Opinion
Emadeb Petroleum Exploration & Production Company Limited achieves First Oil from Ibom Field
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Emadeb Petroleum Exploration & Production Company Limited (Emadeb E&P) is proud to announce the achievement of first oil from the Ibom Field (PPL 236), marking another milestone in Nigeria’s upstream oil and gas industry.
Following sustained investment, technical rigour and collaborative effort, Emadeb E&P has commenced commercial production from Ibom Field.
This achievement underscores Emadeb E&P’s emergence as a fully integrated energy player and highlights the pivotal role of indigenous operators in advancing Nigeria’s energy security and economic diversification.
It also aligns with the Federal Government of Nigeria’s vision and aspiration to increase the nation’s crude oil production.
■ Ibom Field
Located approximately 30 kilometres offshore, Ibom Field was originally discovered in 1979. The field boasts significant in place volume of 103 million barrels of oil.
Since its acquisition in the 2020 Marginal Field Bid Round, Emadeb E&P has invested over $100 million in a phased field development programme. The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) approved the Ibom Field Development Plan (FDP) in November 2024.
■ Key Technical Milestones
● Successful drilling and completion of the Ibom-03 well in September 2023.● Integration of a Mobile Producing Offshore Unit (MOPU) completed in June 2025.● Commissioning of the Ibom Field Mooring System in September 2025.● First oil achieved in October 2025.
■ Demonstrating Indigenous Capacity and Strategic Partnership
“This milestone reflects our deep commitment to unlocking Nigeria’s hydrocarbon potential through homegrown expertise, strong partnerships, and disciplined investment,” said Adebowale Olujimi, CEO, Emadeb E&P.
Olujimi declared: “We are proud to contribute to Nigeria’s energy goals, foster local content, create jobs, and deliver sustainable value.”
The Ibom Field development showcases effective collaboration between the private sector and government institutions and stands as a model for marginal field commercialisation and indigenous capacity development in the upstream sector.
The Ibom Field stands as a testament to what is achievable when strategic intent meets execution excellence.
■ Looking Ahead
Emadeb E&P is now preparing for Phase 2 development to drill two additional wells that will triple production by Q4 2026. The company remains focused on operational excellence, environmental stewardship, safety, and community engagement.
Signed: Management of Emadeb E&PNovember 14, 2025
Opinion
EPL’S SUNDERLAND AFC AS METAPHOR FOR DEVELOPMENT
BY BOLAJI AFOLABI
Sunday May 24, 2026, the curtain was drawn on the 2025/26 season of the English Premier League, (EPL). At various stadia across the United Kingdom, clubs were engaged in the last games of the 380 matches, spanning 40 weeks in a 10-month long time. The EPL, is described as the most successful and popular football league in the world with billions of spectators, viewership, and supporters. As the most watched league globally, it has broadcast deals with numerous organizations like SKY TNT, NBC, and DAZN, covering 212 territories, and earning about 6.7 billion pounds annually on TV Rights only. For some lovers of football, and the EPL in particular, the highpoint of this season was the emergence of Arsenal FC as Champions – the first time after 22 years. For others, it was the exit of Pep Guardiola, the Manchester City FC Manager who won 20 trophies in 10 years. By the way, to underscore the marketing and business positions of the EPL, Arsenal earned 198.7 million pounds for winning the EPL – excluding revenues from other sources.
For the writer; a non-partisan lover of the beautiful game, and with no bias or sentimental attachment with any of the club sides in Europe and across the world, the out-of-the-book performances and achievements of the Sunderland AFC stands out. For soccer aficionados, football statisticians, and chroniclers of events, the feat recorded by the modest club which is from a city in Tyne & Wear of about 12 miles Southeast of Newcastle Upon Tyne will, for many seasons and years remain an important and strategic milestone of the EPL story. Sunderland AFC, which gained promotion back to the EPL before the commencement of the 2025/26 season, after some years in the tricky, tortuous, and difficult English Football League, (EFL) came 7th in the 20-team league.
Aside from earning 168.2 million pounds from the EPL, it qualified for the 2026/27 Europa League competition alongside Bournemouth FC and Crystal Palace FC – they will jointly represent the UK in Europe’s second-tier club competition. Also, the club came tops as the EPL side to have over-performed against the money invested – earning 54 points; 8 more than the projected 36; it had the edge on the decimal points garnered over other clubs including the champions, City, United, Liverpool, and Villa. For unattached, unbiased, and neutral followers of football, the superlative performances of Sunderland AFC deserve special mention, attention, and analysis. Many people still wonder how a club that was in the third tier of English football 3 seasons ago has created a record; arguably the best by any club in its first season at the EPL, after promotion from the EFL.
Founded in 1879 as Sunderland & District Teachers Association Football Club by James Allen, it became a professional club in 1885. Known as “The Wearsiders” and “Black Cats” presently owned by Swiss-born businessman, Kyril Louis-Dreyfus; and partner, Juan Sartori, it has had its fair share of ups and downs in English football. Before the introduction of the EPL, it had won six top-flight titles, with the last one being in 1936, lifted the FA Cup twice, most famously in 1973, and the FA Community Shield in 1936. In the last decade, the club has been oscillating between the EPL, EFL, and League One. Despite its collection of mixed fortunes, Sunderland AFC has produced some notable players who have gone ahead, respectively to become respectable names in English football. It includes Jermaine Defore, Kevin Phillips, David Halliday, Niall Quinn, and Bobby Gurney – the club’s record goal scorer with 228 goals. Reuben Agboola, Asamoah Gyang, Steve Pienaar, Simon Adingra, and Ahmed ElMohamady are some of the Africans that have donned the red and white jersey of the club.
After an 8-year absence from the EPL, which saw Sunderland AFC campaigning in the dregy, cobwebry League One as well as the energy-sapping EFL, it got promoted to the elite division via the championship play-off in May 2025. The Board and Management of the club reasoned that after surviving the challenges and unpredictability of League One and EFL respectively, to stay afloat in the EPL required planning, operations, and results-yielding strategies. Coach Re’gis Le Bris, a French man, who has an impressive coaching career with Lorient FC, and Rennes FC in Ligue 1, came up with a deliberate and intentional blueprint towards ensuring that Sunderland turned the curve. Having crossed the first huddle, Bris, who was appointed as Manager in 2024, went to the next stage with passion, commitment, and conviction. He came up with an admixture of young, hungry players, and older, experienced ones – including home grown, home-adopted, and foreign. His philosophy was anchored on youth development, leadership, and togetherness.
Players like Granit Xhaka; Nordi Mukiele; Dennis Cirkin; Omar Alderete; Enzo Le Fee’; Wisdom Isidor; Brian Brobbey; Betrand Traore; and a few others became the nucleus of the club. On every match day, either at the club’s home ground “Stadium of Light” or any other stadia across the UK, the fans and spectators enthusiastically chant Sunderland AFC anthems – “The Greatest Team Yet” or “Sunderland Till I Die” as the players exhibits grit, brain, focus, hunger, sacrifices on the pitch of play. That Bris has transformed the club is no exaggeration. The club evolved with its unique tactical approach and technical skills with special emphasis on discipline, flexible passing, strong defense, never-tired engine-room, and enterprising build-up play. Through wide overloads, set-pieces, and patient, possession build-up, Bris imbibed the culture of adaptability and willingness to tweak playing styles which resulted in positive results.
Indeed, the Sunderland AFC model of success, which is hinged on strategic recruitment, astuteness, team dynamics, investment in youths, adaptability, and fan engagement can be adopted for realistic growth and development at the sub-national and national levels. From records, the seed of the club’s achievements were fed and watered – through proper planning, sincerity of purpose, and regular appraisals – a few years back. There was no rush or “fire brigade approach.” Though there were some negative results along the way, the entire segments of the club kept their focus on the bigger picture and target. At every stage, the club had to embark on necessary pruning, reviews, recalibration and renewals towards meeting the set objectives; to avoid relegation. Through deliberate, intentional, and sacrificial actions and operations, Sunderland AFC achieved this and more. From observation, all through the season, the tactical principles were pursued with utmost passion and unambiguous dedication.
Considering the overarching levels of accentuating poverty, pervading hunger, disabling unemployment, and other socioeconomic challenges in the country; particularly across the states, the Sunderland AFC’s model may be useful. From reports, the humongous allocation of funds to states have not translated to realistic and visible changes in the lives of the people. Despite the huge monthly allocations of between 1.818 trillion and 2.036 trillion between June 2025 and April 2026, there have been no positive impacts in the lives of people and improvements on infrastructures in the majority of the states. Apart from a few, residents are served menus of unbridled insensitivity, quantum deceit, and in-your-face shenanigans by their Leaders. While a few are alleged to be involved in spurious and wasteful ventures that are at variance with the pressing needs of states, some others are said to be involved in shameless thievery, multifaceted buffeting, and primitive acquisitions.
That Sunderland AFC was able to make 168.2 million pounds (about 302.8 billion naira) from EPL in its first season; outside other revenues, implies that their development model is working. What lessons can be learned? Are there principles that States can domesticate? Are there takeaways for States to make the people happy? Sub-nationals should be involved in proper planning that is built on sincerity of purpose, focus, and vision. Sunderland AFC’s ambition was to make it to the EPL in three years, and avoid relegation – they achieved all and more. How well do states carry out peer review assessments, and regular appraisals of policies and programmes? Are they strategic in the recruitment of appointees and aides? How well do the chief executives head-hunt for resourceful and experienced people or appointments are made purely on ethnic and tribal sentiments? Are they investing in youths as a deliberate policy for governance, leadership, and development?
Indeed, to justify the huge quarterly FAAC allocations, and some other revenues accrued to the sub-national level, Governors must imbibe the words of Brain Tracy that, “excellence is not a destination; it’s a continuous journey.” Like Sunderland AFC, States must be visionary; astute in thinking, operations, and assessments; promote dynamism; imbibe adaptability; and evolve avenues of engagement with the people at all times. As the chief executives of their respective states, they should realize that the improvement of the well-being of their citizens, the attraction of meaningful development, and protection of lives and properties are the reasons for being elected into office – not self-centredness, selfish demagoguery, and crass sectionalism.
* BOLAJI AFOLABI, a Development Communications specialist was with the Office of Public Affairs, The Presidency, Abuja.
Opinion
Political Tourists Can’t Derail PDP-Akpodiete Rejects Cheap Blackmail Over Archived Photo
UGHELLI, Delta State
My attention has been drawn to the deliberate circulation of my old photograph with His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Sheriff F.O. Oborevwori, Governor of Delta State, by a handful of political distractors within our party.
Let me state clearly: this act is nothing but cheap blackmail orchestrated by unstable politicians who are political tourists and migrants with no genuine stake in the growth of the Peoples Democratic Party [PDP].

I joined the PDP in 2018 and have remained steadfast, contributing to the development and growth of our great party across Delta State, especially in the Ughelli North, Ughelli South, and Udu Federal Constituency. Even when the Governor defected, I stood firm and remained committed to the ideals, unity, and future of our great party.
No old photograph, no blackmail, and no smear campaign can erase my record of service, loyalty, and sacrifice to the PDP. The people of U3 know my antecedents, and they know where I stand.
I therefore urge our party leaders, women, youths, and supporters across U3 Federal Constituency to remain calm, focused, and undistracted. We must not allow mischief-makers to derail our collective resolve as we prepare for the 2027 elections.
The PDP remains our home, and together we will reclaim and strengthen our mandate for the good of our people.
Signed
Hon. Dr. Olotu Akpodiete JP
House of Representatives Candidate Hopeful_
Ughelli North, Ughelli South & Udu Federal Constituency
Peoples Democratic Party [PDP]
Opinion
No Law Says Governors Must Control 13% Derivation Fund: Tinubu Should Correct Derivation Error Before 2027
As Nigeria moves steadily toward the 2027 general election, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu faces a defining test in the Niger Delta, one that goes beyond politics and strikes at the heart of constitutional justice, resource governance, and public trust.
For more than two decades, the 13 per cent derivation fund has been disbursed through state governments. Yet stakeholders across the Niger Delta continue to raise a fundamental question: where is the law, constitutional provision, or legislative instrument that expressly mandates that the 13 Per cent derivation fund must be paid exclusively to state governments?
This question cannot be dismissed. It deserves serious attention from the Presidency, the National Assembly, and all institutions charged with upholding the Constitution.
The 13 per cent derivation principle is enshrined in Section 162(2) of the 1999 Constitution. The provision guarantees that not less than 13 per cent of revenues accruing directly from natural resources shall be returned under the derivation principle. However, critics of the current framework argue that while the Constitution establishes the right to derivation, it does not specifically direct that the funds must be controlled solely by state governments.
The result is a debate that has lingered unresolved for years while the communities that host the nation’s oil wells, gas facilities, pipelines, and export terminals continue to grapple with poverty, unemployment, environmental degradation, and inadequate infrastructure.
The contradiction is difficult to ignore as Billions of naira have flowed into oil-producing states through derivation payments, yet many of the communities from which the wealth originates remain among the least developed in the country.
The Niger Delta Civil Society Forum argues that the current arrangement evolved as an administrative practice rather than an explicit constitutional requirement. Whether one agrees fully with that position or not, the arguement raises important constitutional and policy questions that deserve objective examination.
Adding weight to the debate is the acknowledgement that proposals for a dedicated 13 per cent Derivation Fund Board were previously considered at the federal level. This demonstrates that alternative frameworks have been contemplated before and should not be treated as radical or unprecedented.
President Tinubu now has an opportunity to undertake what previous administrations avoided: a comprehensive review of the derivation fund framework to determine whether it remains faithful to the spirit and intent of the Constitution.
Such a review should not be viewed as an attack on state governments. Rather, it should focus on ensuring that derivation funds achieve their original purpose improving the welfare of the people and communities whose resources contribute significantly to the national economy.
Stakeholders have proposed the establishment of independent Derivation Fund Boards in oil-producing states, supported by a Presidential Monitoring Committee to strengthen transparency, accountability, and oversight. These proposals deserve careful consideration and broad consultation.
The issue is bigger than politics. It is about restoring confidence in public institutions and ensuring that constitutional provisions produce measurable benefits for ordinary citizens. It is about ensuring that communities that bear the environmental and social burden of oil and gas production are not left behind while others benefit from their resources.
As the 2027 elections approach, the Niger Delta is watching closely. Citizens are demanding more than promises; they are demanding fairness, accountability, and evidence that the wealth generated from their lands is improving their lives.
President Tinubu has repeatedly pledged his commitment to economic reform, inclusive development, and the rule of law.
The 13 per cent derivation fund presents an opportunity to demonstrate that commitment in a meaningful and historic way.
The people of the Niger Delta have waited long enough. If there are constitutional ambiguities, they should be clarified. If there are administrative distortions, they should be corrected. And if the current framework is no longer serving the purpose for which it was created, then reform is not merely desirable it is necessary.
History may well remember the leader who finally ensured that the benefits of Nigeria’s natural resources reached the communities from which those resources are drawn. President Tinubu should seize that opportunity.
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