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NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsNNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off (6276 Views)

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NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by AmazingGenius(op): 5:10am On Nov 19, 2024
Barely two months after the September completion deadline flop, the Nigerian National Petroleum Commission has explained why it could not deliver the much-awaited Port Harcourt Refinery Company.

In an interview with our correspondent on Monday, the NNPC Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Olufemi Soneye, said the company encountered risks and challenges while carrying out the rehabilitation, being a brownfield project.

He noted that the NNPC began the commissioning of critical equipment and processing units after the mechanical completion in Nigeria.

“You may recall that mechanical completion of the PHRC revamp was successfully achieved several months ago, marking a significant milestone in the project. Following this, we began the commissioning of critical equipment and process units.

“However, as is common with brownfield projects of this scale and complexity, we encountered unforeseen risks and challenges,” he stated.


Nonetheless, he told The PUNCH that the issues were resolved and commissioning activities have resumed.

Soneye stressed that work is being carried out to ensure the project’s completion.

“These issues have since been effectively resolved, and commissioning activities have resumed.

“Work is being carried out around the clock to ensure the successful completion of this critical project,” he told our correspondent.


Asked if there is any timeline for the completion of the project, he replied, “Shortly.”

It was observed that the NNPC desisted from giving new deadlines for the delivery of the refinery, having failed to meet its deadlines seven times.

The moribund Port Harcourt refinery is one of three owned by the Federal Government and managed by the NNPC.

Nigerians have been hopeful that the cost of fuel could crash if the country refines its crude and ends the import of refined products.

The NNPC said last week that it would continue to import fuel, saying it was not the sole off-taker of petrol at the Dangote refinery.

The refinery, situated in Nigeria’s oil-rich Niger Delta region, has been in operation since 1965, but later became moribund for several years.

In March 2021, the Nigerian government acquired a $1.5bn loan for the renovation and modernisation of the refinery, but the contractor handling the project has yet to announce its completion.

The PUNCH observed that promises made to Nigerians by the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources and the NNPC about the refinery have continued to hit brick walls.

After the failure of the sixth deadline in early August, the then Chief Financial Officer of the NNPC, Umar Ajiya, said the refinery would commence operations in September 2024.

However, September ended without a word from the NNPC about the refinery, and Nigerians have been left in the dark since almost two months ago.

Recall that the contractor overseeing the rehabilitation of the Port Harcourt refinery, Maire Tecnimont SPA, refused to disclose the completion date for the project, despite a formal request from a human rights lawyer, Femi Falana.

Apparently baffled by the delay in the completion of the project, Falana had filed an official request under the Freedom of Information Act, seeking clarity on the date set aside for the project completion.

In response, Maire Tecnimont’s legal representative, Muyiwa Ogungbenro, a partner at Olajide Oyewole LLP, sent a letter to Falana in early October, declining to reveal the information.

Ogungbenro stated that the Managing Director of Maire Tecnimont SPA, as part of an independent private contractor, is not obligated to disclose such information under the FOI Act.

“We are counsel to Maire Tecnimont SpA, and we have our client’s instruction to respond to your letters dated 17 and 24 September 2024 requesting information on the contract between our client and Nigerian National Petroleum Company Ltd.

“Our client is a private company. Being a private independent contractor, our client is not a company in which any government has a controlling interest, and does not provide public services, functions or utilising public funds for them to be bound by the obligations in the Freedom of Information Act.


“On this ground, our client regrettably cannot provide the information you have requested,” Ogungbenro declared.

Since then, information about the refinery has been kept from the public, whose hope for cheaper petrol lies in the facility.

From December 2023, NNPC had been giving Nigerians different dates, assuring them that the refinery would begin the sale of refined products soon, having attained mechanical completion.

In July, the Group Chief Executive Officer of the NNPC, Mele Kyari, stated categorically that the refinery would come into operation in early August. He had said in 2019 that the NNPC would deliver all the country’s four refineries before the end of former President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration last year.

When he appeared before the Senate in July, Kyari boasted, “I can confirm to you, Mr Chairman, that by the end of the year, this country will be a net exporter of petroleum products.

“Specific to NNPC refineries, we have spoken to a number of your committees, and it is impossible to have the Kaduna refinery come into operation before December, it will get to December, both Warri and Kaduna; but that of Port Harcourt will commence production early August this year.”


However, the promise was not fulfilled in August which was the sixth postponement.

Though the NNPC said it was on course, the refinery has yet to commence operations even as the fourth quarter of the year nears the end.

The PUNCH recalls that the 210,000 barrels per day refinery was said to have reached what the NNPC called mechanical completion of rehabilitation work in December. It stated that the facility would start refining 60,000 barrels of crude oil daily after last year’s Christmas break.

Later in January, Kyari said the refinery was being tested and would be ready by the end of the first month.

During the second month of the year, the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited completed the supply of 475,000 barrels of crude oil to the facility, raising the expectations of marketers that production would soon start.

This came a few weeks after the NNPC said in January that it was seeking to engage reputable and credible operations and maintenance companies to run the refinery.

In mid-March, Kyari said the Port Harcourt refinery would commence operations in two weeks, April.

“We are serving this country with honour and dignity. And we will make sure that the promises we make on the rehabilitation of these refineries will take place,” Kyari stated after he appeared before the Senate Ad-hoc Committee investigating the various turnaround maintenance projects of the country’s refineries.

As the April deadline elapsed, independent petroleum marketers told The PUNCH that the facility would begin production by the end of July.

Commenting on this then, NNPC’s spokesman, Soneye, said that regulatory approvals from international bodies were the only impediment stalling the operational commencement of the refinery.
Source: https://punchng.com/nnpcl-admits-challenges-delaying-pharcourt-refinery-take-off/

Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by bennybuhari: 5:12am On Nov 19, 2024
Scammers. These are the real people EFCC should go after instead of focusing attention on petty thieves

Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by stonemasonn: 5:16am On Nov 19, 2024
grin
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by richmond500: 6:44am On Nov 19, 2024
Since October last year weh Dem promise us say Refinery go start
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Babzrockman: 6:51am On Nov 19, 2024
Why giving timeline for something u weren't sure? Imagine seven timelines given and yet nothing... Govt sabi lie
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Ttalk: 6:56am On Nov 19, 2024
It shall not be well with the generation of anyone of you who have hand in the perpetual comatose state of the Nigerian refinery.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by nedu666: 7:16am On Nov 19, 2024
Bla bla bla. God forbid I spend my time reading lies
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by pryme(m): 7:23am On Nov 19, 2024
These people are no longer hiding their corruption, they think we are stupid, how do you explain Dangote refinery that was built from scratch?
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by GMIS: 7:45am On Nov 19, 2024
AmazingGenius:
Barely two months after the September completion deadline flop, the Nigerian National Petroleum Commission has explained why it could not deliver the much-awaited Port Harcourt Refinery Company.

In an interview with our correspondent on Monday, the NNPC Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Olufemi Soneye, said the company encountered risks and challenges while carrying out the rehabilitation, being a brownfield project.

He noted that the NNPC began the commissioning of critical equipment and processing units after the mechanical completion in Nigeria.

“You may recall that mechanical completion of the PHRC revamp was successfully achieved several months ago, marking a significant milestone in the project. Following this, we began the commissioning of critical equipment and process units.

“However, as is common with brownfield projects of this scale and complexity, we encountered unforeseen risks and challenges,” he stated.


Nonetheless, he told The PUNCH that the issues were resolved and commissioning activities have resumed.

Soneye stressed that work is being carried out to ensure the project’s completion.

“These issues have since been effectively resolved, and commissioning activities have resumed.

“Work is being carried out around the clock to ensure the successful completion of this critical project,” he told our correspondent.


Asked if there is any timeline for the completion of the project, he replied, “Shortly.”

It was observed that the NNPC desisted from giving new deadlines for the delivery of the refinery, having failed to meet its deadlines seven times.

The moribund Port Harcourt refinery is one of three owned by the Federal Government and managed by the NNPC.

Nigerians have been hopeful that the cost of fuel could crash if the country refines its crude and ends the import of refined products.

The NNPC said last week that it would continue to import fuel, saying it was not the sole off-taker of petrol at the Dangote refinery.

The refinery, situated in Nigeria’s oil-rich Niger Delta region, has been in operation since 1965, but later became moribund for several years.

In March 2021, the Nigerian government acquired a $1.5bn loan for the renovation and modernisation of the refinery, but the contractor handling the project has yet to announce its completion.

The PUNCH observed that promises made to Nigerians by the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources and the NNPC about the refinery have continued to hit brick walls.

After the failure of the sixth deadline in early August, the then Chief Financial Officer of the NNPC, Umar Ajiya, said the refinery would commence operations in September 2024.

However, September ended without a word from the NNPC about the refinery, and Nigerians have been left in the dark since almost two months ago.

Recall that the contractor overseeing the rehabilitation of the Port Harcourt refinery, Maire Tecnimont SPA, refused to disclose the completion date for the project, despite a formal request from a human rights lawyer, Femi Falana.

Apparently baffled by the delay in the completion of the project, Falana had filed an official request under the Freedom of Information Act, seeking clarity on the date set aside for the project completion.

In response, Maire Tecnimont’s legal representative, Muyiwa Ogungbenro, a partner at Olajide Oyewole LLP, sent a letter to Falana in early October, declining to reveal the information.

Ogungbenro stated that the Managing Director of Maire Tecnimont SPA, as part of an independent private contractor, is not obligated to disclose such information under the FOI Act.

“We are counsel to Maire Tecnimont SpA, and we have our client’s instruction to respond to your letters dated 17 and 24 September 2024 requesting information on the contract between our client and Nigerian National Petroleum Company Ltd.

“Our client is a private company. Being a private independent contractor, our client is not a company in which any government has a controlling interest, and does not provide public services, functions or utilising public funds for them to be bound by the obligations in the Freedom of Information Act.


“On this ground, our client regrettably cannot provide the information you have requested,” Ogungbenro declared.

Since then, information about the refinery has been kept from the public, whose hope for cheaper petrol lies in the facility.

From December 2023, NNPC had been giving Nigerians different dates, assuring them that the refinery would begin the sale of refined products soon, having attained mechanical completion.

In July, the Group Chief Executive Officer of the NNPC, Mele Kyari, stated categorically that the refinery would come into operation in early August. He had said in 2019 that the NNPC would deliver all the country’s four refineries before the end of former President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration last year.

When he appeared before the Senate in July, Kyari boasted, “I can confirm to you, Mr Chairman, that by the end of the year, this country will be a net exporter of petroleum products.

“Specific to NNPC refineries, we have spoken to a number of your committees, and it is impossible to have the Kaduna refinery come into operation before December, it will get to December, both Warri and Kaduna; but that of Port Harcourt will commence production early August this year.”


However, the promise was not fulfilled in August which was the sixth postponement.

Though the NNPC said it was on course, the refinery has yet to commence operations even as the fourth quarter of the year nears the end.

The PUNCH recalls that the 210,000 barrels per day refinery was said to have reached what the NNPC called mechanical completion of rehabilitation work in December. It stated that the facility would start refining 60,000 barrels of crude oil daily after last year’s Christmas break.

Later in January, Kyari said the refinery was being tested and would be ready by the end of the first month.

During the second month of the year, the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited completed the supply of 475,000 barrels of crude oil to the facility, raising the expectations of marketers that production would soon start.

This came a few weeks after the NNPC said in January that it was seeking to engage reputable and credible operations and maintenance companies to run the refinery.

In mid-March, Kyari said the Port Harcourt refinery would commence operations in two weeks, April.

“We are serving this country with honour and dignity. And we will make sure that the promises we make on the rehabilitation of these refineries will take place,” Kyari stated after he appeared before the Senate Ad-hoc Committee investigating the various turnaround maintenance projects of the country’s refineries.

As the April deadline elapsed, independent petroleum marketers told The PUNCH that the facility would begin production by the end of July.

Commenting on this then, NNPC’s spokesman, Soneye, said that regulatory approvals from international bodies were the only impediment stalling the operational commencement of the refinery.

Source: https://punchng.com/nnpcl-admits-challenges-delaying-pharcourt-refinery-take-off/
Until we keeeee NNPC this nation is going nowhere
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by ATEAMS: 7:52am On Nov 19, 2024
To speak the truth is a painful thing. To be forced to tell lies is much worse.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by strangest(m): 7:55am On Nov 19, 2024
Ok
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by dibunotion(m): 7:55am On Nov 19, 2024
Fix it and sell it.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by LandMann: 7:55am On Nov 19, 2024
After 18 months of propaganda... Tinubu's government is the most useless in Nigeria since 1960.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by intruder15(m): 7:55am On Nov 19, 2024
This guy should just shut the Bleep up. What is happening with the Dangote refinery clearly shows that our local refineries were intentionally structured not to work.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Fatbam005: 7:55am On Nov 19, 2024
Money no dey.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by strangest(m): 7:56am On Nov 19, 2024
Failures....

They couldn't complete it because they have importation coming from Malta.....


They even want to control Dangotes so they can cripple it and continue with their importation....


Failures... They only think about their pockets.... Not the poor suffering masses
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by DJInfluence: 8:00am On Nov 19, 2024
Is anyone thinking what I’m thinking? If and when this refinery becomes operational, it won’t be long before it breaks down again.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by humberjade: 8:03am On Nov 19, 2024
bennybuhari:
Scammers. These are the real people EFCC should go after instead of focusing attention on petty thieves
No actually, they are suppose to concentrate more on the people they have the power to tackle, because it is petty thieves that becomes massive armed robbers in the future. If these "petty thieves" aren't checked now, there won't be a future for our children in that country.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by OgbeniOja1: 8:03am On Nov 19, 2024
silly govt Shay they were dropping dates before clowns.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Zico5(m): 8:04am On Nov 19, 2024
Very useless and wicked people in government. Buhari and Tinubu will die a painful death for subjecting the masses to untoward hardship. With all the promises left and right before being voted into power. It's still the same story. May they pay with everything they have for subjecting the masses to pains
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by id4sho(m): 8:06am On Nov 19, 2024
Project that has been abandoned grin
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Demolaeby: 8:08am On Nov 19, 2024
How do you think our local refineries will function when they General overseer of the country is having his own refinery abroad and his target market is Nigerians
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Treasure17(m): 8:08am On Nov 19, 2024
Propaganda as usual.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Racoon(m): 8:13am On Nov 19, 2024
This is the same lies the useless government, NNPCL and their mummified zombies here defended with gusto even insulting us as haters. God punish all of una wey get hand in the ripping off of this nation. Wicked souls.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by bdon123(m): 8:14am On Nov 19, 2024
They should sell all refinery,they cannot run a refinery.we are too corrupt to run refineries... better we do private partnership like owning shares in refinery.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by bdon123(m): 8:15am On Nov 19, 2024
Nnpc always use turnaround maintenance to collect budget n d refinery never runs for more than a week
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by bet9ja(m): 8:17am On Nov 19, 2024
Tinubu is a curse to Nigeria. Nothing is really working even since he took over. I spit of his generation
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Nobody: 8:30am On Nov 19, 2024
Ttalk:
It shall not be well with Mahmood and his generation and all those like Wike who have hand in righing in Ogunlere to power.
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Ttalk: 8:35am On Nov 19, 2024
[quote author=adolfHitler1934 post=132938371][/quote]It shall not be well with Maurice Iwu and his generation and all those like PDP who laid the foundation of electoral malpractices in Nigeria
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by SouthSouth1914: 8:43am On Nov 19, 2024
Useless people!
Re: NNPCL Admits Challenges Delaying Port Harcourt Refinery Take-Off by Benekkk: 8:50am On Nov 19, 2024
NNPC and refinery in the same sentence? Laughing in Swahili!
1 2 Reply

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