More Petroleum refineries are springing in with the latest, 100,000 barrel per day capacity
African Refinery Port Harcourt Limited (ARPHL).
The state owned, Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has signed the deal with the private sector driven refinery to be located within the premises of Port Harcourt Refinery.
The new deal is aimed at increasing national refining capacity.
The national oil company disclosed the deal on its X handle, indicating that the Executive Director, Downstream of the NNPC, Mr Dapo Segun signed on its behalf.
On its website, ARPHL described itself as the special purpose vehicle incorporated for the specific purpose of co-locating the 100,000bpd crude oil refinery in Nigeria.
It stated that in line with the strategic plan of the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the NNPC in 2016 advertised a Request for Proposal (RFP) , seeking bids for private investors to transfer brownfield crude oil refineries to the existing refinery sites in Kaduna, Port Harcourt and Warri.
According to the firm, this was aimed at increasing Nigeria’s national refining capacity in the shortest possible time frame.
ARPHL said it submitted a comprehensive proposal and solution to NNPC by the deadline and applied for the Port Harcourt collocation opportunity along with 11 other investors.
It stated that by virtue of having the “most complete package”, it was declared the winning bidder for the Port Harcourt co-location project. However, the value of the contract was not stated.
“Under the aforementioned MoU, we entered into with NNPC, whereby ARPHL will own and operate the 100,000 bpd refinery on 46 hectares of vacant land adjacent the PHRC ’s refinery complex, where we will benefit from direct crude supply from NNPC and access to other shared services, e.g. security, electricity, water, storage, jetty,” it added.
However, a source said it did not make sense that the Port Harcourt refinery, which had been under rehabilitation for years had yet to begin operation and another deal was being signed to build an additional one.
Recall that part of the $1.5 billion facility to repair the Port Harcourt plant was taken from Afreximbank at the time, a debt which the NNPC is supposed to be servicing.
In December last year, the company announced the ‘mechanical completion’ of phase 1 of the 210,000bpd Port Harcourt refinery. Since then, it has not started refining crude oil.
“NNPC Ltd.’s move to boost local refining capacity witnessed a boost today with the signing of share subscription agreement between NNPC Limited and African Refinery Port Harcourt Limited for the co-location of a 100,000bpd capacity refinery within the PHRC complex.
“The signing of the agreement is a significant step towards setting in motion the process of building a new refinery which, when fully operational, will supply Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), Automotive Gas Oil (AGO), Aviation Turbine Kerosene (ATK), Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG), and other petroleum products to the local and international markets and provide employment opportunities for Nigerians,” the NNPC said in the announcement.
The deal is coming at the time at the Port Harcourt refinery which had been shut for decades is coming on stream in the next few weeks.
Also, the $20 billion Dangote Refinery was gradually rolling out products what would be sufficient for both domestic and external consumption.
The Warri and Kaduna refineries are also being rehabilitated while BUA has embarked in the building of another high profile refinery in Akwa Ibom, so also are many nano refineries ready to hit the market.
The aim is to make Nigeria a net exporter of Petroleum products.