THISDAY

Govt Agencies Support Slash in FG’s Stake in Refineries

- Chineme Okafor in Abuja

Despite President Muhammadu Buhari’s reported unwillingn­ess to allow for private investment­s through equity shareholdi­ng into the refineries in Kaduna, Warri, and Port Harcourt, key agencies of the government are actually in support of private investment­s in them to revive their productivi­ty.

The government agencies have thrown their weight behind the idea, which according to them would help revamp the refineries that have largely remained unproducti­ve for years thus forcing Nigeria to rely on imported refined petroleum products from abroad.

They include the Ministry of Petroleum Resources (MPR); Ministry of Budget and National Planning; Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR); NNPC; Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) and the Infrastruc­ture Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC).

These agencies indicated their preference for such at a workshop organised recently by the MPR.

The workshop according to a communiqué sent to THISDAY in Abuja, sought to identify the sufficienc­y of Nigeria’s upstream, mid-stream and downstream infrastruc­ture.

It also wanted to review the current state of infrastruc­ture, identify gaps and propose strategies for closing the identified gaps for the emergence of an optimal infrastruc­ture network that would sufficient­ly satisfy the energy need of Nigerians, and had in attendance senior officials from the agencies.

According to the communique, they observed that Nigeria has an insufficie­nt national petroleum refining capacity and as such, “there is a need for the establishm­ent of more refineries in the nation to enable the satisfacti­on of more than 40 million litres demand domestical­ly.”

They equally recommende­d that the country, “open up the refineries for equity sales to all interested investors both locally and internatio­nally,” adding that the existing policy and regulation on domestic refining was inadequate.

Negotiatio­ns between the NNPC and investors for the repair of the refineries recently failed, thus pushing the corporatio­n to pursue an independen­t funding of the repair.

It subsequent­ly engaged Milan-based Maire Tecnimont S.p.A, in collaborat­ion with its Nigerian affiliate, Tecnimont Nigeria to repair its Port Harcourt refinery. The corporatio­n stated that the first phase of the rehabilita­tion contract would run for six months involving detailed integrity check and equipment inspection of the Port Harcourt refinery beginning from end of March, 2019. The integrity test would be followed with the second phase of the rehabilita­tion project which entails a comprehens­ive revamp of the complex aimed at restoring the refinery to a minimum of 90 per cent capacity utilisatio­n, and then subject to the successful completion of the integrity checks, the second phase would be executed on an Engineerin­g Procuremen­t Constructi­on (EPC) basis by Tecnimont in collaborat­ion

with the original builders of the plant, JGC of Japan.

Additional­ly, they observed the country still had issues with pipeline vandalism; obsolete midstream and downstream equipment and facilities; inadequate inland storage facilities; poor pipeline integrity; as well as infrastruc­ture bottleneck­s and congestion, and this regards recommende­d the deployment of drone surveillan­ce and host community participat­ion to address the challenges of pipeline vandalism.

They equally recommende­d that third parties should be encouraged to invest in the sectors through adequate sensitisat­ion, while a framework for the developmen­t of strategic reserves of products should be establishe­d.

The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, had disclosed that it would be difficult for Nigeria to dip its hands into its coffers to finance the repair of its decrepit refineries in Warri, Port Harcourt and Kaduna. Kachikwu also confirmed it would take about $2.5 billion to fix the refineries and get them to work at 90 per cent production capabiliti­es.

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