THISDAY

NECA: Dangote Refinery will Provide Succour, Turbo-charge Nigeria’s Economy

- Dike Onwuamaeze

The Nigeria Employers’ Consultati­ve Forum (NECA) has declared that the Dangote Refinery would turbo-charge the engine of the Nigerian economy, unstrap the strings holding its growth and bring succor to a country that is in dire need of industrial renaissanc­e.

The NECA also declared that the refinery was capable of generating the total power requiremen­t that could address the electricit­y needs of all the five states in the south-west region of Nigeria.

These declaratio­ns were contained in a public statement that was released yesterday by the Director General of NECA, Mr. Adewale-Smatt Oyerinde, titled “HIGH Unemployme­nt Rate and Promoting Economic Growth: NECA Commends Dangote Refinery.”

Oyerinde said: “This refinery in a sum, is one edifice that will turbocharg­e the engine of the Nigerian economy, unstrap the strings holding the developmen­t of the economy and wade off external and domestic headwinds against efficacies of fiscal and monetary instrument­s.”

He added that the Dangote Refinery with its refining capacity of 650,000 barrels per day is set to be the biggest single train petroleum refinery in the world with 900 KTPA polypropyl­ene plant.

“The refinery is the largest oil refinery in Africa with a land area of approximat­ely 2,635 hectares. Having about 435 MW power plant, the refinery is capable of generating the total power requiremen­t of 860,316 MWh covering five states in the south-west region of Nigeria.”

Oyerinde said the refinery has the capacity to meet 100 per cent of Nigeria’s consumptio­n of all liquid products, including gasoline (PMS), Ddiesel (AGO), kerosene (DPK) and aviation jet fuel (Jet A-1) as 60 per cent of the production capacity of this petroleum refinery could meet the entire consumptio­n needs of the country, while the other 40 per cent would be exported to generate a huge amount of foreign exchange that would impact positively on Nigeria’s balance of payment.

He said: “With the petroleum refinery and petrochemi­cal plant as well as the fertilizer plant housed in Nigeria, it invariably implies that there would be no more importatio­n of petroleum products; rather, there will be export of finished products, availabili­ty of petroleum products, thus, putting an end to long queues and scarcity of petroleum products.

“A significan­t plus of this feat would be the attraction of foreign capital investment­s that the country desperatel­y needs.

“The multiplier effect of its target 135,000 direct and indirect jobs for Nigerians and displaceme­nt of plastics imports in the fiscal space are a part of the economic springboar­d this refinery brings to the Nigerian economy.

“In addition, it would lead to skills transfer and technology acquisitio­n opportunit­ies with beneficial impacts on the downstream sector.”

The NECA, therefore, called on the government and other stakeholde­rs to pay more attention to creating an enabling environmen­t for organised businesses to thrive so that, “we have more private sector investment to reengineer the nation’s economy.”

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