- Minister of State for Petroleum
Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, said it is a "shame" and a "fraud" that
Nigeria still import petroleum products
-
Kachikwu said Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) must meet
its target of ending petroleum products’ importation between 2018 and
2019
Minister of State for
Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, has said that it is demeaning for
Nigeria and the country economy system for Nigerian to still be
importing petroleum products.
He said
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) must meet its target
of ending petroleum products’ importation between 2018 and 2019
Kachikwu said: “Importation of
petroleum products will have to cease. There’s absolutely no reason why a
country with the resources that we have will continue to import
petroleum products. It is a shame on this country, it is a fraud on the
system and we are going to end it.
“We
are committed to the 2018/2019 template, because it is something we
have to do. The refineries are not performing to capacity and it is not
going to be easy, but we have to end importation of petroleum products.
“If we do that, the downstream will
survive; but if we don’t, then by the first quarter of 2020, the Dangote
refinery will come on board. And if that happens, it then means we will
have scraps in our hands as refineries. Therefore, there’s the urgency
of now to end importation.”
Daily
Post reports that he added that assets vandalism had been a major
challenge of the upstream sector of the oil and gas industry.
He said: “Our
crude oil export pipeline system namely, Trans Forcados to the west,
the Obangbiri-TemiDaba-Brass in central Niger Delta, the Nembe creek
trunk line and the Trans-Niger pipeline, which evacuates crude produced
onshore to export terminals, were subject to severe vandalism.
“Similarly, the Bonny-Port Harcourt
crude oil pipeline and the Escravos-Warri-Kaduna crude oil supply
pipelines were not spared. In spite of this, we witnessed a peak
production of 2.35 million barrels per day recorded at the beginning of
2016, which declined to an almost all-time-low of 1.3 million barrels
per day per day due to incessant vandalism. Our 2016 crude oil
production averaged 1.85 million barrels of oil per day.”
Meanwhile, the minister of petroleum resources Ibe Kachikwu received the secretary general of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), H. E. Mohammad Barkindo, on Monday, February 27.
Speaking
during a meeting to welcome Barkindo at the headquarters of the Nigeria
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) in Abuja, Kachikwu said the
achievements of OPEC under him, within a short time showed he was the
right man for the job, The Cable reports.
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