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The World Rejoices With King Of Gas Julius Rone At 52

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Julius Rone, the Chief Executive Officer UTMOL does not fit the mold of the typical energy executive. At 52, the Nigerian businessman has spent decades doing what most in his industry have only talked about — turning the country’s vast, underleveraged gas reserves into a platform for serious commercial enterprise. The result is a career that has made him one of the most recognized names in Nigerian energy and earned him a nickname — “King of Gas” — that his peers did not give lightly.

Rone built his reputation the hard way. In an industry where access and politics often determine outcomes, he distinguished himself through operational discipline, long-term thinking and an ability to read the market before the market knew what it was saying. Those who have worked alongside him describe a leader who sets high standards, moves deliberately and rarely mistakes noise for signal.

The Nigerian gas sector is not an easy place to build a business. Infrastructure gaps, regulatory complexity and price volatility have derailed more than a few ambitious ventures.

Rone navigated those headwinds not by avoiding them but by understanding them well enough to build around them. That capacity for clear-eyed problem-solving, executed consistently over time, is what separates his story from the many that stall at ambition.

At 52, Colleagues point to a leadership style that is measured rather than flashy, relationship-driven rather than transactional and focused on outcomes over optics. In an environment where reputation is currency, he has spent carefully and invested wisely.

Today, Thursday June, 25 the world would definitely celebrates the genius as he clocked 52.

Friends, colleagues and business associates are ready to rejoice with the man who has not only made impact in Nigeria’s economy but has laid down a foundation for a more sustainable future in Africa’s gas sector.

For a generation of Nigerian entrepreneurs watching to see whether serious, scalable business-building is possible at home, Rone’s trajectory offers a credible answer. He did not build a career abroad and return.

Even now, there is no indication of deceleration. Those close to him suggest the appetite for building — for identifying gaps, assembling the right teams and executing with discipline — remains as sharp as ever. In that sense, the milestone is less a moment of reflection than a marker on a timeline that still has considerable runway ahead.

The “King of Gas” is not done.

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