Nov. 18, 2013
NewsRescue– The caption may read like a joke, but it is sadly true. They just did it with PHCN, refurbished for 3 trillion of Nigeria’s money, then dashed to Transcorp boys for 4oo billion. The cabal have had their eyes on the nation’s refineries for so long. Dangote and Otedola bought it during Obasanjo’s era, but Yar’Adua overturned the sale. Now, under the greatest looting government in history, Diezani is ready to own Nigeria’s refineries through her Cabal co-conspirators, and Nigerians will just be looking.
Read from DailyTrust
Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer, plans to begin privatising its four state-owned oil refineries before the end of the first quarter, Petroleum Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke said.
“We would like to see major infrastructural entities such as refineries moving out of government hands into the private sector,” Alison-Madueke said in an interview with Bloomberg TV Africa in London. “Government does not want to be in the business of running major infrastructure entities and we haven’t done a very good job at it over all these years.”
A presidential audit of the facilities last year recommended their sale due to inadequate government funding and “sub-optimal performance.” The refineries, which have a combined 445,000 barrel-a-day capacity, should be privatized within 18 months, according to the report submitted to President Goodluck Jonathan in November 2012.
While Nigeria is also Africa’s top crude exporter and the most populous with more than 160 million people, it relies on fuel imports to meet more than 70 percent of its needs. Its state-owned plants operate at a fraction of their capacity because of poor maintenance and aging equipment. The West African nation exchanges 60,000 barrels a day of crude for products with Trafigura Beheer BV and a similar amount with Societe Ivoirienne de Raffinage’s refinery in Ivory Coast, according to Nigeria National Petroleum Corp.
“We are right now undergoing a major turnaround maintenance program” of the refineries, Alison-Madueke said.
Improvements to the two-unit 210,000 barrel-a-day Port Harcourt refinery, the country’s biggest, will be completed by the end of the year, to be followed by enhancements at the Warri and Kaduna sites in 2014, according to the NNPC. Warri has a daily processing capacity of 125,000 and Kaduna 110,000 barrels.