There are indications that the inability of the country’s refineries to meet domestic demand for petroleum products may have affected the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, projected annual revenue savings of $1 billion.
Accordingly, the Corporation hopes that in 2020 it would copy the measures taken to realize the savings of around $1 billion seen in 2016 with its crude-for-product swaps strategy. Speaking on the sidelines of the African oil and gas conference in Cape Town, Chief Operating Officer for NNPC Upstream, Bello Rabiu, said that the crude-for-product swaps would likely end once Nigeria revamps its refineries.
Rabiu said, “NNPC hopes in 2019 to emulate savings of around $1 billion seen in 2016 with its crude-for-product swaps, which would likely end once Nigeria revamps its refineries. If our refineries are back, which we want in the next 18 months, this thing will stop. So, all these are just stop-gap measures, but the key issue is that we wanted to import at the least cost before our refineries come back on-stream.”
Source: Vanguard