Port Harcourt refinery misses June target

Despite
assurances by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation that the Port
Harcourt Refining Company Limited will start refining crude oil by the
end of last month, findings have shown that the plant has yet to start
delivering on the target.
This is coming as civil society
organisations have called on the Federal Government to cut down the
volume of crude being supplied to the four refineries based on the fact
that the facilities are producing far below the 445,000 barrels, which
they get on a daily basis.
It was, however, learnt that the Port
Harcourt refinery had started receiving crude oil through boats for
commercial processing, but it had yet to commence the production of
refined petroleum products.
Our correspondent gathered that the
rehabilitation of the plant had reached an advanced stage, but sources
explained that the refinery was far from being ready to refine crude.
Mid last month, the Group Managing
Director of the NNPC, Dr. Joseph Dawha, disclosed that the PHRC would
start refining crude oil and contribute to petroleum products’
availability by the end of June.
Dawha had said, “Presently, the
refineries are undergoing rehabilitation and we are undertaking what we
call a new strategy to carry out the turnaround maintenance on them.
Basically, what this means is that we are carrying out phased
implementation of the rehabilitation of the refineries. We are taking
the refineries unit by unit and carrying out turnaround maintenance on
them.
“Most of the refineries have advanced to
a certain stage where they will be able to operate very soon. For
example, the Port Harcourt refinery, which has reached an advanced
stage, will start receiving crude by end of this month and then, of
course, will start contributing to the available products in the
country.”
The NNPC has four refineries, two in
Port Harcourt, and one each in Kaduna and Warri. They have combined
installed capacity of 445,000 barrels per day. A comprehensive network
of pipelines and depots strategically located throughout Nigeria links
these refineries.
But sources confirmed to our
correspondent that the pipelines were hardly being used to transport
crude and refined products to and out of the refineries due to the
activities of vandals who regularly rupture the pipelines.
The Group General Manager, Public
Affairs Division, NNPC, Mr. Ohi Alegbe, stated that crude oil was being
transported to the Port Harcourt refinery through boats, and noted that
the natural resource would get to the facility by the end of this week.
“Crude is being supplied to the Port
Harcourt refinery, and you know we are using marine to do the supply.
Before the end of the week, they will get crude in Port Harcourt,” he
said.
When asked if the refining process would
start once the crude oil hit the refinery this weekend, Alegbe replied,
“It is a long process. However, once they start production and get the
crude, I will let you know.”
Meanwhile, the representative of civil
societies on the Board of the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency
Initiatives, Mrs. Faith Nwadishi, has argued that the four refineries
combined are refining far below the 445,000 barrels of crude being
supplied to them daily.
Nwadishi, who is the National
Coordinator, Publish-What-You-Pay as well as the CSOs representative on
the global EITI board said, “We all know that when the four refineries
perform at optimum capacity, they can only produce at 50 per cent. They
cannot deliver 100 per cent of the 445,000 barrels per day that they
get.
“Now, even if the NNPC decides today
that the four refineries will work at 100 per cent capacity, we know
that their 100 per cent capacity can refine only 50 per cent of the
445,000 barrels that they get on daily basis.”
She added, “So, what we are saying is
that the four refineries put together in Nigeria operate around 20 per
cent average and by the time the Port Harcourt refinery is operating at
80 per cent capacity, it can only raise that average to about 25 or 30
per cent. So, the problem still persists.
“Therefore, what we are asking for is
that there should be transparency in the turnaround maintenance of our
refineries. Why should Nigeria to go to smaller countries like Chad to
refine our crude? If we know that the NNPC does not have the capacity to
refine 445,000 barrels per day, let us give them exactly what they can
refine.”
The Managing Director, Pipelines Product
Marketing Company, Mr. Haruna Momoh, had stated last month that the
NNPC was importing 50 per cent of the refined petroleum products being
consumed in the country.
He explained that when the ongoing
rehabilitation and turnaround maintenance of the Port Harcourt refinery
was completed, the plant would run at 80 per cent of its installed
capacity and produce five million litres of petrol on a daily basis.
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