Dangote Refinery Set to Begin Petrol Refining in November, Says Official

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The Dangote Refinery is set to start diesel and jet fuel refining operations by October 2023 and petrol refining by November 2023.

This is according to Dangote Group Executive Director, Devakumar Edwin. He made the statement during an interview with S&P Global Commodity Insights yesterday .  

According to him, the Dangote refinery will receive its first cargo of crude in the next two weeks and will begin producing up to 370,000 barrels per day of diesel and jet fuel from October 2023.

READ ALSO:  Dangote, PH Refineries, Others Won’t Alter The Cost Of Fuel -NNPCL

He also noted that by November 30, the refinery will start the phased ramp-up to 650,000 barrels per day of petrol.

He said: Right now, I’m ready to receive crude,” said Edwin, who previously ran Dangote Cement. “We are just waiting for the first vessel. And so as soon as it comes in, we can start.” 

While discussing the timeline adjustment, Edwin informed S&P that NNPCL had previously committed their crude to another party on a forward basis, causing a delay in the availability of crude.

He emphasized that this situation is temporary, and the refinery is expected to exclusively use Nigerian crude by November 2023.

Furthermore, he clarified that the Nigerian oil will be procured in US dollars, not naira, because the refinery is located in a free zone on the outskirts of Lagos.

Nevertheless, NNPCL will provide some crude at reduced prices due to its ownership stake.

Edwin also mentioned that the Dangote refinery has the capability to process most African crudes, with the exception of heavy Angolan grades, Middle Eastern Arab Light, and even US light tight oil.

He said:  We can take even some of the Russian grades… if the global system opens up to allow us to receive them. Basically, if you look at our production profile, 50% of my production will meet 100% of the requirements of the country. 

“Excess gasoline – which will be 10 ppm sulfur Euro 5 quality — will be exported to other African markets as well as the US and South America, although the volumes will be relatively small. Meanwhile, jet fuel will be exported to Europe and diesel will be sold in sub-Saharan Africa.” 

S&P also reported that Edwin said the Dangote refinery would be enormously beneficial to Nigeria by establishing a reliable supply of “environmentally friendly” refined products and bringing a huge amount of foreign exchange into the country. 

According to him, the refinery will also ease a fuel supply crisis in import-dependent West Africa, where Nigeria’s recently scrapped fuel subsidy created a thriving illicit market for gasoline amid price fluctuations. 

Meanwhile, he noted that the money coming back into the refinery business will go for further investments because Aliko Dangote’s focus is always on Nigeria. 

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