‎NIGERIAN REFINERIES CANNOT WORK ANYMORE– OBASANJO

Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has reaffirmed his position that the Nigerian Refinery facilities will never work. This comment came in the wake of Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation’s effort to seek technical partners to run the facilities.

‎The former president emphasized the position on Sony Irabor Live on Saturday.

‎“One of the lessons that I learnt is that PPP (public-private partnership) works. Look, one project that has not been destroyed by the government in Nigeria is the NLNG (Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas), where the private sector has 51 per cent, and the Nigerian government has 49 per cent.

‎“See what we did with Nigerian railways. See what we did with the national shipping company. See what we are doing now, even with the NNPC. The NNPC has refineries, and I said to people that it will never work. And a man had the audacity to say, ‘Am I a chemical engineer?”

‎“Look, when I was there, I called Shell. I said, ‘Look, please, I beg you, come and take 10 per cent equity and run the refinery for us.’ They said no. I said, ‘Okay, if you don’t want to take equity, don’t take equity. Come and run the refineries. They said no,” he stated.

‎“So, I called him (a shell executive), and I said, ‘Tell me, be honest with me. Why don’t you want to handle this?’ He said first, they want to let me know that they make most of their profits on the upstream, not the downstream.

‎“Number two: he said our refineries are too small. This was when I was an elected President. He said our refineries are too small. One is 60,000 barrels, and another is 100,000 barrels. He said refineries at that time were in the range of 250,000 barrels to 300,000 barrels. Number three: he said our refineries are not well-maintained. We call quacks and amateurs to come and maintain our refineries. The refineries are not in good order. He said, ‘Number four, there’s too much corruption around our refineries, and they don’t want to be part of that,”

‎“Until one day, Aliko (Dangote) came and offered $750m to take two of the refineries; that will be 51 per cent. I said, ‘Wow, God, you are really a God of miracles.’ I told Aliko to bring the money quickly. They brought the money, and they paid,”

‎“When I left office, NNPC went to my successor and convinced him. So I got up. I went to Umar. I said, ‘Look, Umar, maybe you don’t know; this is why we did what we did.’ He said, ‘Well, NNPC came to me.’ I said, ‘But you know that NNPC cannot run this thing. He said he knew. I asked, ‘Then why did you give in? He said because of pressure. And I said, ‘‘Look, when you sell these refineries, you will not get 200 million (dollars) for them, because you will sell them as scrap.’’

‎“Only the present NNPC head has told the country the truth. But in the meantime, I was told that they have spent about $16bn, which is only $4bn short of what Aliko used to build Africa’s largest refinery.”

Related posts

‎OAU EXPLAINS OBI’S EVENT VENUE CANCELLATION

BOD CONDUCTS FREE TRAINING ON DIGITAL ASSETS AND FOREX TRADING FOR ONDO YOUTHS 

ARMY RECOVERS REMAINS OF SLAIN SOLDIER COUPLE IN IMO FOREST