
Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Upstream Regulatory Commission (NURC), Mr Gbenga Komolafe
Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) has unveiled a gas-centric transition strategy aimed at eliminating routine flaring by 2030 and reducing methane emissions by 60% by 2031.
According to NUPRC Chief Executive, Gbenga Komolafe, this strategy will not only reduce emissions but also create thousands of green jobs by monetizing vast gas reserves.
Komolafe made this known at the ongoing 24th Nigeria Oil and Gas (NOG) Energy Week conference 2025, in his keynote address titled: ” _Positioning Nigeria’s Upstream Oil & Gas for Energy Security, Sustainability and Economic Resilience_ “.
He said Nigeria is building Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) capacity, deploying floating infrastructure, and leading cross-border pipeline development to fuel not only its own economy but Africa’s industrial renaissance.
Komolafe highlighted the potential benefits of the strategy, saying, “These aren’t just policies; they are opportunities for investment, innovation, and inclusive growth.”
The strategy is supported by Nigeria’s Upstream Decarbonisation Framework, which integrates emissions tracking, MRV systems, carbon capture, and climate finance access through carbon markets.
The NUPRC has also inaugurated the Decarbonisation and Energy Sustainability Forum and formally declared March 18 as Nigeria’s Upstream Decarbonisation Day.
This annual event will serve as a rallying point for stakeholders to track progress, share knowledge, and accelerate climate-aligned development.
Komolafe added, “Interestingly, we are enabling emissions reductions to become revenue streams through a new ecosystem of carbon services including monitoring, consulting, tech deployment, while maintaining high environmental and asset integrity.”




