General News of Friday, 14 June 2024

Source: www.mynigeria.com

My refinery will crash fuel price in Nigeria – Dangote affirms

Aliko Dangote Aliko Dangote

Aliko Danogte, the Chairman of the Dangote Group says his newly launched state of the art refinery will crash the price of fuel in Nigeria similar to what it did for diesel.

The richest man in Africa made this known at the recent Afreximbank Annual Meetings and AfriCaribbean Trade & Investment Forum in Nassau, The Bahamas.

When asked about what his $20 billion 650,000 barrels per day Lagos-based refinery will do to PMS commonly known as petrol, he explained how the price of diesel fell from 1,700 to N1,200 when his diesel flooded the Nigerian market.

Currently, petrol sells at an average of N700 per liter.

He noted that his refinery currently has 4.78 billion liters of storage capacity for refined petroleum products.

“The issue of gasoline is certainly a different issue. That one is being dealt with by the government. But let me give you an example. In diesel, which the industries, transporters and everybody consume; when we first started, it was N1,700, and the dollar conversion was about N1,200 then. Immediately when we started, within two weeks we brought down the price to N1,000. We took it from N1,700 to N1,200 and from N1,200 to N1,700, we have given more than a 60 percent drop in price.

“With the currency now back up to about N1,500 per dollar, the price is still below N1,200. That’s a big improvement, from N1,700 to N1,200. And the diesel is available, we are not living from hand to mouth anymore,” Dangote replied when asked about a possible petrol price cut.

“The country doesn’t have strategic reserves in terms of petrol, which is very dangerous. But in our plant now, when you came, we had only 4.78 billion liters of various tankage capacity. But right now, we’re adding another 600 million.

“So effectively, as we go forward, the refinery will be the strategic reserve of the country in terms of petroleum products,” he noted.

Dangote alleged that the reason why international oil companies refused to sell crude oil to his refinery was that they did not want him to succeed.

“And I think that is the process that we’re now really going through. But the truth is that, yes, the country, the sub-region, and also the continent, of sub-Saharan Africa, need this refinery. So, you expect them to fight through non-supply of crude, non-purchase of the product, but I think it’s all temporary. We’ll get there,” he added.

Recall that Dangote Refinery turned to the US for 24 million barrels of crude supply monthly.

Consequently, the refinery shifted the date to commence supply of fuel to July 10–15, 2024, from June.