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    HomeNewsNigeria Finally Did It: Years of Darkness Are Ending

    Nigeria Finally Did It: Years of Darkness Are Ending

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    By: Olabode Opeseitan
    • The River Niger stopped this pipeline for a decade. Here’s what it means for your electricity, your business, and your country.
    For more than a decade, one of Nigeria’s most consequential infrastructure projects sat unfinished because of a river.
    Not a lack of money, not a shortage of will, not even the familiar fog of Nigerian bureaucracy, though all three played their parts. It was the River Niger itself, wide and deep and indifferent, that stopped the engineers, swallowed the deadlines, and kept half of Nigeria’s gas network disconnected from the other half. On April 30, 2026, just two days ago, that finally changed. And if you buy diesel, pay an electricity bill, or own any kind of business in this country, this story is directly about you.
    NNPC Limited announced the completion of the River Niger crossing for the Obiafu-Obrikom-Oben (OB3) Gas Pipeline, a 130-kilometre artery designed to carry up to 2 billion standard cubic feet of gas per day from the oil-soaked creeks of Rivers State westward to Oben in Edo State. The crossing was drilled not over the river, not through it, but approximately two kilometres beneath its riverbed, using Horizontal Directional Drilling, the same class of engineering used to build tunnels under the English Channel. In the context of Nigerian infrastructure, it is the most technically ambitious pipeline crossing ever attempted on home soil. A Nigerian company, PCE Nig. Limited, did the drilling.
    The project started around 2016 with an original completion date of March 2024. That date passed. August 2024 was announced and also passed. By August 2025, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Gas) was still describing it as “nearing completion.” The River Niger crossing was the reason. The Niger Delta environment is notoriously hostile to heavy engineering: unstable soils, high water tables, dense communities, and a riverbed whose geology refused to cooperate with standard drilling plans. Every attempt surfaced new complications. The engineers adapted, redesigned, and adapted again. Two years of missed deadlines were not laziness, they were the price of refusing to cut corners on a crossing two kilometres below a living, shifting river.
    What finally made the difference was institutional memory, something Nigeria is not often credited with having. In June 2025, NNPC completed a different River Niger crossing for the AKK (Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano) Pipeline in the north. Those engineers solved the river problem first. NNPC’s Group CEO, Engr. Bashir Bayo Ojulari, described OB3 as a deliberate upscaling of those hard-won AKK lessons: transferred, refined, and applied to an even more unforgiving environment. Nigeria, for once, learned from itself. That sentence alone should be on a billboard.
    To understand why this matters, picture Nigeria’s gas network as a human body. The Niger Delta gas fields are the heart. The pipelines are the arteries. For years, the OB3 section meant the eastern heart was pumping furiously, but the main artery was severed at the river. Gas that could have powered factories in Lagos, lit homes in Abuja, and fueled industries in Kano was instead flared into the sky or left stranded underground, a $700 million infrastructure investment that could not do its job because one river stood in the way. NEPA and its acolyte took the light. The River Niger kept it off.
    With the crossing complete, over 500 million standard cubic feet of incremental gas per day will be unlocked for the domestic market in the near term. That number sounds technical until you translate it: more gas means more turbines spinning, more megawatts on the national grid, and fewer hours that Nigerians spend staring at a ceiling fan that will not move. Every megawatt added to the grid reduces Nigeria’s collective spend on diesel generators, a cost that, in aggregate, runs into hundreds of billions of naira every year and falls hardest on the people who can least afford it. The generator is a tax. This pipeline is a tax cut.
    For business owners and manufacturers, the signal is even louder. Aliko Dangote said publicly that completing OB3 would attract $2 billion in new investment into the Nigerian economy. That is not a government press release. That is a market verdict from one of Nigeria’s most ruthlessly rational industrialists. Companies that shelved expansion plans because gas was unreliable will now revisit those spreadsheets. Fertiliser, petrochemicals, cement, food processing; every sector that runs on gas is watching this milestone with its chequebook open.
    The OB3 and AKK pipelines are not rivals, they are one system, and that system is now on the verge of completion for the first time. OB3 is the east-west connector: it takes Niger Delta gas and feeds it westward. AKK is the north-south highway: it picks up that gas and carries it 614 kilometres to Kaduna and Kano. Without OB3’s River Niger crossing, even a fully operational AKK would have been perpetually gas-starved, like a highway with no on-ramp. April 30, 2026 is the day Nigeria’s national gas grid became, structurally, one coherent network. That has never been true before.
    The contractor that made it happen, PCE Nig. Limited, deserves its flowers. In a country where complex infrastructure routinely gets handed to foreign firms, a Nigerian company just drilled two kilometres beneath one of Africa’s great rivers and delivered a world-class result. That is a national capability that compounds. It means the next complex project is faster, cheaper, and more achievable. It means Nigerian engineers solved a problem that had stumped this project for a decade. That story should be louder than the pipeline itself.
    Congratulations are also in order to the Tinubu administration. It promised to renew the hope of Nigerians. Pipeline by pipeline, road by road, bridge by bridge, poultry by poultry, hospital by hospital, one insurgent takedown after another, it is gradually redeeming its pledge to a nation that lost hope in its leaders after decades of betrayal. Yet, we must remember that completing the crossing is not the same as gas flowing. Nigerians are waiting eagerly for the commissioning. They want to know when the pipes will be tested, pressurised, inspected, and formally activated for the cubic feet to move from south-south to west. After overcoming a decade of “almost done,” earning the trust and credibility of Nigerians by going under the Niger Delta’s most forbidding river, the NNPC Limited and the Federal Government must carry Nigerians along inch by inch as we get to the finish line.
    Nigeria has set itself targets of 3 million barrels of oil per day and 12 billion standard cubic feet of gas per day by 2030. It is part of the building blocks to attaining a trillion-dollar economy. OB3 is the story of a country deciding, one drilling rig at a time, that it will no longer be stopped by its own geography.

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