Sunday Tribune

Plan to cut reliance on fuel imports

- Emsie Ferreira

NEW ENERGY Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi said on Friday she would seek approval from the cabinet to initiate the building of a new oil refinery to reduce South Africa’s reliance on fuel imports.

“I have come to the conclusion that our country, and indeed the sub-region, is ready for a new refinery investment,” Kubayi said in her budget vote speech to Parliament.

“By the time any new refinery is completed, the country will be importing in excess of a third of its fuel requiremen­ts. This high dependence on import of finished product by a major economy like ours located at the southern-most tip of the continent is not in the interest of energy security and does not advance local industrial­isation.

“I will therefore, in the third quarter of this financial year, be approachin­g cabinet for a firm decision in this regard.”

Kubayi said she would prefer the project to be a venture between the public sector and a private partner involved in crude oil production. However, the majority stake in the refinery must be South African.

The minister conceded there was a glut of refined oil products on the market at present but said it was not in South Africa’s interest to be heavily reliant on imports given currency fluctuatio­ns. She said issues of national sovereignt­y also came into play.

Restructur­ing

In her maiden budget speech, the minister also announced her department would restructur­e the Central Energy Fund (CEF) to improve ways in which its subsidiari­es were run.

“We will, in the coming months, be embarking on the restructur­ing of the CEF group and create a model that makes it easy for accountabi­lity and ensures the entity operates efficientl­y and in a profession­al manner.”

The exercise will see the transfer of African Exploratio­n Mining and Finance Corporatio­n (AEMFC) and the troubled Petroleum Agency of SA to the Mineral Resources Department in the current financial year.

Kubayi said department director-general Thabane Zulu would act as chief executive of the Strategic Fuel Fund on a secondment basis.

“This is to ensure that we are able to implement the recommenda­tions in light of the report on the selling of strategic fuel reserves for the country,” Kubayi added.

She recently confirmed that part of the country’s strategic fuel reserves were sold off on her predecesso­r’s watch in late 2015. The sale is the subject of an investigat­ion.

Tina Joemat-pettersson, who was axed in the March cabinet reshuffle, had denied a sale, saying it had been a rotation of stock of the Strategic Fuel Fund. The sale caused an outcry, partly because the stock was disposed off at the low price of $29 a barrel. – ANA

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