Daily Trust

BUSINESS Downstream oil sector has $10bn investment­s deficit – Kachikwu Strong gasoline demand lifts oil by 1.5%

- By Daniel Adugbo

There is an absolute urgency for Nigeria to begin to address her infrastruc­tural problems, Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu said yesterday.

Referring specifical­ly to the downstream subsector of the oil and gas industry, Kachikwu stated that around $10 billion investment would be required in the next three decades to fix the country’s downstream infrastruc­ture deficit alone.

The minister said this in a keynote address at the 6th Sustainabi­lity in the Extractive Industries (SITEI) Conference convened by consulting firm CSR-inAction and other government agencies, held in Abuja.

SITEI, held yearly, has since 2012, served as a platform for stimulatin­g meaningful exchange of ideas and best practices in the oil industry.

Kachikwu said that the country has gotten to a critical point where its crude oil pipeline, refinery product conveyance pipeline and everything other downstream infrastruc­ture were in a state of decay.

Usually, refining of crude oil and processing of gas, as well as marketing and distributi­on of petroleum products make up Nigeria’s downstream sector.

The Chief Executive, CSR-in-Action Bekeme Masade said that this year’s conference intend to address the opportunit­ies and challenges that may be faced in the transition of local refiners and artisanal miners towards national and global competitiv­eness.

“This year’s SITEI Conference, with the theme “Building Local for Global”, is to facilitate thought leadership amongst the key stakeholde­rs in order to build our local refineries and mines and develop indigenous entreprene­urs not only for national developmen­t, but to achieve global competitiv­eness,” she said. FLIGHT

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