NNPC Limited and Dangote Refineries Eye Crude-Sale, Product Buy-Back Deal -
The Nigerian National Petroleum
Company Limited and the Dangote Petroleum Refinery are wrapping up
discussions on crude oil sales by NNPC to the Dangote refinery in naira
and the buy-back of refined petroleum products from the $20bn plant in
naira.
Parties in the deal may conclude discussions next
week, the Vice President of Oil and Gas at Dangote Industries Limited,
Devakumar Edwin, declared on Thursday during a space session organised
by Nairametrics on X.
The Dangote official also revealed
that oil marketers had continued to boycott the diesel and aviation fuel
produced by the Lekki-based plant, stressing that they had also
reported the refinery to President Bola Tinubu that the plant’s
low-priced diesel was counter-productive to oil marketers’ businesses.
Edwin
further revealed that NNPC had demanded to oversee the production of
refined products at the Dangote refinery, based on the fact that the
national oil company would supply crude to the plant.
In August
2024, The PUNCH reported that the Federal Government disclosed that the
sales of crude oil to Dangote refinery and other local refineries would
commence on October 1, 2024.
The Minister of Finance and
Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, announced this during a
meeting with the Implementation Committee established to implement the
decision.
“The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of
the Economy, Mr Wale Edun, today led the Implementation Committee
meeting on the transition to crude oil sales in naira.
“The
meeting reviewed progress on key initiatives, including the upcoming
commencement of naira payments for crude oil sales to the Dangote
Refinery starting October 1, 2024,” the finance ministry had stated in a
post on its official X handle in August.
It also stated that the
Executive Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, Dr Zacch
Adedeji, and the Chairman of the Technical Sub-Committee reported that
“The first PMS delivery from Dangote is expected next month (September)
under existing agreements.”
Providing updates on this during the
space session on Thursday, the Vice President at Dangote Industries,
Edwin, noted that discussions were advancing on naira transactions for
crude purchase and product buy-back.
Naira transactions
Edwin
said, “Now we are still discussing with the government to give us the
crude in naira. The discussions have been going on. It has not yet been
concluded. When we buy the crude from them in naira, they will take the
products back from us in naira, that’s where we are. We are still in
discussions.
“So now whatever we are producing, they will buy
back from us. In fact, NNPC has told us they will have a team of six to
10 people permanently stationed inside our refinery. They even told us
we should give them office space because they are going to give the
crude.
“They are going to monitor the production and then they
will buy it back in naira. So, this is where we are and we are waiting
for the conclusion of the discussions. Hopefully, by next week, if it
gets concluded, we can kick off.”
Edwin stated that the
President of Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, was the one who
insisted on dealing with the Nigerian government in naira because of the
foreign exchange challenges confronting the country.
“When it
came to petrol, we told the Presidency that if we were going to continue
to import crude, our cost of production would be high and of course,
our quality is very high. So, we will continue to export and manage the
business. Then they sat with us and said, ‘Okay, we will try and give
you crude allocation and you please produce and sell to us the products
which you are producing out of the crude’. We said, yes.
“Then
they said, can you sell it in naira? We said, no, we are a free zone
company. We will be normally selling in dollars. They said, no, the
country is in acute scarcity of dollars. So, please, we will supply the
crude to you in naira. Sell the product to us in naira. Though
internally, including me, some of us objected to the idea. My president
clearly said we are going to accept this because the country is badly in
need of foreign exchange.
“The currency value is dropping every
day. Yes, I know I am going to take a loss because by the time we sell
it in naira and convert it to dollars, (we are not even getting the
dollars). By the time we convert, the currency may become weaker. So, we
know he (Dangote) is going to lose. He said, I’m willing to take the
loss in the interest of the country. I don’t mind, but the country is in
bad shape. Somebody has to take certain risks. I’m willing to face the
loss to whatever extent it is. So, that is how we agreed,” Edwin
explained.
Marketers boycott plant
He also
revealed that importers of petroleum products and marketers reported the
Dangote refinery to President Tinubu after the refinery crashed the
price of diesel.
According to him, over 95 per cent of petroleum product importers in Nigeria are not buying products from the Dangote refinery.
He
said the refinery struggles to sell about 29 tankers of diesel per day
due to low patronage from local petroleum product importers.
As a result of poor local patronage, the refinery, he said, exports most of its diesel and aviation fuel.
He said the Dangote refinery has imported around 57 shiploads of crude, as local supply from the NNPC remains limited.
“Petroleum
product marketers in Nigeria have written to President Bola Tinubu,
complaining that the refinery’s local diesel prices, which have dropped
from N1,200 to N1,000 and now to N900 per litre, are negatively
impacting their businesses,” Edwin stated.
However, he
maintained that despite the challenges, 44 per cent of the refinery’s
petrol production capacity is sufficient to meet Nigeria’s local demand.
He
said, “You can come to the refinery and see, I can load 2,900 tankers
daily. The whole country is empty, not one tanker. Whereas, where I can
load 2,900 a day, not one tanker is being loaded. So they want to
continue to import. So they are just blockading us.
“Number
two, they (marketers) even wrote to His Excellency, the President. I
have a copy I can share with all of you, where they wrote to the
President, ‘Oh, Dangote Group came in and started producing diesel. They
dropped the price the first time, they dropped the price the second
time, and it is disturbing us.’
“So the interest of the
refinery was to produce locally and try to supply at a reasonable
price. So, we gave a reasonable price, we dropped and then we dropped
the second time and they wrote to His Excellency, the President saying
we are dropping the price and disturbing the market. So, they refused to
buy from us.”
Currently, the official revealed that
around 29 tankers are lifting fuel from the depot of other importers
daily, neglecting local production.
Earlier, while speaking
on the Brekete Family live show on Monday, Edwin said the Dangote petrol
will be exported if the NNPC and other petroleum dealers in the country
refuse to patronise it.
Asked if the petrol would be sold
locally, Edwin replied, “There has been a kind of a blockade from
lifting our products within the country. The traders have been trying to
blockade, and so now we have been exporting our petroleum products.
PMS, we are ready to pump in as much as possible to the country.
“But
if the traders or NNPC are not buying the product we will end up
exporting the PMS as we are doing with the aviation jet and diesel,” he
declared.
Edwin expressed surprise that the company started
facing different challenges it never expected when the refinery was set
to commence operations.
He recalled that the philosophy initially
was to add value to the raw materials available in the country,
regretting that Nigeria is still exporting crude and importing refined
petroleum products after over three decades.
Despite having a
gantry that can load 2,900 tankers per day, Edwin disclosed that the
refinery has not loaded up to five per cent of the gantry’s capacity
owing to low local patronage.
“Go and see our product gantry, we
can load 86 tankers at any given time. We can load 2,900 tankers of
petroleum products every day, but we are not even loading five per cent,
because those who are interested in the trading business, feel that
probably this local production is going to affect their established
interest, so they are not allowing our products to be sold locally. They
are not coming to lift our products. So, what are we doing? We are
exporting the products.
“Yes, the refinery can survive, we can
import the crude, we can export petroleum products, and we can survive.
But is that why he invested in the refinery?” he queried.
NNPC tackles lawmaker
In
another development, the spokesperson of NNPC Olufemi Soneye, tackled
Dr Muiz Banire, SAN, and former Commissioner of Transport and
Environment, Lagos State, for contending in his column in a newspaper
publication (not The PUNCH) that NNPC is the black hole of Nigeria.
“At
this critical intersection, the task for all well-meaning Nigerians
should be how to find lasting solutions to the mischiefs in the oil
sector and not to look for scapegoats, as Dr Banire has done.
“According
to Banire, Nigeria has been experiencing fuel scarcity since 1973 on
the back of fuel subsidy and the NNPC Ltd is responsible for it. The
assertion that the NNPC is responsible for this state of affairs is
moot. The policy of fuel subsidy is not the preserve of the NNPC.
“Various
administrations over the years have thought it wise to subsidize the
cost of petroleum products for citizens. They came up with different
methods of doing that. The role of NNPC Ltd has been to implement the
policy as decided by the government. At a point when the various
administrations felt that the fuel subsidy policy had become a burden
that should be done away with, they made it known. NNPC Ltd, as the
national oil company, implemented it.
“This was the case in 2012
when the nation went up in protest against the government’s decision to
remove fuel subsidies. The same scenario repeated itself in 2019 when
the then-administration came up with the policy to remove fuel
subsidies. NNPC Ltd is neither responsible for the policy of fuel
subsidy nor its removal,” Soneye stated.
Source: https://punchng.com/NNPC-Dangote-eye-crude-sale-product-buy-back-deal
(Quote) (Report) 1 Like (Like) (Share)
Comments
Post a Comment