Oil and Gas

Crude oil refining in PH refinery 'll lower pump price – NOGASA

Supreme Desk
20 Dec 2022 2:31 PM IST
Crude oil refining in PH refinery ll lower pump price – NOGASA
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Supreme reports that the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) commenced the rehabilitation of PHRC refinery in May 2021.

The Natural Oil and Gas Suppliers Association of Nigeria (NOGASA) says resuming crude oil refining at the Port Harcourt Refinery Company will reduce pump prices.

The National President of the association, Mr. Benneth Korie, told newsmen on Monday in Abuja that the refinery would begin refining crude oil before the end of 2022.

He quoted the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, as assuring that the PHRC refinery would soon begin refining crude oil.

Supreme reports that the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) commenced the rehabilitation of the PHRC refinery in May 2021.

The Federal Executive Council (FEC) had approved $1.5 billion for the rehabilitation exercise, which was being executed by Tecnimont SPA, an Italian company, in three phases of 18 months, 24 months, and 44 months.

The PHRC operates two refineries: the old refinery, with a capacity of 60,000 barrels per stream day (bpsd), and the new refinery, with an installed capacity of 150,000 bpsd.

This, he said, brings the combined crude processing capacity of the PHRC refineries to 210,000 bpsd.

He said with this development, the price of petroleum products would go down, adding that the refinery had been under maintenance and would begin production once operations began.

"But we have assurances from the Minister of Petroleum Resources that the PHRC refinery will start working this December, definitely between now and the end of January 2023."

"After Port Harcourt, other refineries, including those in Warri and Kaduna, will come up because work has been seriously going on there."

"Then you will see that the prices of petroleum products will go down on their own because there is a difference between the importation of products and loading from our refineries," he said.

He said the refinery, when it becomes operational, will blend Automative Gas Oil (AGO), Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), DPK, Jet A1, and other products.

The NOGASA president decried delays and cost of distribution of products due to loading from the depot, adding that once the refineries began operation, importation of petroleum would stop and the trucks would loading directly from it.

"Formerly; trucks used to load from refineries but now paid vessels spend between 10 and 14 days to load product from depots as against one day, marketers and transporters are suffering and sacrifice a lot in the bid to distribute products," he said.

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