The House of Representatives Committee on the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) has said the Commission’s proposed N1.75 trillion 2025 budget must result in visible and measurable development across Niger Delta communities.
Erhiatake Ibori-Suenu, Chairman of the Committee, made this clear on Tuesday during the NDDC’s budget defence at the National Assembly, stressing that lawmakers would not approve the proposal as a mere formality.
According to her, the budget represents renewed hope and opportunity for millions of people in the oil-producing region and must therefore be people-centred, transparent, and strictly aligned with national development priorities.
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“The NDDC budget represents hope, opportunity, and the promise of a better quality of life for our people,” Ibori-Suenu said. “Every line item must be purposeful and aligned with the Renewed Hope Agenda. This Committee will insist on accountability, transparency, and value for money.”
She stressed that the House would subject the 2025 budget to rigorous scrutiny to ensure it delivers measurable outcomes in critical areas such as infrastructure development, human capacity building, youth empowerment, and economic inclusion.
While commending the Commission’s ongoing reform efforts, the Committee Chair noted that legislative support would be tied strictly to performance and verifiable results on the ground.
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“The people of the Niger Delta deserve projects they can see, use, and benefit from,” she said, pledging sustained legislative oversight to ensure effective implementation of the budget.
Earlier, Samuel Ogbuku, the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of the NDDC, presented the Commission’s N1.75 trillion 2025 budget proposal, themed “Budget of Consolidation.”
He described it as a shift from transactional governance to a results-driven and transformational development approach.
Ogbuku explained that the proposed budget reflects the reform agenda of the current management and aligns with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.
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He added that the Commission adopted a no-borrowing strategy, resulting in a nine per cent reduction from the 2024 budget.
According to him, personnel costs were estimated at N47.5 billion, overheads at N96.4 billion, while capital expenditure remains the core focus of the proposal.
The Managing Director also disclosed that the Commission had abandoned line-item budgeting in favour of sectoral allocations, a move aimed at reducing project delays and improving efficiency.
Reviewing the Commission’s 2024 performance, Ogbuku noted that the NDDC exceeded its revenue projections, recording N1.945 trillion in actual revenue against a projected N1.911 trillion.
The session ended with assurances from both lawmakers and the Commission’s management to deepen collaboration towards delivering sustainable development and inclusive growth across the Niger Delta region.