Indications
emerged on Wednesday that the $8bn refinery proposed by Africa’s richest man
and President, Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, would be located at the
Olokola Free Trade Zone, Ondo State.
A
senior official of the company, who asked not to be named because he was not
authorised to speak on the matter, told our correspondent that the refinery
would be located in the OFTZ.
One
of the factors considered for the location of the refinery, according to the
source, is that it is the biggest deep seaport in the country and other big
industries are located there; besides, Ondo is one of the oil producing states
in the country.
The
source added that stable crude oil supply was also a vital element in the
choice of the location for the refinery because Chevron and a number of other
oil producers had oil fields in the oil-rich region of the state.
On
why Lagos was not chosen, industry analysts said though the state was a coastal
state, Dangote would have to build pipelines to transfer crude from oil fields
to the refinery, thereby incurring additional expenses.
The
source explained that necessary approvals had been secured for the refinery,
adding that the Dangote Group was just waiting for the necessary equipment with
which to build the refinery to arrive.
Another
source told our correspondent that Dangote, who was listed on Monday as the
first African entrepreneur to lay claim to a $20bn fortune and one of the 25
richest men in the world, would put down $4bn of his personal fortune to build
the refinery, while international financial institutions had raised the
balance.
Dangote
had in April announced plans to invest up to $8bn in building an oil refinery
with capacity for around 400,000 barrels a day by late 2016.
The
capacity, experts had said, would almost double Nigeria’s current refining
strength.
“This
will really help not only Nigeria but sub-Saharan Africa. There has not been a
new refinery for a long time in sub-Saharan Africa,” Dangote had told Reuters in
a telephone interview.
Nigeria
currently has the capacity to produce some 445,000 barrels per day in four
refineries, which operate well below that owing to decades of mismanagement and
corruption in Africa’s leading energy producer.
The
country relies on subsidised imports for 80 per cent of its fuel needs.
Dangote
said the country’s ability to import fuel would soon be challenged.
“In
five years, when our population is over 200 million, we won’t have the
infrastructure to receive the amount of fuel we use. It has to be done,” he
said.
Past
efforts to build refineries have often been delayed or cancelled, but analysts
have said Dangote should be able to build a profitable Nigerian refinery, owing
to his past successes in industry and his strong government connections.
Analysts
have said previous attempts to get the refineries going were held back by
vested interests such as fuel importers profiting from the status quo.
“The
people who were supposed to invest in refineries, who understand the market,
are benefiting from there being no refineries because of the fuel import
business. Some are going to try to interfere,” Dangote said.
He
said making a new refinery run at a profit would work even if the government
failed to scrap the subsidised fuel price that has deterred others from
investing.
“We’ve
done our numbers and the numbers are okay,” he said.
Dangote,
who spoke on the sidelines of the recent World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape
Town, South Africa, said he had secured $4.25bn loans from banks to build the
refinery.
He
said the loan was secured from “two offshore banks and some Nigerian banks.”
2 comments:
Why is it that Dangote is too afraid of igbo land to site one of his investment?
i have no idea
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