Daily Trust

FG to announce refinery investors next month – Kachikwu

- By Daniel Adugbo FLIGHT SCHEDULE

The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Mr. Ibe Kachikwu, yesterday, said the Federal Government will announce the private investors in the refineries in the coming March.

Speaking at a session during the ongoing Nigerian Internatio­nal Petroleum Summit (NIPS), Kachikwu said the government was also considerin­g a policy that would compel multinatio­nal oil and gas firms operating in the company to build refineries in Nigeria.

The minister said, by that time, internatio­nal oil firms would no longer be allowed to ship out all the crude oil they produced in Nigeria.

The minister noted that emphasis would shift to local production of substantia­l portion of the crude oil produced in the country.

Daily Trust reports that no internatio­nal oil company (IOC) currently owns a refinery or refined petroleum products in the country. However, there have been recent commitment­s by the IOCs to build one or provide equity funding for the repair of the existing refineries.

“We would get to a point where Nigeria, definitely, would be a major supplier of refined petroleum products. It just has to happen. Nothing else makes sense,” the minister said.

“We are also saying directly to oil companies that a time would also come when we would not be open to see them move around all the crude oil they produce in Nigeria.

“We will like to see integrated refining and integrated processing here. It gives us more jobs and creates more investment,” Kachikwu said.

Speaking earlier, the minister said the challenge to oil companies had changed.

“Oil has got to provide the resources to power this country; jobs for our people; and the operationa­l environmen­t that is transparen­t enough for others to take Nigeria serious.

“My target over the next 10 years is for Nigeria to become self-sufficient in its own power provision, gravitate from crude oil as it where, to very refined, clean provision of fossils.

“Nigerian entities and Nigerian shareholde­rs would begin to move from the minuscule 10 per cent today to between 40 and 50 per cent of local investment­s.”

The minister said since the launch of the 7Big wins two years ago, the administra­tion had been able to change the funding capacity for the upstream that had energised investors in the upstream sector.

“Now we are beginning to see projects like Egina, $15bn; Zabazaba, potential $10bn; Bonga, potential $10bn, and the likes and so many other investment­s put at over $40bn potential investment­s over the next five years, if we do the right thing,” he asid.

 ??  ?? From left: Secretary General of the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries, Mohammed Sanusi Barkindo, Secretary to the Government of Federation, Boss Mustapha and the Minister of state for Petroleum Resources, Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu at the maiden...
From left: Secretary General of the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries, Mohammed Sanusi Barkindo, Secretary to the Government of Federation, Boss Mustapha and the Minister of state for Petroleum Resources, Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu at the maiden...

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