The Minister of
State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu has said that Nigeria will
begin to export refined petrol and other petrochemical products within the next
four years if plans to ramp up the country’s domestic refining capacity work
out well.
Kachikwu stated this recently
in Abuja when he briefed journalists on his plans for the country’s petroleum
sector.
He noted that if the plans to co-locate new refinery investments within the country’s existing refinery complexes in Kaduna, Warri and Port Harcourt become successful, and the private refinery owned by the Dangote Group comes on stream, Nigeria will produce more petrol than she needs and then export the excess.
He noted that if the plans to co-locate new refinery investments within the country’s existing refinery complexes in Kaduna, Warri and Port Harcourt become successful, and the private refinery owned by the Dangote Group comes on stream, Nigeria will produce more petrol than she needs and then export the excess.
He explained that
it would take at least three years to get the co-located refineries to begin
production, adding that Dangote’s is expected to come on stream between 2019
and 2020.
“The policy on the whole is
that we must target a time frame of 12 and 18 months to get out of importation.
“It is not good for the country, it is not a good image, it does not create jobs and we lose tax when it comes to the government and creates a huge amount of quite frankly, emotional backlash when people have to queue looking for fuel,” said Kachikwu.
“It is not good for the country, it is not a good image, it does not create jobs and we lose tax when it comes to the government and creates a huge amount of quite frankly, emotional backlash when people have to queue looking for fuel,” said Kachikwu.
He said that Nigeria, which
imports most of the petrol she needs for her domestic use was working
feverishly to get joint venture partners who can come in and set up new
refineries in the country.
“We have advertised recently
for co-located refineries and asking people to come and co-locate new
refineries into our refineries’ premises so that they can share pipelines,
tankages and we are working hard to see that we can complete whatever refinery
upgrade we are trying to do within the next 12 to 18 months and obviously for
the co-located refineries which are the new ones, targeting to see that we are
able to finish within two to three years,” he said.
According to him: “If we do
that, obviously we will have excess production capacity for refined products
and bear in mind that obviously Dangote is also bringing in its refinery which
probably is hitting up about 2019/2020.
“At that point, we begin to look at export market and that really is what we should be doing given the sort of behavior of oil prices today.”
“At that point, we begin to look at export market and that really is what we should be doing given the sort of behavior of oil prices today.”
The minister also talked about
improving the incentives for private investments to come in and help upgrade
the country’s gas production and supply infrastructure.
He noted in this regards that
works on new terms for gas businesses was already going on in the ministry.
That, he stated would be discussed further with the oil majors to get their
inputs.
“We need to finalize gas terms.
A team within the ministry is working very hard now to come up with gas terms
and negotiate those gas terms with majors because if the gas terms are there,
the investments will go in and once there is certainty we can grow those,”
Kachikwu stated.
He added: “Once we have
parallel revenues that can come in from gas and some extent the petrochemicals,
the reliance on crude oil revenue will ease, so gas is very critical not just
in terms of our earning cycle but also in terms of our power mix, being able to
supply power to the Nigerian public.”
“I know that the ministry of
power is targeting about 7000 megawatts for 2016 and some portion of 2017, and
stranded gas is key.
“We need to get infrastructure
to get that gas through NPDC or third parties so we have sufficient gas to
power the turbine and so we are working on that and the sort of numbers or
duration that I see is a period of one to two years to get us this level,” he
further explained.
Source: ThisDay

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