The Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, said his refinery has secured a licence to refine more than 300,000 barrels of Nigerian crude per day and will begin to process gasoline soon.
In an interview in Riyadh on the sidelines of the Saudi-Nigeria business roundtable, he noted that the refinery does not want to start with foreign goods but with Nigerian crude.
The refinery was supposed to start production in August but missed that target in addition to several others over the years.
But Dangote insists that his refinery will start producing “very very soon.”
He also explained that the refinery’s first priority is to supply gasoline to Nigeria before exporting to elsewhere, including the West African region.
The Dangote Petroleum Refinery was importing crude oil and expected its first cargo in about two weeks, according to the Executive Director, Dangote Group, Devakumar Edwin.
The report stated that though the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, NNPCL trades crude oil on behalf of Nigeria, in an interview with S&P Global Commodity Insights at the time, Edwin revealed that the NNPCL had committed its crude to other entities.
The Dangote refinery boss did not disclose the other entities receivingthe oil company’s crude, but the NNPCL had earlier disclosed in August that it had entered into a $3bn crude oil-for-loan deal with African Export-Import Bank.
The 650,000 barrel-a-day facility, which is expected to produce 27 million litres of diesel, 11 million litres of kerosene and nine million litres of jet fuel, will receive crude from other producers in Nigeria, as well as the country’s state oil company, said Dangote, whose fortune estimated at $16.2bn by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Nigeria increased its oil output by 60,000 barrels per day last month, reaching 1.49 million barrels per day — the highest in almost two years.
The country has launched a new grade of crude called Nembe through a joint venture, as the nation ramps up its oil output.
The Nembe crude stream is expected to be managed and marketed by a joint venture between state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) and oil firm Aiteo Eastern E&P Co. Ltd.
Crude theft and attacks on pipelines in the Niger Delta have crippled the OPEC member’s ability to meet its quota, meaning that the Nigerian government has been struggling to meet its revenue targets.