NNPC: No refinery is functional in Nigeria now and can’t be soon
The Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, Mele Kyari, says there is no single refinery working at the moment in the country.
Kyari disclosed this to members of the House of Representatives Joint Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream).
The committee is investigating the increased in prices of diesel and cooking gas.
Kyari, on Tuesday in Abuja, said the country’s refineries were not working at the moment, adding that the situation was regrettable but the NNPC was doing something to bring the refineries back to work.
According to him: “The refineries will not come back tomorrow.
“There is a process going on.
“We have decided to do a quick fix for Warri refinery.”
He said that no one could guarantee the security of petroleum supply, adding that countries were preserving excess volume that they had in their kitty.
He said: “The world has never seen this kind of uncertainty.
“Today, countries are stockpiling products.
“Shortly before COVID-19, the world was already facing shortfall of three million barrels of supply of oil.”
Kyari said that there had been no control to manage the energy crisis across the world, stressing: “To guarantee energy security means you just make product available at anytime and by any cost.”
The GMD also disclosed that over 200 illegal refineries were being operated across the country.
He said that the solution was to restore crude oil production, adding that there was a massive intervention that was ongoing and by the end of July “we will restore production to a level that is reasonable.
“Many European countries are asking for rationing gas, they are asking people to alternate their Air Conditioning.
“Today, countries are toying with subsidy because prices are so high because they don’t think they can manage inflation associated with it.”
Farouk Ahmed, the Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum, said that the current geopolitical crisis in Ukraine and Russia had resulted in the increase of petroleum product.
Ahmed said this was because Russia was one of the major producers, adding that the war had affected petroleum products and it also affected all nations across the world and Nigeria was not an exemption.
He said that the landing cost of petroleum product was also a factor, adding that the high cost was not limited to Nigeria.
He said: “We need to see what can be done to alleviate the suffering of the people.
“If our refineries are back on stream and make foreign exchange available at the official rate of N400 per dollar and if our refineries come back, we can then get a reprieve.
“We also need to address the issue of vandalism.”
Rep. Abdullahi Gaya, Chairman, House Committee on Downstream, noted that Nigeria had refining capacity, but because none were functioning, it led the country to her sorry state.
Gaya said that there was need to find solution to the high cost of diesel and cooking gas in a bid to cushion the effect on the generality of Nigerians.
Some of the lawmakers who spoke, however, said that Kyari and Ahmed expressed helpless situation.
One of them said: “You have just presented a hopeless situation.
“You have the responsibility to proffer solution.
“If there is no solution, then why are we here?”
The lawmakers said that they were particularly concerned about the plight of Nigerians, as many of them collect a minimum wage of N30,000.
They noted that Nigeria may have to go the way of other nation by subsidising cooking gas.
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