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    Home » Nigeria’s Seplat Energy resumes operations as oil workers halt strike

    Nigeria’s Seplat Energy resumes operations as oil workers halt strike

    April 6, 2026
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    Lagos — Workers at Seplat Energy, Nigeria’s largest independent oil and gas producer, have suspended ​strike action after the company issued written commitments ‌on pay rises, their union said on Saturday.

    Workers walked out on Friday after wage negotiations stalled, raising concerns about oil and ​gas output at a time when Nigeria is ​seeking to maximise production amid rising global oil ⁠prices.
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    In an April 4 letter to Seplat’s Chief ​Executive Roger Brown seen by Reuters, Nigeria’s Petroleum and ​Natural Gas Senior Staff Association (PENGASSAN) said it had directed members at Seplat Energy to immediately suspend industrial action after negotiations resumed with ​the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC).

    The union said ​talks on a 2026 collective bargaining agreement would continue, with the ‌aim ⁠of concluding outstanding issues by April 13. The union has not disclosed what pay demands it is seeking.

    “We can confirm that the union has suspended its notice ​of industrial action ​to allow ⁠negotiations to conclude on outstanding items within an agreed framework,” Seplat spokesperson Ogechukwu Udeagha ​said. “Operations are recommencing at our various locations.”

    Seplat ​targets ⁠output of up to 155,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day this year, up from an average of 131,506 ⁠boepd ​last year as it seeks to ​scale production while remaining a major supplier of gas to Nigeria’s ​domestic power market.

    *Isaac Anyaogu; editing: Susan Fenton – Reuters

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