Nigeria loads first crude at huge new Dangote refinery | Business

[ad_1]

Nigeria loads first crude at huge new Dangote refinery

LAGOS, Dec 9, 2023 (BSS/AFP) – Nigeria’s huge oil refinery built by Africa’s

richest man Aliko Dangote received its first crude deliveries, the company

said on Saturday, in the latest step to starting up the delayed megaproject.

Billed as Africa’s largest of its type, the 650,000 barrel-per-day Dangote

refinery could be a game changer for Nigeria’s economy when fully operational

by helping ending the country’s reliance on fuel imports.

Dangote Petroleum Refinery received an initial shipment of one million

barrels of crude from Agbami deepwater field and began loading on Friday, the

company spokesman said Saturday.

The initial run will be for production of diesel and aviation fuel before

moving on to petrol output.

Dangote gave no date for the actual start of refinery production.

Though one of Africa largest oil producers and the continent’s top economy,

Nigeria relies almost totally on imported fuel and diesel because of a lack

of refining capacity.

Nigeria swaps crude worth billions of dollars for petrol that it had

subsidised for years to keep prices cheap for its domestic market.

Fuel imports and subsidies caused a huge drain on foreign exchange when

Nigeria was struggling with dwindling oil revenues and foreign currency

shortages.

“Dangote Petroleum Refinery can meet 100 per cent of Nigeria’s requirement of

all refined products, gasoline, diesel, kerosene, and aviation jet, and also

have surplus of each of these products for export,” the company said in a

statement.

The facility sits on 2,635 hectares (6,500 acres) of land at the Lekki Free

Zone on the edge of Lagos city and cost an estimated $19bn, according to

local media.

The refinery, first scheduled to open in 2021, was officially inaugurated by

then president Muhammadu Buhari earlier this year and was supposed to begin

operations in June.

Since coming to office in May, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has ended the

long-standing fuel subsidy and floated the naira currency in economic reforms

he says will attract foreign investment and build long term growth.

The former Lagos governor has called on Nigerians to be patient with his

reform programme as the initial impact saw fuel prices soar, a sharp fall in

the value of the naira and an increase in the cost of living.

 


 

 

 



[ad_2]

Source link