in connection with an organised cable theft and metal export syndicate,” she said.
“During the operation, more than 100 drums of service cables suspected to belong to the Electricity Company of Ghana were discovered on the premises,” she added.
According to her, the quantity and condition of the cables suggest a sustained and organised operation targeting ECG infrastructure.
Police said a 24-hour guard has been placed at the premises to prevent the removal of any materials while investigations continue.
The Ghana Police Service described the operation as a major step in the fight against the theft of critical national infrastructure.
According to the Service, the stealing and illegal export of ECG cables has had a severe impact on electricity supply to communities, businesses, and public institutions across the country.
Police reaffirmed their commitment to working with other state agencies to protect national assets and ensure that those responsible are brought to justice.


