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Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) - Business (5) - Nairaland

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Abakaliki Mall, Ebonyi Taking Shape (Pictures) / Latest Update from Dangote Refinery, Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos (Photos and Videos) / Dangote Refinery Takes Delivery Of Gigantic Distillation Component In Lekki.PICS (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by GMbuharii: 10:06pm On Jan 18, 2020
itsme01:


Ki nin we ba yii.. since you are congratulating me in Ibo language eman yua abuzz to your village people too grin

Typo error....

Before you constipate,I meant, "your post that emanated from your anuxsz"

Congratulating ko,congratulobia ni....
.grin grin

1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by johnoj24(m): 10:06pm On Jan 18, 2020
Bighead9:
Imagine the number of people Dangote alone, has put food on their tables.
Igbo's won't like this. grin grin grin grin grin


God bless this Aboki, for creating Jobs to million Nigerians.
Why do you guys like trouble

1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Hotfreez: 10:10pm On Jan 18, 2020
bptc10:
my friend stop talking nonsense, over 60% of private investment in Lagois is own by the Igbos

But you Igbos said Tinubu owns Lagos.
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Bighead9: 10:10pm On Jan 18, 2020
Moralgladiator:
He is a rich man... government assisted billionaire. Cosmas maduka is a self made billionaire.
All in all,Igbos have the highest number of financially independent individuals in the world....it's a great achievement.


See chest beating. Your Comoas Maduka is a Ritualist just like 90% of all other Igbo Rich men. grin

There end is near, Just like Orji Kali and the owner of Peace Airlines. grin grin

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Nobody: 10:15pm On Jan 18, 2020
ruggedboy01:
if you're nobody people will not talk about you, indeed Igbo is a great tribe... yolloba you people should visit east and see refinery OK

See refineries? Where - at Awka or Enugu?
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by OniyideAmplify(m): 10:20pm On Jan 18, 2020
Boschh:
I wonder whether people are being paid to be tribalistic on Nairaland..

It's a shame though..
in fact, I don't just understand..Nairaland should be called the 'centre of tribalism.'

1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Nobody: 10:21pm On Jan 18, 2020
jimyjames:
Las las dangote and the Igbo's who own 80% of properties in Lagos will completely buy Lagos from the hands of afonjas

Truly Lagos indeed a no mans land hahaha





Wait until we divide Nigeria (which is happening very soon), then come and tell us Lagos is no man's land.
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by OniyideAmplify(m): 10:25pm On Jan 18, 2020
quirus:


Wait until we divide Nigeria (which is happening very soon), then come and tell us Lagos is no man's land.
loollllssss..Many Igbos we just surrender and claim Oduduwa's citizenship when they remember wetin dey port and Alaba Intl Market

1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Nobody: 10:27pm On Jan 18, 2020
Bighead9:
Imagine the number of people Dangote alone, has put food on their tables.
Igbo's won't like this. grin grin grin grin grin


God bless this Aboki, for creating Jobs to million Nigerians.

Mehn, Tribalism and Racism are cultures that will never end !!! it has become part of us!!! Sad but true, and I do not blame you, Its a cultural thing!!!
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by jimyjames(m): 10:34pm On Jan 18, 2020
quirus:


Wait until we divide Nigeria (which is happening very soon), then come and tell us Lagos is no man's land.

Lol and you think if this country is divided you will seize everything that is invested in Lagos by Igbo's and dangote , Indians , Chinese and labanise ? Look 90% of investments in Lagos is owned by investors outside Yoruba land and There is noting you can do about it, Lagos is no mans land, the Yoruba capital is Ibadan not Lagos

1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by rahymrafiu(m): 10:37pm On Jan 18, 2020
cool cool cool
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by itsme01: 10:59pm On Jan 18, 2020
Davinity:
Smelling tribalism on this nairaland... They should close this shitty site already... You go on Twitter apart from the mad people area Twitter people you hardly see tribal or religious post.

Rubbish

This OP a big fool... And if you don't report me you're mad

why report you when i am enjoying your wailing and pain hahahahah!!! cry me a river boy
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by goslowgoslow(m): 11:09pm On Jan 18, 2020
Boschh:
I wonder whether people are being paid to be tribalistic on Nairaland..

It's a shame though..
Don't blame them but the moderators who are also bias, triibalistic, political and very daft. They go against even their own rules....they even have people they support here and give you a ban if you speak against them but will never ban those ones if they bully you. Uncivilized set of moderators shame on all of them.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by sulaak(m): 11:24pm On Jan 18, 2020
Behind the hype, is Dangote’s refinery a game-changer?


In December 2019, an ambitious refinery project in the remote Ibeju-Lekki suburb of Lagos, Nigeria, took delivery of the world’s largest single crude distillation column, to much fanfare.

In December 2019, an ambitious refinery project in the remote Ibeju-Lekki suburb of Lagos, Nigeria, took delivery of the world’s largest single crude distillation column, to much fanfare.

After years of hopes and delays, Aliko Dangote’s 650,000 barrels a day refinery – one of the world’s second biggest – is due to start operations in just over a year’s time.

Government officials and citizens are united in the hope that the Dangote refinery complex, which will also produce fertilizer and petrochemicals will do for Nigeria’s stalled economy something comparable to what signing a 26 year-old Cristiano Ronaldo would do for a premier league team facing relegation.

The Nigerian government’s well-documented import substitution policy direction has Dangote Refinery front and centre of it.

Once onstream in early 2021, the refinery on the coast of Lagos is expected to reverse the decades-old system of exporting crude oil and importing refined petroleum products such as gasoline, diesel and lubricating oil.

Forex savings
This should ease pressure on the naira by freeing up some $8.7bn used to import refined petroleum products each year as well as create jobs in services and manufacturing around the project.

The real estate boom around the refinery points to the optimism about the project. It is meant to be a catalyst for local development plans in the Ibeju-Lekki area such as a new international airport, a deep sea port and a free trade zone.

DO THE MATHS
Behind the hype, is Dangote’s refinery a game changer?
Posted on Friday, 10 January 2020 16:07, updated on Monday, 13 January 2020 10:47


A worker walks past structural parts of an under construction oil refinery plant at Dangote refinery in Ibeju Lekki district, on the outskirts of Lagos, Nigeria August 7, 2019. Picture taken August 7, 2019. REUTERS/Temilade Adelaja
In December 2019, an ambitious refinery project in the remote Ibeju-Lekki suburb of Lagos, Nigeria, took delivery of the world’s largest single crude distillation column, to much fanfare.

In December 2019, an ambitious refinery project in the remote Ibeju-Lekki suburb of Lagos, Nigeria, took delivery of the world’s largest single crude distillation column, to much fanfare.

After years of hopes and delays, Aliko Dangote’s 650,000 barrels a day refinery – one of the world’s second biggest – is due to start operations in just over a year’s time.

Government officials and citizens are united in the hope that the Dangote refinery complex, which will also produce fertilizer and petrochemicals will do for Nigeria’s stalled economy something comparable to what signing a 26 year-old Cristiano Ronaldo would do for a premier league team facing relegation.

The Nigerian government’s well-documented import substitution policy direction has Dangote Refinery front and centre of it.

Once onstream in early 2021, the refinery on the coast of Lagos is expected to reverse the decades-old system of exporting crude oil and importing refined petroleum products such as gasoline, diesel and lubricating oil.

Forex savings
This should ease pressure on the naira by freeing up some $8.7bn used to import refined petroleum products each year as well as create jobs in services and manufacturing around the project.

The real estate boom around the refinery points to the optimism about the project. It is meant to be a catalyst for local development plans in the Ibeju-Lekki area such as a new international airport, a deep sea port and a free trade zone.

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Despite the positive sentiment towards the refinery however, few people have tried to calculate the measurable impact of the refinery on Nigeria’s economy and the Ibeju-Lekki area in particular.

How far will the refinery cut Nigeria’s fuel import bill and boost exports? Beyond the cash, what will be the effects of siting the new nexus of Nigeria’s downstream petroleum industry in a fast-growing and densely populated area of the country’s commercial capital?

READ: Andrew Alli of SouthBridge believes the savings in foreign exchange from importing oil products would be more limited than many expect.

Is the refinery a cure-all?
To understand why Dangote’s Refinery may not deliver the hoped for structural changes, we must first run through the basic figures that tell the story of Nigeria’s trade balance and its internal petroleum consumption:

According to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), the country’s daily petrol consumption comes to 51 million litres.
Using the standard measure of 47% petroleum motor spirit (PMS) per 159-litre barrel of crude oil according to the U.S. Department of Energy,
This means that Dangote’s Refinery must process about 471,500bpd to satisfy Nigeria’s internal demand.
What happens to export earnings?

The problem is that if the feedstock for Dangote’s refinery comes from local oil production, as the chief of the state oil company has promised, then it will eat into Nigeria’s export cargoes and revenues.

Nigeria’s 2019 crude oil production averaged 2,037 million barrels a day (b/d)

The 2019 average international crude oil price was $64 per barrel.

If the refinery satisfies Nigeria’s internal demand, it would save over $8.7bn. That’s how much the country spent on fuel imports in 2017.
That sounds great, but what about the opportunity cost?

By allocating over 470,000 b/d of locally-produced crude oil to the refinery, the state oil company is losing about $11bn of forex earnings a year. That’s almost a quarter of the country’s current forex earnings. Nigeria would be losing $11bn to save $8.7bn.

That’s not the end of the story


If local refining output meets all local demand, Nigeria will no longer need it’s often opaque and costly fuel subsidies.

Ending that system would mean that the estimated $3.85bn paid to subsidise fuel in 2019 would be saved.

Adding the import savings and the subsidy savings would mean total savings of $12.55bn – slightly over the estimated $11bn of lost forex earnings.

Two difficult roads to a refinery revolution
There are still policy options which could mean the Dangote refinery would radically change the state’s finances.

The Dangote Refinery could pay for its 650,000 b/d feedstock from Nigeria at the international market price and in foreign exchange.

That would mean it would be paying over $15bn a year in raw material costs alone.

That exceeds the stated construction costs of the refinery and is more than the net worth of Dangote, still the richest man in Africa.

The other option is more radical still and would require a determined policy shift in government.

Nigeria could boost its crude oil production by 650,000 b/d, supplying all the increase to the Dangote refinery.
Then it could export all 2.03mn b/d of crude to its foreign customers and retain the forex without having to budget for fuel imports.
This would be within the OPEC rules – the cartel’s limits on production do not include crude allocated to local refining nor do they govern exports of refined products.

This would allow Nigeria to use all its OPEC quota for exports and at the same time meet all its local needs for petroleum products, then would be able to export over 100,000 b/d of refined products for forex to the region and beyond.

That would be a game-changer. And would be in a different league from the estimated savings of $1.5bn a year under the current financial structure.

The tough question is whether Nigeria could possibly ramp up local crude production by 650,0000 over the next five years.

No question that it would be technically possible. The NPPC insist its medium-term target is 3mn b/d production.

But while Nigeria has the reserves to sustain 4mn b/d but it hasn’t made the necessary investments.
Lining up the deals and the new partners – whether China, India or western IOCs such as Shell or Exxon – could take five years alone.

It is also highly significant that there has been no public discussion of a credible way for Nigeria to boost local production to maximise the benefits of the refinery project.

How will Dangote make money from the refinery?
In the absence of any discussion about coordinating strategy, we are thrown back on the tricky but vital question for Dangote – how can the refinery make a profit?

It may be that the refinery could end up being subsidised by the government – an accusation that has trailed Dangote’s rise to business supremacy.


For example, if the refinery is guaranteed 650,000 barrels per day at a fixed and favourable (naira) price, there is nothing stopping it from satisfying the local consumption quota, then selling the extra circa 179,000 bpd worth of product to buyers anywhere in the world – at higher international prices.

In other words, Nigeria could end up exchanging a corrupt and opaque fuel subsidy programme that purports to assist ordinary Nigerians with a hidden corporate subsidy that assists a multibillion-dollar business entity.

And that is just one half of the bigger picture.

Ibeju -Lekki’s Infrastructure Problem – Another Elephant in the Room
Speaking at the Offshore Trading Logistics Expo in October 2019, Dangote Group Executive Director, Devakumar Edwin said there was no plan for refined products to be moved to market around the country by rail.

According to him, a transport solution made up of “shuttle boats” and expanded road networks would do the trick.

This implies the existing traffic nightmare and safety hazard – thousands of 40-ton 12-wheeler road tankers loaded with 33,000 litres of petrol – will simply be moved from Apapa Port and Port Harcourt to the Lekki corridor, on the eastern flank of Lagos.

The Lagos State government says it has plans to build a “7th Axial Road” linking Ibeju-Lekki to the Benin-Sagamu Expressway, so as to bypass the residential Lekki-Epe corridor.

The new road could take more than a decade if it ever gets done.

For example, 12 years into what was supposed to be a 4-year project, only 30KM of the 49.4km Lekki-Epe expressway has been completed.
As at 2013, 15KM was completed at a total cost of about N50bn ($423m), whereas the entire project was initially projected to cost $460 million (54.2bn), meaning that as much as 70 percent of the initially proposed project sum was spent constructing only 30 percent of the project.
Further information on money spent on the road since 2014 is obscure. Lagos State has refused to open its books to scrutiny, even after a 2017 Appeal Court ruling held that all Nigerian states must abide by the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act. Exactly how much it has spent on the still-uncompleted expressway is anyone’s guess.

Knock-on effects
Against this background, the idea that the proposed 7th Axial Road intended to rescue Lekki from its impending tanker traffic doom will magically come into into existence between now and the refinery’s January 2021 opening date is fanciful.

Instead it looks likely that the Lekki-Epe expressway will become ground zero for an unwelcome and terrifyingly dangerous new tanker traffic problem, which is currently confined to Lagos Mainland.

One of the very few decent and affordable residential districts in Lagos is about to follow Apapa – a once prosperous middle class Lagos neighbourhood that has deteriorated over the past two decades into a miasma of degraded infrastructure, burnt-out vehicle carcasses and fallen shipping containers.

If the trucks do not have an alternative route, it will spark an inevitable demographic and capital flight Lekki will suffer as thousands of road tankers tear a predictable path of accidental infernos and human misery en route to the Nigerian downstream oil industry’s new Mecca.




David Hundeyin
By David Hundeyin
Nigerian writer and journalist


https://www.theafricareport.com/21854/behind-the-hype-is-dangotes-refinery-a-game-changer/


1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Nobody: 11:26pm On Jan 18, 2020
jimyjames:


Lol and you think if this country is divided you will seize everything that is invested in Lagos by Igbo's and dangote , Indians , Chinese and labanise ? Look 90% of investments in Lagos is owned by investors outside Yoruba land and There is noting you can do about it, Lagos is no mans land, the Yoruba capital is Ibadan not Lagos

Nobody is seizing anything, we welcome your developmental investments.
But in the final analysis, the Yorubas are the greater beneficiaries of these investments. That is through job creations, environmental beautification, banks enrichment (financial clout), infrastructural developments (think Apapa Rd), robust circulation of money, etcetera.
And most sweetly you buy those lands used by you from the tribal landlords which you cannot take away anytime you are going.
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Mynightmare: 12:00am On Jan 19, 2020
itsme01:


stop taking everything personal chief wailer.. lossen up its weekend

The French and the English have being throwing banters and jokes at each others for decades and not one of them are crying and forming victim

you can google the jokes quite hilarious and funny.. a joke on tribal pecuilarity isnt a bad thing, so long its not inciting war or calling for bloodshed

.
while trying to shade him you made a meal of urself, you are pained because he served you in ur own coin

1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by IMASTEX: 12:17am On Jan 19, 2020
Boschh:
I wonder whether people are being paid to be tribalistic on Nairaland..
It's a shame though..
They have no idea that is the greatest tools the politicians use "divide & rule".
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Basher8583: 1:38am On Jan 19, 2020
Aidejay:
this bottomless pit of insecurities that people like you need to fill with your endless ranting, just imagine this just imagine that...as you don type this rubbish now hope your life makes sense now?

Na so e pain you and your likers and sharers reach
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Basher8583: 1:41am On Jan 19, 2020
Pidginwhisper:
When the refinery is finally ready,the recruitment exercise for the juicy posts will take place in India while nigerians are left with crumbs

Na me say make you no read book well. The indians are not dull people. Infact very excellent when it comes to education because of the competition amongst themselves making them get better and better by the years
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Basher8583: 1:50am On Jan 19, 2020
Moralgladiator:
He is a rich man... government assisted billionaire. Cosmas maduka is a self made billionaire.
All in all,Igbos have the highest number of financially independent individuals in the world....it's a great achievement.

Hmmm bro, the number of igbo trillionares are steadilylly declining.
1. Some have disappeared after paying their spiritual dues(times up)

2. Some are in Asian jail waiting for execution

3. Some have already been executed in Asia

4. Some are in USA Guantanamo bay for scamming American businessmen aka Invictus

5. Some are patiently waiting thier turn for Karma aka Emoney
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Thunderblasts(m): 3:08am On Jan 19, 2020
Bighead9:
Imagine the number of people Dangote alone, has put food on their tables.
Igbo's won't like this. grin grin grin grin grin


God bless this Aboki, for creating Jobs to million Nigerians.

Oga abeg beg God to help solve the poverty rate in your state first. I like the number of individual millionaires in igbo compared to a one man show.
Get a life!

1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Thunderblasts(m): 3:12am On Jan 19, 2020
Basher8583:


Hmmm bro, the number of igbo trillionares are steadilylly declining.
1. Some have disappeared after paying their spiritual dues(times up)

2. Some are in Asian jail waiting for execution

3. Some have already been executed in Asia

4. Some are in USA Guantanamo bay for scamming American businessmen aka Invictus

5. Some are patiently waiting thier turn for Karma aka Emoney

Before you talk about a people, visit them and eat back your words.
No be corper from una state come dey gist me say Onitsha make am fear with it's tall buildings when he visited Anambra for the first time in 2014?
If not for NYSC he won't have realized the level of development in igboland compared to his own Northern state. Same igbos that lost everything to a civil war?
You should bow in shame!

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Acidosis(m): 4:03am On Jan 19, 2020
Moralgladiator:
He is a rich man... government assisted billionaire. Cosmas maduka is a self made billionaire.
All in all,Igbos have the highest number of financially independent individuals in the world....it's a great achievement.

Yeah, more than Chinese people.
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Nobody: 4:08am On Jan 19, 2020
Boschh:
I wonder whether people are being paid to be tribalistic on Nairaland..

It's a shame though..
Really a shame. I do wonder same as well. Really a shame indeed

1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Benwallt(m): 4:29am On Jan 19, 2020
Urhobokwaleboy:
A nigga once said:it has gotten to the stage where by after commenting on nairaland you'll then add "am not from so so tribe o but am from this tribe"...

Just look at them up their turning the thread into a tribal one..

With all this happening i think it will be better if the country just divide,cause there's nothing like "ONE NIGERIA"



BUNCH OF ANNOYING FOOLS
You ppl are the one giving power to continue by castigating them. They love seeing that you mention them. Just ignore n scroll past.

1 Like

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Benwallt(m): 4:46am On Jan 19, 2020
What delight me is the fact that no kidnapping has been recorded since this project started unlike somewhere else. One side embraces development as d way forward while d other side embraces what I can grab, kidnappings n ransom over development. Lets think deeply and rise to our nation. God bless Nigeria.
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Bighead9: 5:00am On Jan 19, 2020
Thunderblasts:


Oga abeg beg God to help solve the poverty rate in your state first. I like the number of individual millionaires in igbo compared to a one man show.
Get a life!


Those criminal, millionaires you meant to say. Like Orji Kalu, Allen Onyema, Evans e.t.c. grin grin grin

Keep celebrating the criminals in your Region.

Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by XaintJoel20: 5:06am On Jan 19, 2020
ManishSmith:
Why was the refinery not built in south south?
Militancy
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by Almisbahussalaf: 6:20am On Jan 19, 2020
When you see Shoe Maker You say Aboki but ehen you hear the Name Dangote You forget that He too is From The North
Re: Dangote Refinery Gate, Lagos Gradually Taking Shape (Photos) by jaxxy(m): 6:26am On Jan 19, 2020
itsme01:


stop taking everything personal chief wailer.. lossen up its weekend

The French and the English have being throwing banters and jokes at each others for decades and not one of them are crying and forming victim

you can google the jokes quite hilarious and funny.. a joke on tribal pecuilarity isnt a bad thing, so long its not inciting war or calling for bloodshed

.

The white Americans and black African Americans are not throwing such jokes at each other u know why? They have sense and are sensitive to the event of history, anybody coming from a marginalized and cheated section of the country to make it against all odds will naturally one way or the other chest beat. As u call it.

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