Ernest Chinwo in Port Harcourt, Chineme Okafor in Abuja, Adibe Emenyonu in Warri
Minister of State for Petroleum, Ibe
Kachikwu, has said the lingering fuel shortages in major cities across
the country would gradually ease off with coming on stream of
refineries, which require about $700 million to upgrade and operate at
90 per cent capacity.
Kachikwu, who noted this when he
re-commissioned the 46-km Escravos-Warri pipeline, however warned that
the long-term solutions would take time.
According to him, “It is going to take
time because we are addressing a long-term solution. There is a lot of
policy issues coming in to ensure that we resolve this and we would not
need to go back to the pipes over again.
Kachikwu, who also inaugurated the
Bonny–Eleme Refinery crude pipeline to formally bring it on stream,
added: “When the upgrade and repairs, led by the foreign investors, with
our joint team, are concluded, our capacity will move from about 50 per
cent to about 90 per cent, resulting in movement from 12 million litres
to slightly in excess of 20 million litres production per day. The
co-located refineries that we have also advertised, which will be
private sector-led, by the time they are attained in about two years,
there will be excess of 750,000 barrels refined petroleum production
capacity per day.
“Our hope is that by 2018, fuel
importation will be reduced by at least 60 per cent, because of the
upgrade that would have taken place. By 2019, when the co-located
refineries are in place, we will actually be exiting importation and
begin to export refined petroleum products. That is the strategic way.
That is what we are working on.”
He called on Nigerians to collectively tackle the issue of pipeline vandalism.
Kachikwu at the event, also disclosed
both Warri and Kaduna refineries which had been cut out from supply of
crude oil due to the vandalised pipeline are now receiving crude
simultaneously for the first time in many years.
He said the Warri refinery had already started working while Kaduna will start production at the end of the month.
According to him, this means that for
the first time in many years, the nation’s three refineries at Port
Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna, as well as major crude pipelines in the
country will be working at the same time.
Kachikwu stated in a statement from the
spokesman of the NNPC, Mallam Garuba Deen Muhammad, that the Escravos
terminal was the heartbeat of the downstream sector of the country’s
petroleum industry, adding that it was critical to local supply of
finished petroleum product as both refineries in Warri and Kaduna are
majorly fed from Escravos crude stock.
“The challenge of this country is the
challenge of focus and stewardship. For the first time in many years the
three refineries are going to be working and it will help in a great
deal with the issue of fuel supply and distribution across the country
and it will go a long way to manage the fuel crisis,” said Kachikwu.
The minister enjoined Nigerians to be more patient as the NNPC was working hard to end fuel shortage across the country.
On that, he stated: “I appreciate the
patience of Nigerians and I am committed and focused to make petrol
available to all nooks and crannies of Nigeria.”
It is equally understood that the
pipeline which has some of its axis underwater especially at challenging
terrains to make it quite difficult to vandalise, was built by Ocean
Marine Solution.
Its chairman, Captain Hosa Okunbor, told
journalists that the completion of the multi-billion naira project was
made possible by President Muhammadu Buhari, who insisted on bringing
total reform in the oil and gas sector.
He noted that this is first time in the last 10 years that crude will be delivered to the Warri refinery through pipelines.
Okunbor who disclosed that his firm was
also undertaking similar project between Bonny and Port Hacourt
refinery, expressed strong confidence that with three refineries Warri,
Port Harcourt and Kaduna, refining petroleum, the scarcity of the
petroleum industry products would soon be a thing of the past.
“Today, we are very glad that for the
first time over 10 years we are able to deliver the crude line between
Escravos and Warri and crude is now flowing through the pipeline which
was impossible over the years…
“For me, am so glad because sometimes
there are certain things you achieve that are more than money. We have
created serious value for this country using our own resources.
He added: “The community are able to
cooperate with us. We used carrot and stick approach and our security
surveillance and also the contract of actually doing the job and
replacing the contract. It was very tedious and sometime we almost got
killed and threat to our lives which informs why you see all these
security around us. We have put our lives on the line to deliver
Escravos, we have also delivered Bonny to Port Harcourt and today there
is crude in Port Harcourt that is flowing to the refinery and the same
thing with Warri refinery.
“As a company it was a big gamble to do
this. We spent billions without a penny from NNPC but today we have
cured the problem. A lot of people did not understand, some wrote
petitions that we were given contract, at a point my name was going to
be soiled and I believe in my name. I am a role model to my family and
the people on the street and that is what gave the will to deliver
this.”
Kachikwu, who stated that the daily
consumption of premium motor spirit (pms) currently stands at about 45
million litres, pointed out that the refineries now operating at 60 per
cent capacity could only produce 12 million litres. He however added
that there was need to upgrade the refineries to produce at 90 per cent
minimum to produce about 20 million litres.
He said the corporation was already sourcing for foreign investors to raise the necessary funds.
He however said the foreign investors
were not coming to run the refineries but only to provide the needed
capital and technical assistance.
“We have signed the advertisements for
investors to come in. There is no confusion about what they are coming
to do; they are not coming to run the refinery. They are coming to
provide funds to take our performance on these refineries to 90 per cent
and to provide us with technical skills. So, the areas of intervention
will be funding and technical support,” he said.
He explained that, “Port Harcourt is
back in production, Warri is back in production. Kaduna today is
receiving and will soon be back in production. It is something of joy.
These are problems we set out to correct and we are correcting one by
one.
“I thank Nigerians for their patience
and I urge them to remain resilience, support what we are doing because
this is the only way to change the system. We may see all kinds of
publications, all kinds of attacks; I don’t focus on these, I focus on
the results and the results are coming out.
“Total investment for that is up to $700
million and we don’t have that. Let us be honest about it. So, the best
thing to do is to find a very creative way to bring in investors, who
will come in, work with our team here, who have the skills, reactivate
and upgrade facilities in this place and help us provide technical
support and we will pay through the flow-out of the refined products
over time.”
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