Stakeholder faults $2bn turnover requirement for P’H refinery concession

Adebisi Aikulola
Adebisi Aikulola
Port Harcourt Refinery

A former Group General Manager of Planning at the defunct Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Babajide Soyode, has said no private operator would be ready to take over the Port Harcourt Oil Refining Company from the government for $2bn.

The chemical engineer who spoke in Lagos wondered why the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited would demand that an operator have $2bn to acquire the newly rehabilitated oil refinery.

The NNPCL said it was seeking to engage reputable and credible operations and maintenance companies to operate and maintain the Port Harcourt Refining Company.

This, it said, was “to ensure reliability and sustainability towards meeting the nation’s fuel supply and energy security obligations.”.

NNPCL requested that interested companies demonstrate “a minimum average annual turnover of at least $2bn for the financial years ending in 2019, 2020, 2021, and 2022, respectively.”.

Reacting, Soyode, who is a technical consultant to the Dangote Oil Refinery, said: “Nothing is really wrong in transferring the refinery to a private operator. It depends on the terms and conditions. With the terms and conditions given, they don’t want anyone to run the refinery. How will you be asking me to have $2bn to run the refinery? What is the value of the refinery that I must have for $2bn? How many service companies have $2bn? I thought they were serious; they are not serious.”

The retired NNPC manager held that the Port Harcourt refinery and others owned by the government should have been upgraded instead of undergoing rehabilitation.

“There is no reason why those refineries that were among the best when we built them then should have deteriorated. In fact, I must tell you, the refineries didn’t deteriorate; the management deteriorated them.

“Even if the refineries are old, they can be upgraded to the latest technology. This so-called rehabilitation, let me tell you, is equipment that was built in the 60s and 70s, you want to rehabilitate it to the same state? Does it make sense?” he asked.

He advised that the government’s moribund” refineries in Port Harcourt, Warri, and Kaduna should be merged into one, while 65 percent of the equity should be privatised.

“NNPCL should still have substantial equity, but not controlling equity. That’s the only way forward. There is nothing wrong with the refineries. There are much older refineries in Houston, all over the world,” Soyode noted.

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