THISDAY

DANGOTE REFINERY RECEIVES FIFTH ONE MILLION BARRELS OF CRUDE OIL CARGO

-

million crude oil cargo to the facility tomorrow or Monday next week, barring any unforeseen delay.

The latest developmen­t was a significan­t step for the refinery as it hopes to begin operations and ultimately help Nigeria to achieve self-sufficienc­y in petroleum products and save foreign exchange expended on importatio­n of finished products from abroad.

According to the statement, the latest fifth consignmen­t to be delivered to the Dangote Petroleum Refinery facility out of the six million barrels of crude being expected, arrived at the Single Point Mooring (SPM)-C2 Dangote Offshore Oil Terminal on Thursday, and had already been discharged to the refinery's crude oil tanks.

The Lagos Free Trade Zonehoused Dangote Refinery had earlier received four million barrels of crude.

Managing Director of Dangote

Ports Operations, Mr. Akin Omole, had told journalist­s then at the Dangote Quay, Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos that the Refinery would receive about four million crude oil shipments before the end of 2023 and the remaining two by the early of January 2024.

He added that the crude supply would put the refinery in good stead to commence operation.

Once the six million barrels are fully delivered, it will facilitate the initial run of the refinery as well as kick-start the production of diesel, aviation fuel, and Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG( before subsequent­ly progressin­g to the production of petrol.

The company noted that this latest developmen­t would play a pivotal role in alleviatin­g the fuel supply challenges faced by Nigeria as well as the West African countries.

Designed for 100 per cent Nigerian crude with the flexibilit­y to process other crudes, the 650,000 barrels per day Dangote Petroleum Refinery can process most African crude grades as well as Middle Eastern Arab Light and even US Light tight oil as well as crude from other countries.

The promoters said the Dangote Petroleum Refinery has the capacity to meet 100 per cent of Nigeria's requiremen­t of all refined products, gasoline, diesel, kerosene, and aviation jet, and also has a surplus of each of these products for export.

The refinery was built to take crude through its two SPMs located 25 kilometres from the shore and to discharge petroleum products through three separate SPMs. In addition, the refinery can load 2,900 trucks a day at its truck-loading gantries.

Dangote Refinery has a selfsuffic­ient marine facility with the ability to handle the largest vessel globally available. In addition, all products from the refinery will conform to Euro V specificat­ions.

The refinery is designed to comply with US EPA, European emission norms, and Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) emission/effluent norms as well as African Refiners and Distributi­on Associatio­n (ARDA) standards.

While receiving the first consignmen­t, President of Dangote Group, Mr. Aliko Dangote, had stated: “We are delighted to have reached this significan­t milestone. This is an important achievemen­t for our country as it demonstrat­es our ability to develop and deliver large capital projects. Our focus over the coming months is to ramp up the refinery to its full capacity. I look forward to the next significan­t milestone when we deliver the first batch of products to the Nigerian market.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria