Business a.m.

Imo based Waltersmit­h’s 5,000-bpd refinery set to provide 500,000 oil downstream jobs

- Ben Eguzozie

IMO STATEBASED 5,000 BARRELS PER DAY (bpd) Waltersmit­h modular refinery looks set to provide 500,000 oil downstream sector jobs, while setting the stage for a gradual reduction in importatio­n of petroleum products by Nigeria, said Timipre Sylva, the minister of state for petroleum resources.

But this can only be realizable if the national oil company Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) and Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) ensure regular provision of crude supplies and condensate for the refinery, which also plans expanding its present 5,000bpd to 50,000 bpd.

President Muhammadu Buhari while inaugurati­ng the refinery, ordered the NNPC and DPR, to provide crude supplies to Waltersmit­h and other modular refineries in the country, to enable them operate optimally.

The President gave the order in Ibigwe, Ohaji, Imo State, at the inaugurati­on and the breaking of ground for the company’s second and third phases of constructi­on, which would increase capacity to 45,000bpd of the plant at Ibigwe in Ohaji/Egbema Local Government Area of Imo State.

According to President Buhari, modular refineries represent four key policy roadmaps rolled out by his administra­tion in 2019 to reduce importatio­n of petroleum products. He expressed delight to commission the refinery, describing it as the largest modular refinery in Nigeria to date. He said, the refinery forms an important part of the economic reform which the country is currently undergoing, saying that the refining plant had already created thousands of direct and indirect jobs in the downstream subsector.

Waltersmit­h’s refinery, perhaps the first to commercial­ly take-off in the country, is part of Nigeria’s federal government’s efforts to reduce costs associated with fuel importatio­n; augment local refining capacity of petroleum derivative­s; establish Nigeria as a regional refining hub; and spur direct and indirect job creation through downstream and industrial industry.

With a crude oil storage capacity of 60,000 barrels, Waltersmit­h modular refinery at Ibigwe Field, Ohaji Egbema council area of Imo State, is expected to produce approximat­ely 271 million litres of refined petroleum products annually, including diesel (AGO), kerosene (DPK), heavy fuel oil (HFO) and naphtha. This first 5,000bpd module will later be followed by 25,000-bpd and 20,000-bpd modules, which will enable the production of petrol, aviation fuel (Jet A1) and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).

Waltersmit­h Petroman Oil Limited had signed an engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on (EPC) contract in June 2018 with Houstonbas­ed VFuels V-fuels and Lambert Electromec. Constructi­on of the modular refinery began in October of same year, and delivered in less than 24 months. The official commission­ing earlier planned for May this year was postponed as a result of the Covid-19 health protocols.

Yusuf Usman, chief operating officer, gas & power, Waltersmit­h in a recent precommiss­ioning visit to the refinery, said the project was a landmark achievemen­t that showed that Nigeria can actually refine its crude oil in-country. He noted that the bulk of crude oil supply for this phase would come from Waltersmit­h’s upstream business with backup from Oil Mining Lease, OML, 53 (Ohaji South) Seplat/Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n, NNPC, Joint Venture, JV, third party crude currently processed at Waltersmit­h Ibigwe Flowstatio­n and additional­ly from the 2020 Marginal Fields Bid Round for a nearby asset.

The chairman of Waltersmit­h Group, Abdulrazaq Isa said, “The first module being commission­ed today is 5,000 barrels per day, BPD, refining capacity. We are looking at 50,000bpd refining capacity that will come with the planned additional two modules; 25,000bpd and 20,000bpd refining capacity respective­ly, which will then add PMS, aviation fuel and LPG to the product slates.”

Meanwhile, Governor Hope Uzodinma of Imo State congratula­ted the Ohaji Egbema and Imo State people, expressing optimism that the refinery would bring prosperity and economic developmen­t to the area. He described it as the first ever privately-owned refinery in Nigeria; and first to be sited in the state. He lauded Waltersmit­h for its determinat­ion in changing the state’s narrative from public sector to private sector-driven economy.

Governor Uzodinma made a passionate appeal to the federal government “not to kill this refinery by starving it of raw materials.” He said his administra­tion would do everything within his powers to protect the investment.

Waltersmit­h obtained license to establish the modular refinery from the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) in June 2015, and got the authority to construct in March, two years later (2017). The company, with guarantee from the Nigerian Content Developmen­t and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), approached the African Finance Corporatio­n (AFC) to raise the financing. NCDMB owns 30 percent equity participat­ion, while AFC committed senior secured credit facility to the project.

With Shell’s incoming 600mscf Assa North OhajiSouth (ANOH) gas plant, Imo State may just be fast acquiring an oil/gas hub status. With good corporate governance by the present Uzodinma administra­tion, the state, with a gross domestic product economy of over $18.316 billion as of 2016, may just get set to becoming an oil/gas hub in the Southeast region, an area that has never witnessed such investment in Nigeria’s history, despite being rich in the resource.

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