In a major boost for indigenous technology, the Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF) has announced the completion of five groundbreaking research projects now ready for intellectual property protection and commercial deployment.
Ahmed Aminu, Executive secretary of PTDF disclosed this in Abuja on Wednesday, at the final peer review stage of PTDF’s Annual Oil and Gas Research Grant Competition and Endowment program stating that the projects are viable pathways to sustainable energy growth.
According to Aminu, the showcased research addresses critical industry challenges with strong commercialisation prospects. He explained that the programmes have stringent criteria, requiring Nigerian lead researchers with locally domiciled projects vetted by steering committees or university panels.
Key projects included an integrated pipeline monitoring system using Li-Fi, UAV, and DSP technologies for defect detection and remediation; carbon nanotube-enhanced perovskite solar cells and plasmonics dye-sensitised cells; sustainable bioenergy from non-edible oil seeds; pyrolysis and catalytic hydrogenation processes to convert biomass, plastic waste, and bitumen into fuels and chemicals; and geological studies of Cretaceous source rocks in Nigeria’s Middle Benue Trough.
Aminu stated that outcomes prioritised patents, publications, and practical petroleum solutions as key performance benchmarks, with PTDF facilitating IPR filings at the Federal Ministry of Trade and Investments.
He commended the research teams for demonstrating professionalism despite various challenges, describing the peer review as a celebration of excellence and appealed to stakeholders to support scaling these innovations for industry adoption, spin-off enterprises, job creation, and in-country knowledge transfer.
By focusing on locally driven innovation, from pipeline integrity to renewable energy materials, the PTDF ES said the fund is positioning itself as a strategic bridge between academia and the oilfields, as well as between fossil fuels and the emerging energy transition landscape.
According to him, two grant awardees and three Endowment streams emerged from rigorous national competitions.
In her remark, Orisemeyiwa Eyesan, the commission chief executive of Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), who was represented by her senior technical assistant, Allagor Preye, commended the PTDF for boosting research credibility, influencing policy, and fostering continuous collaboration to promote energy security.



