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NNPC’s architect of trust: Why the Chief Relations Officer matters

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In today’s global energy landscape, the real measure of corporate strength is not only in barrels lifted or revenues declared. Increasingly, it is found in the quality of stakeholder relationships and trust a company can sustain – relationships with regulators who approve, investors who fund, communities who host, and partners who collaborate. Essentially, relationships within the business ecosystem.

For the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd), this vital responsibility rests squarely on the shoulders of the Chief Relations Officer (CRO), a role now held by Mrs. Morenike Adewunmi, a lawyer and accomplished energy executive with an international pedigree.

Mrs. Morenike Adewunmi
Mrs. Morenike Adewunmi, Chief Relations Officer, NNPC

The CRO role is often misunderstood, sometimes confused with the traditional Chief Communications Officer. Yet the distinction is profound. The Chief Communications Officer tells the story; the Chief Relations Officer ensures that the right people believe in that story and stand with the company when it matters most. Put differently, the CRO’s work is about “who we have on our side” – stakeholders, regulators, investors, communities, and global partners. Without them, even the most compelling strategy risks collapse.

Mrs. Adewunmi’s appointment could not have come at a more significant time. NNPC Ltd is undergoing a bold transformation into a commercially driven, globally competitive energy company, a journey that requires not just operational efficiency, but legitimacy in the eyes of those who hold influence over its future. This legitimacy cannot be bought or advertised; it must be earned through consistent trust-building, policy advocacy, and stakeholder diplomacy. That is the essence of the CRO’s mandate.

Her career path reflects the depth required for this office. A lawyer by training, she holds a Law degree from the Ogun State University and was called to the Nigerian Bar. Her professional journey includes a distinguished tenure at Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) and the wider Shell Group, where she held senior roles spanning legal advisory, business relations, and government affairs. Within Shell, she developed a reputation for her ability to navigate complex stakeholder interfaces, regulatory frameworks, and craft partnerships that advanced both corporate goals and national interests. These skills are now critical to NNPC Ltd as it positions itself on the frontline of Africa’s energy future.

As CRO, she is responsible for shaping the company’s relationships with all the tiers of government, regulators, investors, host communities, and international institutions. Her office is where policy is explained, trust is negotiated, and legitimacy is consolidated. Every successful engagement that secures regulatory approval, every investor and shareholder convinced of NNPC’s credibility, every community that embraces partnership rather than protest – these quiet victories are the results of a capable CRO.

But beyond the technicalities, her appointment also carries symbolic weight. In an industry long dominated by men, the rise of a woman into such a strategic and visible leadership role signals an important shift toward inclusivity. For young professionals, especially women aspiring to careers in law, energy, and corporate leadership, Mrs. Adewunmi represents both possibility and proof that excellence can shatter ceilings. She is considered one of the best SME’s on non techinical risks.

NNPC Ltd’s journey into the future will be shaped not just by the energy it produces, but by the confidence and trust it inspires. And confidence comes from relationships – from “who we have on our side.” In Mrs. Morenike Adewunmi, NNPC Ltd has not only appointed a Chief Relations Officer; it has invested in a custodian of trust, a bridge-builder, and a strategist of legitimacy.

As Nigeria navigates the energy transition and seeks to attract investment while deepening local content, the CRO’s role will remain indispensable. It is the quiet force that ensures policies align, communities cooperate, investors commit, and the company’s reputation endures. In this sense, the CRO is less a back-office executive and more a frontline architect of corporate survival and national progress.

Mrs. Adewunmi embodies that significance. She is not simply telling NNPC Ltd’s story – she is ensuring that the people who matter most believe it, support it, and walk alongside the company into the future. And in today’s energy world, that may be the most valuable asset of all.

By Kunle Odusola-Stevenson, energy communications strategist and policy commentator in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector

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