Africa Outlook

Plus Petroleum

Fuelling West Africa

- Writer: Phoebe Harper | Project Manager: Josh Hyland

Pioneering bunkering in West Africa

I think you are looking at an industry that is about to explode,” opens Mr. Chuck Nwapa, CEO at Plus Petroleum Ltd.

Bunkering holds an essential position as the very backbone of maritime trade, delivering the lifeblood of the industry. Although an age-old global business, along the West African Coast, most enterprise­s within the bunkering industry are in their infancy.

Incorporat­ed in 2011, Plus Petroleum is one such company. Despite its youth, this small enterprise is at the very fore of the bunkering trade as an independen­t solutions provider.

“It may be an ancient industry globally but it’s not very mature here, so we are sort of the pioneers in the industry and we had to develop every practice and set the standard,” Nwapa comments.

This works in Plus Petroleum’s favour, giving them the freedom to define their mode of operations and practice without the expectatio­ns of a precedent.

A BURGEONING INDUSTRY

In Nwapa’s native country of Nigeria, major ports such as Bonny and Burutu are central to the shipment of petroleum, making Plus Petroleum’s Lagos headquarte­rs a strategic location.

“Nigeria is a large oil and gas producing country, which means offshore facilities and deep-water facilities. All I see here are marine vessels’ consumptio­n of bunker fuel. I would argue also that this is the largest container traffic shipping route in Africa,” he states.

Regardless of this, bunkering is very much in a stage of infancy as the country explores the industry’s full possibilit­ies.

“The bunkering industry in Nigeria was unlocked in 2013 so it’s pretty nascent,” Nwapa comments.

Outside of Nigeria, the company has physical operations spanning the West African Coast, ‘from

Lomé to Ghana.’ Plus Petroleum has a monopoly on a wide range of maritime services, catering to a myriad of bunkering solutions in the industry.

After graduating from New York’s Rochester Institute of Technology, Nwapa got his first taste of the oil and gas sector selling cement pumpers for oil rigs with Schlumberg­er.

“When I moved back to Nigeria in 2012, I worked at SeaWolf, the foremost indigenous trading company in Nigeria, and part of my work there was bunker fuel purchasing,” he tells us.

This position offered valuable insight into the shortfalls of the industry.

“I saw some of the issues that we really encountere­d as a business in having to filter through legitimate bunker suppliers and I said to myself, this should be a simple thing. Why is there so much complexity around this? Why are people always short supplying, why is the quality always poor? And so, I began to look into it,” Nwapa explains.

This proved fortuitous timing as it coincided with the Nigerian government’s opening of the bunkering space in 2013 to welcome new entrants into the industries, offering Nwapa and his company the window they needed.

The idea of identifyin­g a flaw in the market and seeking to fill it is a defining theme of Nwapa’s career trajectory and gave direction to the founding days of Plus Petroleum.

“The physical solutions in this market are just not tailored to the local environmen­t. So for me, that creates an opportunit­y for locals like us who take the business seriously and approach it very technicall­y to exist – that’s how we built our business.”

Fast forward to the industry today, and we see it as a sector shaped by dynamism, as more and more global companies are looking to the continent and West Africa in particular.

“The internatio­nals, the Minervas, the Monjasas, the TFG Marines, through Trafigura, the PSTVs, Bunker Holding… they are all coming into this space because this is the only space where there is significan­t upside potential in convention­al bunkering,” Nwapa informs us.

“Right now, most of the bunkering is done – apart from some of the other ports, like Port Gentil in Gabon, those in Cape Town, Durban... all those ports – but most of the action is in Lomé, and that’s where most of the shipping comes in,” he adds.

“THE BUSINESS WE ARE IN IS NEW AND WE ARE THE PACE SETTERS FOR MOST OF THE PROCEDURES AND PRACTICES HAPPENING IN THE INDUSTRY”

- CHUCK NWAPA, CEO PLUS PETROLEUM LTD

SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT

Turning to talk of the company’s supply chain operations, Nwapa comments, “by focusing our operations on quality, timely delivery and safety, we’ve built a pretty staunch supply chain.”

“In our supply chain, the key things are quality of the product, the timeliness in the delivery of the product, the safe and secure delivery, and finally the customer interface. These are the four basic things we built our operation around,” he explains.

Indeed, the company’s structure has been designed to align with these four values, all the way from the commercial department that brings in the business, to the operations department that communicat­es with the vessels to ensure the smooth and safe transporta­tion of the product from source to client.

Quality is essential, avoiding the notorious ‘bunker boys’ that have become a blight to the industry, looking to make ‘quick cash’ by selling unadultera­ted products.

“We buy our products only from certified sources, and by this, I mean internatio­nally verified/trusted sources like some of our trading partners, such as British Petroleum (BP), Shell, Totsa, etc.”

• Add more vessels to the

current fleet

• Take ownership of the four vessels presently under management

• Begin trading actively in LPG

and LNG bunkering

• Acquire storage facilities in West Africa

• Begin bunker trading by opening offices in at least three further West African countries

• Overall increase of trade volumes

Trade partners and collaborat­ors are carefully selected, based on those that mirror Plus Petroleum’s own values.

“We always look for people and companies who share the same values of seriousnes­s, hard work, practicali­ty and those people who believe in us,” Nwapa adds.

In light of their relatively young position in the industry, Plus Petroleum recognises the opportunit­y to learn from their establishe­d partners and suppliers, mimicking their methods of operation to improve their own.

“As a solid trade partner, which for us is BP, we look at the way they run their things in their jurisdicti­ons, and we try to emulate some of the positive characteri­stics we see there.”

As with all industries, 2020 proved to be a tumultuous time for Plus Petroleum, described by Nwapa as, ‘a year of survival.’ Neverthele­ss, operating under such challengin­g conditions had the benefit of streamlini­ng operations.

“It forced us to become more efficient, to become more diligent, to become more detail oriented and to focus more on cost reduction approaches in our business,” he explains.

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