Greenville LNG- 10 Brands to Watch 2025
Full Name | Greenville LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas Company Limited) |
Year of Establishment | 2015 |
Website | |
Headquarters | Rumuji, Rivers State, Nigeria |
Chairman / CEO | Mr. Eddy van den Broeke (Chairman) |
Operational Capacity | 2,250 MT/day (Phase I); expansion planned to 5,250 MT/day |
Core Areas of Operation | LNG production, CNG distribution, LNG trucking logistics, refueling hub stations |
Countries of Operation | Nigeria, with expansion plans across West Africa |
Distribution Fleet | 700+ cryogenic LNG-powered trucks forming a virtual pipeline network |
Gas Hub / Stations | Lafia (Nasarawa), Benin (Edo), Shagamu (Ogun), Koton-Karfe (Kogi), Kaduna |
Key Milestones | First mini-LNG plant in West Africa; first LNG-powered railway locomotives; first LNG/CNG hub in Nasarawa State |
Best Known As | Nigeria’s largest independent LNG producer and a major force in the nation’s clean energy transition |
Greenville LNG, Nigeria’s pioneering indigenous liquefied natural gas company, has rapidly emerged as a game-changer in the country’s energy sector. Incorporated in 2015, the company commissioned its state-of-the-art mini-LNG plant in Rumuji, Rivers State, in 2018 and began full-scale operations in April 2019. Greenville has distinguished itself as the first and largest independent LNG producer in West Africa.
At the heart of Greenville’s operations is its mission to deliver sustainable, affordable, and environmentally friendly energy alternatives to industries, power plants, transport systems, and SMEs. Its Phase I facility comprises three liquefaction trains producing 2,250 metric tonnes of LNG daily, with Phase II expansion underway to increase capacity to 5,250 metric tonnes per day. To distribute LNG seamlessly nationwide, Greenville operates a fleet of over 700 cryogenic LNG-powered trucks, capable of traveling up to 1,200 kilometers per trip, ensuring access to regions without pipeline infrastructure.
In addition to production and transport, Greenville has invested in building a network of LNG and CNG refueling stations across Nigeria. These include hubs in Edo, Ogun, Kogi, Kaduna, and the landmark Lafia station in Nasarawa State, commissioned in 2024. This first-of-its-kind hub aligns with the Federal Government’s Presidential Initiative on Compressed Natural Gas (Pi-CNG) and underscores Greenville’s strategic role in Nigeria’s energy transition. The company has also pioneered LNG-powered railway locomotives on the Abuja–Kaduna line and fueled commercial bus operations in Lagos.



