Connect with us

Business

Nigeria seeking to end petroleum-product imports in 2 years as refining capacity set to expand

Aliko Dangote insists that lower oil prices are good for Nigeria in the long term
Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Bloomberg | Nigeria is set to get another new oil refinery as a federal government push to end fuel imports attracts investors to the industry.

Petrolex Oil & Gas Ltd. plans to build a US$3.6 billion plant with a capacity of 250,000 barrels a day, Chief Executive Officer Segun Adebutu said in an interview in Lagos. The closely held company is working on the “front-end engineering design” and will complete construction in 2021, he said.

Nigeria, Africa’s biggest oil-producing nation, does not have adequate refining capacity and imports at least 70 percent of its needs.
A federal government pledge to end such purchases in the next 2 years by building local capacity has lured investors including Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, who is constructing a 650,000-barrel-a-day refinery.
Meanwhile there are efforts to rehabilitate the country’s 3 existing plants.

Petrolex, whose CEO started an oil and fuel trading business about 12 years ago, has also built a storage-tank farm and other “mid-stream infrastructure” for US$330 million, Adebutu said December 4.
The inauguration of the tank farm and the start of refinery construction – both at the same site in Ibefun, Ogun state – is planned for this month.

The tanks are connected to a pipeline at Mosimi, which will transport products around the country, according to Adebutu, who sees a big market in Nigeria’s 180 million-strong population.
Petrolex will finance the refinery project with loans from Nigerian banks and international lenders, as well as its own revenue, he said.

The company also plans a fertilizer plant and lubricants facility as well as a liquefied petroleum gas plant, Adebutu said.

Petrolex is targeting listing on the Nigerian Stock Exchange in the next 10 years to ensure the business “outlives its owners” and can fund future expansion, according to Adebutu. “By the next 5 years we would have achieved a significant amount of our ambition, then begin strategy talks with the stock exchange.”

The company’s current workforce is about 3,000 and Adebutu expects to employ about 10,000 people directly by 2021 when all the energy projects will be “up and running.”

Continue Reading
Comments

© Copyright 2026 - The Habari Network Inc.