See The Amount NNPC Is Requesting Just To Fix Our Refineries
To fix the nation’s ailing refineries, the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) said it has finalised plans to get external
funds of $500 million.
The Group Managing Director of the Corporation, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, said
this yesterday in Lagos as a guest speaker at a luncheon organised by
The Petroleum Club Lagos. The NNPC chief said the decision to seek
repayable fund is in line with
the transformation of the NNPC to become
an autonomous business venture.
The $500 million, Kachikwu said, will bring the refineries back on
course to give the required capacity output, adding that the funds would
be repaid over the next seven to nine years.
He reiterated his commitment to making NNPC a profitable company, and
to accomplish this target, he has adopted some measures including the
unbundling of the corporation, cancellation of offshore processing
agreement (OPA), crude swap and other unprofitable business models.
He said the two of the refineries would be shut down for eight to
nine months for quick repairs, while the remaining, which are better in
shape would be used to supplement imports. They would be shut down after
the other two are back on stream.
To turn NNPC from its current loss to profit position, Kachikwu said
next year will be the most challenging in the transition and
transformation programme of NNPC and the oil industry. “From 2016, we
(NNPC) will have a budget and work within the budget. There will be no
arbitrary deductions from the corporation’s revenues because it belongs
to the government. Other important projects and activities not covered
by the budget, the corporation will seek external funds like any other
company, which it will repay. We have made our books open and
transparent. Our accounts will be audited, and financial organizations
that lend would be able to know the state of the company and basis for
which they will lend,” he said.
The NNPC chief also said the Pipeline and Product Marketing Company
(PPMC), an arm of the Corporation, is his worst headache. According to
him, 85 per cent of NNPC losses come from PPMC because of vandalism,
community issues and connivance of some of the staff with the
perpetrators of the crime.
To check the development, Kachikwu said he has moved the depot
managers in PPMC, and has stopped pumping of products in the night. He
said products are now pumped during the day.



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