The four refineries belonging to the
Federal Government may end up as scrap once the Dangote Group begins
processing crude oil at its refinery in Lagos by 2019, the Minister of
State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, has said.
According to him, if the country fails
to take urgent steps to revamp the refineries in Port Harcourt, Warri
and Kaduna, the facilities may be worthless in three years’ time after
the Dangote refinery must have come on stream.
Kachikwu, who spoke at a stakeholders’
consultative forum on the draft National Gas Policy and National Oil
Policy in Abuja on Thursday, stressed that Nigeria had no other option
than to ensure that its refineries work in the shortest possible time.
The minister said, “Refineries will have
to work. It is really not an option anymore. And not only should they
work, they have to work very quickly. The reality is that if we do not
privatise and we do not concede them, which is not what we are doing
now, then we have a responsibility to find private capital to get them
to where they should be.
“This is because if we do not get them
to work, in 2019, I can assure you that if the Dangote system works
well, we will have scrap, we won’t have refineries, because by then it
will be too late to do anything.”
Kachikwu urged stakeholders to work
together in bringing down the cost of production in the industry to a
reasonable and manageable level, noting that crude oil was still being
produced at $27 per barrel in Nigeria.
This production cost, according to him,
is high as no decent country will produce at that amount at a period
when the oil price is unpredictable.
“We are going to try to get those figures below $18 per barrel,” he said.
On the total deregulation of the
downstream oil sector, Kachikwu said, “At every given time in the
history of every country, you will always have partial deregulation. The
reason being that you have to catch up each time and make an amendment,
and even if it is just one day, you may have some level of subsidy for
that one or two days before it is removed.
“What is important is the goal post,
where are we headed? Where we are headed is to try and free the industry
so that it can do its own rules and set its own prices. There are few
mechanics that we still need to get in place properly. We can’t forget
the fact that we still have foreign exchange challenges and that income
to the government is still very tight.
“You still have to find a way to balance
that. But what is important is what the objective is. And the objective
is still to fully deregulate.”
The minister stated that more policies
and activities had to be fine-tuned in the petroleum industry to make it
run smoothly like in other countries where the sector was being
successfully run, adding that Nigeria would exit Joint Venture cash
calls before December this year.
He said, “We have dealt with subsidy
removal. We began the process of exiting Joint Venture Cash Call.
Hopefully, before December, we will get to a point where Joint Venture
cash call would be a thing of the past.”
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