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Nigeria’s fuel needs would be 45 million litres per day by 2025- NNPC

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Abiodun Oba      |        

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation says the country’s fuel needs would be 45 million litres per day by 2025.

Mr Kragha Anibor, NNPC Chief Operating Officer, Refineries disclosed this at a panel session at the ongoing Nigerian International Petroleum summit, on Wednesday, in Abuja.

The panel discussed the topic “Refining, Transportation and petrochemical”.

He said that the Port Harcourt refinery had its last Turn Around Maintenance in 2000, Warri in 2004 and Kaduna in 2008.

Anibor said that government would not sell off the refineries without putting them in a shape that would enable financiers to come in with funds to revamp them for optimal performance.

According to him, government would continue to ensure adequate and best agreement with investors for the refineries to ensure the best for the industry.

He said that the major challenge of the corporation in ensuring that the refineries work was funding adding that refineries are not too old for effective refining operations.

He projected that when the refineries are in good shape they will be producing about 22.5 million litres per day.

He added that Dangote refinery coming on stream would be producing about 53 million litres per day which when added to the output of the refineries would be over the daily needs of the country.

He assured that efforts were on to ensure that Port Harcourt refinery would be up and running by 2020.

“We have contacted the original builders and they will soon come to start work,” he said.

However in his comment, Mr Chidi Izuwah, the Director-General, Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission, said that concessioning the refineries was the best way to get them working.

He said that the NNPC must embrace full concession model to tackle the problems with the refineries.

He said that the corporation must reactivate, upgrade, follow the industry standard, and add new technology to help the nation make money from the refineries.

“The government must play the role in bringing the private sector into the downstream sector to help the country benefit from the oil and gas sector,” he said

© 2019, maritimemag. All rights reserved.

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