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I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu - Politics - Nairaland

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Tam David West "I Never Said Fuel Will Sell For N40 Under PMB / Fuel Crisis: Queues To Disappear By April 7th- Kachikwu / Fuel Scarcity Will Persist Till May–kachikwu (2) (3) (4)

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I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Nobody: 6:00am On Apr 01, 2016
Chineme Okafor in Abuja with agency report
In its bid to reduce fuel importation in the foreseeable future, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has said that nine companies have submitted bids for the co-location of new refineries within the complexes of its three existing refineries in Kaduna, Warri and Port Harcourt.

This is just at the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, has clarified that he never informed the Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) last Tuesday that the fuel shortages will end between April 5 and 7, but assured THISDAY in a phone conversation that concrete measures had but put in place to end them soon.



NNPC said in a statement by its spokesperson, Mr. Garuba Deen Mohammed, that the open bid exercise was a demonstration of the determination of the federal government and NNPC to increase the nation’s refining capacity from 445,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 650,000bpd.

It quoted its chief operating officer (COO) of refineries, Mr. Anibo Kragha as making this disclosure when the technical bids of the companies were opened in Abuja.

According to the statement, a technical evaluation committee has been set up to study the bids and announce winners as soon as possible.

It said the exercise was witnessed by representatives of the Nigerian Extractives Industry Transparency Initiative (NEITI) and the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP).

Kragha, according to the statement, said the corporation was committed to boosting the nation’s refining capacity which in turn would end the perennial fuel shortages in the country.
He said: “The aim is to leverage on the existing facilities to fast track the take off of the refineries as soon as possible.”

Also, Kachikwu has waded into the lingering crisis in the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) with the aim of ending the fuel shortages in the country.
According to NNPC, Kachikwu invited all stakeholders within the IPMAN hierarchy to his office where he raised a 14-man committee to resolve the lingering leadership crisis in the association.
He told them that IPMAN was a critical stakeholder in the downstream petroleum sector and as such should be united.

Members of the 14-man reconciliation committee set up by Kachikwu include Danladi Pasali, Dibu Aderigbe, Abubakar Maigandi, Hemmed Fashola, Leo Nkememe, Chukwudi Fred Ezinwa and Chief Ben Odjugo.
Others are Andrew Ashiga, Igwe Ezekwesili Maduaguna, Emma Ihedigbo, M. A. Shettima, Augustine Erhabor, Prince I. Dunuje and Lawson Ngoa.

They are expected to help the government monitor the distribution of petrol to their members as well as the protection of pipeline facilities in the country.

But as NNPC grapples with ending the perennial fuel shortages in the country, a report from the Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI), a UK-based natural resources accountability group, has shown that under President Muhammadu Buhari, the state-run oil firm has continued to withhold billions of dollars in oil revenues from the treasury.

The report titled, “NNPC Still Holds the Blank Check”, is a follow up to a 2015 report on the activities of NNPC by the NGRI and was obtained by THISDAY yesterday in Abuja.

It said the corporation still holds on to oil revenues without effective rules or oversight, adding that despite Buhari’s personal resolve to curb graft in Nigeria’s oil industry, the corporation in the second half of 2015 made up to $6.3 billion from sales of export crude, domestic crude and oil from its subsidiary the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), out of which only $2.1 billion was entered into the Federation Account.

According to it, the NNPC retained 66 per cent of sales proceeds from these three types of transactions. This, it noted, was 12 per cent higher than what it retained between 2013 and 2014.
It said that while the NNPC’s withholding covers known costs, notably its share of the joint venture expenditure, the corporation has however not fully explained others, especially revenues retained from NPDC and domestic crude sales.

NNPC’s spending on this scale, it said, raises questions about its adherence to fiscal responsibility, especially at a time when public finances are stretched and the government is looking for monies to fund its budget.

The report advised the government to establish a clear, legally enforceable rule governing what revenues NNPC could keep and how they can be spent now that it is undergoing some sorts of reforms.
Otherwise, it said oil sector corruption and waste could return to their prior devastating levels once Buhari leaves or crude oil prices rise again.

Meanwhile, Qatar’s oil minister has said 12 countries have agreed so far to participate in a meeting it will be hosting next month to discuss a freeze in oil output levels.
Qatar announced earlier this month that it would be the meeting venue for OPEC and non-OPEC producers on April 17to discuss the production cap.

The talks are aimed at bolstering oil prices that have fallen from over $100 a barrel in 2014 to less than $40 a barrel at present.

According to Reuters, the Minister of Energy and Industry, Mohammed Bin Saleh al-Sada, said yesterday that Qatar was still expecting official confirmation from producers that had verbally expressed plans to attend the meeting.

Those confirmed so far are Saudi Arabia, Russia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Venezuela, Nigeria, Algeria, Indonesia, Ecuador, Bahrain, Oman and Qatar.

Since the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Russia, the world’s two biggest oil producers, agreed to an output freeze at January levels, the price of oil recovered some of its losses from $30 a barrel to about $40 a barrel.
However, Iran has said it will not freeze oil output, as it is keen on raising production following the lifting of international sanctions after it agreed to stop its nuclear programme.

But as OPEC and non-OPEC producers prepare to meet, the United States has fast become a big importer of oil again, Bloomberg has reported.
In the three months since the U.S. lifted its 40-year ban on crude oil exports, U.S. crude shipments to foreign buyers have stalled.

At the same time, imports into the U.S. jumped to a three year high in what looks to be a reversal of a yearslong decline in the amount of foreign crude brought into the American market.

According to the report, refineries are choosing to buy imports instead of West Texas Intermediate (WTI), an oil variant produced in the US. One of the major beneficiaries is Nigeria, which is regaining lost market share. Imports from Nigeria surged to 559,000 barrels a day in mid-March, compared with an average of 52,000 in all of 2015.

Thisday: http://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2016/04/01/nnpc-targets-650000bpd-refining-capacity-opens-bids-for-co-location-of-plants/

2 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by HungerBAD: 6:03am On Apr 01, 2016
Even me don't even know what to believe anymore.

Too much conflicting News left and right.

72 Likes 3 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Tex42(m): 6:03am On Apr 01, 2016
This is just at the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu,
has clarified that he never informed the Senate Committee on Petroleum
(Downstream) last Tuesday that the fuel shortages will end between April 5
and 7, but assured THISDAY in a phone conversation that concrete measures
had but put in place to end them soon.
who talk'am?

If Kachikwu didn't inform the senate committee on petroleum about April 5 & 7... It means that the committee cooked up that lie. Either way, one of them(Kachikwu or the committee) is definitely lying.

I suspect Kachikwu and or the committee has/have been seeing lie Muh'd lately.

Govt of promise and fail

"I said and I did not say"

Na sure one chance naija enter so o!




Meanwhile, April fool 4rm Kachikwu & the Senate committee on petroleum

104 Likes 4 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Nobody: 6:08am On Apr 01, 2016
OK
Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Nelkoko: 6:12am On Apr 01, 2016
Dats all

83 Likes 4 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by dubemnaija: 6:15am On Apr 01, 2016
APC this April first again? Kai!

47 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by dokunbam(m): 6:24am On Apr 01, 2016
This NNPC problem is complex.

What is really the problem?

13 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by kossyablaze(m): 6:24am On Apr 01, 2016
APC have failed us!

4 Likes

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by nnachukz(m): 6:26am On Apr 01, 2016
Everyday is April Fool day for the APC government. I always blame zombies when these people start to issue out incoherent statements. One zombie will soon interpret what he meant in his previous statement and this statement but the interpretation will only be to suit the zombiesm program code embedded in him.

74 Likes 7 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by erunz(m): 6:34am On Apr 01, 2016
Government of confusion

32 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by DONMAYOR19(m): 6:35am On Apr 01, 2016
and someone still say this useless and clueless government is not confused. apc scam na second to known.

44 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by gbaskiboy: 6:37am On Apr 01, 2016
ALL People Confused (APC)

52 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Nobody: 6:38am On Apr 01, 2016
Its better this man shut up his mouth and pretend as if he knows what his doing.

36 Likes 1 Share

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by popez: 6:48am On Apr 01, 2016
APC=Association of proffessional criminals.


APC=April-fool practicing congress. cheesy


I hope zombies are enjoying these national embarrassments? Smh

51 Likes 3 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by 400billionman: 6:53am On Apr 01, 2016
Promise of CHANGE

has turned into

CHANGE of Promises...

65 Likes 3 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by NextGovernor(m): 6:55am On Apr 01, 2016
Just when you think Mama Kelechi is cheating you on the price of
Garri and you vex comot go buy for Mama Chidi store and you met
the price double of Mama kelechi's own and you have no other
option than to buy for that price because shame non go let you go
back 2 Mama kelechi shop. That's exactly where we are now in
Nigeria.

PDP non good we use our hand run enter APC to reverse back now
is a problem.

127 Likes 16 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Bawsse(m): 7:06am On Apr 01, 2016
Corporate three-mouth now... Nawao!

5 Likes

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by beejaay: 7:08am On Apr 01, 2016
confused wannabe leaders......

22 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by chinchum(m): 7:10am On Apr 01, 2016
i think the main news was left out, which is 9 bids has been received from firms to set up refineries at the same location 3 of Nigerian refineries are. I prefer the long term sustainable solution, and i think the bids are at least 6 months late, the bid committee should get to work already and award those competent enough to site refineries and get them running in less than 24 months.

Importing and oversupplying refined oil product which the previous admin used to solve the fuel scarcity issue was not a sustainable solution, it was a wasteful and unsustainable fix .

5 Likes

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Kyase(m): 7:12am On Apr 01, 2016
HungerBAD:
Even me don't even know what to believe anymore.

Too much conflicting News left and right.
no mind the op joor.
NNPC Targets 650,000bpd Refining Capacity, Opens Bids for Co-location of Plants
the headline is different from the source he quoted, but sha.......

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by milky3(f): 7:15am On Apr 01, 2016
ha! till when then? undecided una wan kill person

5 Likes

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by knostbrown01(m): 7:20am On Apr 01, 2016
MIPNIG:
ports, U.S. crude shipments to foreign buyers have stalled.

At the same time, imports into the U.S. jumped to a three year high in what looks to be a reversal of a yearslong decline in the amount of foreign crude brought into the American market.
According to the report, refineries are choosing to buy imports instead of West Texas Intermediate (WTI), an oil variant produced in the US. One of the major beneficiaries is Nigeria, which is regaining lost market share. Imports from Nigeria surged to 559,000 barrels a day in mid-March, compared with an average of 52,000 in all of 2015.

Thisday: http://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2016/04/01/nnpc-targets-650000bpd-refining-capacity-opens-bids-for-co-location-of-plants/



SO That's the reason we are selling all our crude oil production to USA.
we r not getting out of this mess sooner and only God can save us

1 Like 1 Share

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Chanchit: 7:27am On Apr 01, 2016
I was expecting something like this. He forgot april7 is just less than 10days when he said it.

5 Likes

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Symphony007: 7:27am On Apr 01, 2016
NNPC is still a mess and even a bigger one under he that says he would overhaul it like a magician...africa's largest state owned oil company cannot solve a petrol crisis within it's borders, then how can it solve bigger issues like refining petrol within our borders, and even grow to a point of competing with companies like gasprom?...nigeria, the same today, tomorrow and forever...

23 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by cckris: 7:36am On Apr 01, 2016
The man has truly joined the party of Alhaji Liar Mohammed.

17 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Nobody: 7:55am On Apr 01, 2016
That Thunder dey GYM HOUSE

20 Likes 3 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Emekamex(m): 7:59am On Apr 01, 2016
I had a feeling that this statement will be denied later.

24 Likes 4 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Pidggin(f): 8:04am On Apr 01, 2016
We are being taken for a ride

17 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by sugardad1(m): 8:04am On Apr 01, 2016
Tramo government!
Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by Nobody: 8:13am On Apr 01, 2016
Kyase:

no mind the op joor.
NNPC Targets 650,000bpd Refining Capacity, Opens Bids for Co-location of Plants
the headline is different from the source he quoted, but sha.......

But was the statement no within the news? Our interest at the moment is prioritizing fuel availability through effective distribution.

3 Likes

Re: I Never Said Fuel Scarcity Will End By April 7th - Kachikwu by cr7lomo: 8:33am On Apr 01, 2016
Why are Nigerians attacking this man... Whr is the minister of petroleum... That is the real corruption... When there is problem, he will leave the load on kachukwu , but when it becomes beneficial,he takes the glory... Nigerians, open yours eyes and stop being fooled by old selfish men

24 Likes 2 Shares

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