Hopes for
the Federal Government divesting its interest in the nation’s
refineries, as being expected were dashed, yesterday, as the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, said the facilities are not for
sale.
Rather than selling the refineries as
being expected, the Group Managing Director of the NNPC, Dr. Ibe
Kachikwu, said joint venture partners with established track records of
success in refining would be invited to support the running of the
refineries to make them more efficient.
Kachikwu made the disclosure during an
official tour of the Okrika Jetty and the Port Harcourt Refining Company
Limited, PHRC, in Rivers State, yesterday.
The NNPC boss also disclosed of plans by
the corporation to unbundle the Pipelines and Products Marketing
Company Ltd, PPMC, into three companies
Refining operations
Recall that for decades, the Federal
Government has been constantly urged to privatise the four state-owned
refineries with combined capacity of 445,000 barrels per day to make
them more efficient and profitable.
The refineries were bugged down by lack
of proper Turn Around Maintenance, TAM, which left them almost comatose
for decades, leading to huge wage bills on petroleum products
importation.
Ironically, colossal sums were wasted by
successive governments on TAM, which did not make much difference in
the refineries operations. For instance, the late Gen. Sani Abacha, was
said to have awarded a major contract of $215 million in 1997 for the
Kaduna Refinery, while the Abdulsalami Abubakar administration in 1998
set aside about $92 million for the refineries.
During his tenure, former President
Olusegun Obasanjo, between 1999 and 2003, also awarded contracts
estimated at between $254 million and $400.4 million for the
rehabilitation of the refineries and pipelines while in 2007, another
$54 million went into the TAM for Kaduna refinery alone.
Again, former President Goodluck
Jonathan commenced a $1.6 billion phased TAM, scheduled to begin in
January 2013 and ending October 2014, but which commenced in October
2014 and now rescheduled to end in March 2016.
Attempts by Obasanjo to privatise two of
the refineries in the past also failed, as the decision was revoked by
his successor, late President Umar Musa Yar’Adua.
Obasanjo in a recent television
interview recalled that the two refineries in Port Harcourt were sold to
business mogul, Aliko Dangote, leading a consortium of investors in a
$750 million deal.
However, the late Yar’Adua cancelled the sale due to “pressure” and refunded the money to the Dangote consortium.
Managing Director, PHRC, Dr. Bafred Audu
Enjugu, disclosed that the ongoing phased rehabilitation of the
refinery cost a little less than $10 million, adding that the job was
holistically carried out by indigenous engineers without any foreign
support.
Although Kachikwu did not give details
about the joint venture arrangement, he noted that the ongoing phased
rehabilitation of all the state owned refineries would be given an
accelerated vigour with the aim of reducing petroleum products
importation.
He added that at full capacity, all the
refineries could supply only 20 million litres of premium motor spirit
otherwise known as petrol on a daily basis.
PPMC and pipelines operations
With regard to unbundling the PPMC,
Kachikwu also said the marketing subsidiary of the NNPC was being split
into three to ensure lean, efficient and profitable operations.
He said the split would be along the
lines of: a pipelines company that would focus primarily on the
maintenance of the over 5000 kilometers pipelines of the Corporation; a
storage company that would maintain all the over 23 depots, and; a
products marketing company that would market and sell petroleum
products.
He added that efforts are in top gear to fix all the crude and petroleum products pipelines in the country.
He disclosed that the military will also
be enlisted in the protection of the pipelines, with the Nigerian Air
Force to providing aerial survey, the Nigerian Army Engineering Corps
fixing damages, while the Police and the Nigerian Navy will provide
marine surveillance for the network of pipelines.
He said the move will ensure that the
right sets of skills are rightly positioned and the numbers of leakages
in terms of pipeline breaks and products losses are reduced to the
barest minimum.
On her part, the Managing Director,
PPMC, Mrs. Esther Nnamdi-Ogbue, assured that the company would think
outside the box to provide solutions to all the challenges confronting
it.
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