Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. - Politics (4) - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Politics › Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. (31811 Views)
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by tonychristopher: 11:30am On May 11, 2015 |
Sunnybobo3:Yes Ask me why The over head cost will be low No import tarrif No custom tarrif Low logistic cost Cheap and available labour Nearness to market Nearness to raw material Simple refining system and faster roi It will be cheaper Simple economics |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by baralatie(m): 11:32am On May 11, 2015 |
tonychristopher:if the market is not monopolistic in nature! |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 11:32am On May 11, 2015 |
Eddygourdo:You do not comment on a post after reading the first paragraph. If you had read it all, you would have seen the irrelevance of your post. As long as the NNPC remains the way it is and the legislature refuse to pass the PIB, we'll be going round and round in circles. |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by tonychristopher: 11:35am On May 11, 2015 |
Sunnybobo3:A lot of factors Labour cost Type of refinary Profit margin Policy and tax regime Economies of scale But know it will be cheaper Toyota is cheaper in Japan than Nigeria ..why Economies of scale and comparative advantage Simple These things are elementary economics we dont need Adam smith here brother |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by tonychristopher: 11:37am On May 11, 2015 |
baralatie:Yes ..I forget the open market Market forces also |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by seighapaul(m): 11:41am On May 11, 2015 |
Pavore9:You just gave a perfect local example. |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 11:42am On May 11, 2015 |
tonychristopher:It is not as simple as you make it sound. In reality, practical is always different from theory. First of all, there are no import and custom tariffs on imported PMS. Nigeria has a shortage of skilled manpower in the oil industry and labour is not cheap in Nigeria (Oil workers are paid more in Nigeria than in developed countries). Cost of logistics in Nigeria is Obe of the highest in the world The only thing you got right there is proximity to raw material and market. Nearness to raw material brings me to the next question, will crude oil be sold to the refineries at international price or will the price be subsidised? Let's take it from here. ... |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 11:47am On May 11, 2015 |
tonychristopher:Is the above about Japan not against your argument? Japan imports nearly all if not all the materials used in manufacturing Toyota and yet it's cheaper in Japan than those countries where the raw materials are sourced. Tooth pick is cheaper imported from China than produced in Nigeria |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Whynotthetruth(m): 11:48am On May 11, 2015 |
Pavore9:Comparative advantage of Umunede over your village in garri production allows cost of production plus transportation of the garri to be still cheaper than producing it in your village where inputs like energy, labour etc are higher... |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by tonychristopher: 11:49am On May 11, 2015 |
Sunnybobo3:Jesus Even in maths for you to solve a complex problem simplify it.... I have experience here ...I maintain my stand there is no big deal in refining crude We have the capacity and biafrans did it creek boys did it Stop this grammar.....its simple approach brother |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 11:50am On May 11, 2015 |
baralatie:Theoretically yes but practically depends on many factors. Next question, assuming you are right above, do you think private investors who set up refineries in Nigeria can sell fuel to Nigerians at a price much lower than what it's sold for in our neighbouring countries? |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by baralatie(m): 11:52am On May 11, 2015 |
Sunnybobo3:OK let us start the market is priced at international rate. |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Pavore9: 11:53am On May 11, 2015 |
seighapaul:l wonder! How can it be cheaper after adding cost of the transportation of the over 200km journey, bribes paid along the way to policemen whey no dey take eyes see trucks that are ferrying farm produce! |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 11:54am On May 11, 2015 |
tonychristopher:Dude, nobody is talking about refining crude here. You are not talking to an illiterate either, I can hold my own anywhere. Refining crude is very simple, the issue here is 'AT WHAT COST'. |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by baralatie(m): 11:59am On May 11, 2015 |
Sunnybobo3:good! don't forget the price in Nigeria right now is subsidized! the local market is 40 million / day.selling at a price to meet optimum and rapid return over will be the investor best marketing strategy.waiting for price index of neighbouring countries will be irrevelant unless the investors have monopoly of local market. |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Charly68: 12:01pm On May 11, 2015 |
The God of heaven will surely make life miserable for all those that has refused to allow our systems to work well in Naija. They gather the money in self aggrandisement but God will help them to waste it ..Why shouldnt our refineries be working..we should be exporting refined oil to neighboring countries instead of importing the product from other nations . May God help GMB to stand up to the daunting task |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 12:02pm On May 11, 2015 |
baralatie:Good, considering that the cost of doing business in Nigeria is high due to dearth of infrastructure, high cost of labour and logistics, do you think the the cost of refining a litre of PMS would be cheaper or more expensive in Nigeria than in developed countries? |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Whynotthetruth(m): 12:04pm On May 11, 2015 |
ricsman:Do you know about a company called Oando PLC?...biggest beneficiary of subsidy scheme...do you know the owners ![]() |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Pavore9: 12:05pm On May 11, 2015 |
Whynotthetruth:But that is not the case, Let me take the case of lgbariam, a farm settlement in Anambra state which is eve closer to Delta State than where l come from. garri is more or less the same price in Umunede! They massively cultivate cassava, they have local labour mostly from Abakilaki (Ebonyi state) and both ends predominantly use firewood for the frying of the garri, me abi alumni in garri frying! ![]() |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by baralatie(m): 12:07pm On May 11, 2015 |
Sunnybobo3:the cost of downstream business does not affect upstream oil and gas.follow my other comments virtually all the factors of doing business in the upstream and refining process have all manner of govt backing! so investors in the upstream are heavily shielded! |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 12:07pm On May 11, 2015 |
baralatie:Thanks for the answer above but you obviously are not aware of where I'm driving at. Now, if you have a refinery today in Lagos and the price of PMS in Benin, Togo, Ghana etc is in the region of 140 naira to 145 naira per litre while it's 130 naira in Nigeria, will you sell in Nigeria or find a way to export to those neighbouring countries where you'll make more profit? |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 12:08pm On May 11, 2015 |
baralatie:Refining is downstream, isn't it? Remember we've already agreed the refineries buy crude at international price |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by baralatie(m): 12:10pm On May 11, 2015 |
Sunnybobo3:not exactly! sourcing of refined products and distribution is downstream sourcing of crude,storage,refining and all in transport is upstream |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by millhouse: 12:12pm On May 11, 2015 |
who wan lose? |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 12:12pm On May 11, 2015 |
baralatie:Refining and distribution are downstream. Check again. To add to my post above, remember we have already agreed that the refineries buy crude at international oil price. |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by tonychristopher: 12:16pm On May 11, 2015 |
Sunnybobo3:Leave that to market forces to determine We have educated people ruling us ..its not about education its about common sense application bro |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by bigmo1(m): 12:19pm On May 11, 2015 |
Op, good article, but ihave questions that I would like you or any other person knowledgeable to answer. 1. How much is a litre of refined petrol directly from international refineries? 2. How much does it cost to ship down to Nigeria? 3. How much does is it cost for clearing, import duties and other sundry expenses at the port? 4. How much does it cost to transport and distribute? 5. What is the actual total amount per litre after adding all expenses. 6. How much is govt subsidizing? Nb: for the questions above, we need genuine information not the one fabricated by NNPC, or fake ones being bandied on the internet. 7. Can't the govt itself arrange to import refined petrol wholesale or make international refineries supply the country itself, instead of using independent marketers who keep grabbing the whole nation by the balls when it deems fit? |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by azpekuliar: 12:20pm On May 11, 2015 |
Where is jpphilips to dissect this? |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Sunnybobo3(op): 12:20pm On May 11, 2015 |
tonychristopher:The market forces are not just local forces, this is an international commodity we are talking about and you can't treat Nigeria in isolation here. PMS can never be significantly cheaper in Nigeria than it is in Benin, Togo, Cameroon, Niger, Chad etc and you won't have scarcity in Nigeria. Impossible! |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by Nobody: 12:22pm On May 11, 2015 |
The op isn't the writer. Lildreezy: |
| Re: Why Our Refineries Can't Work, At Least For Now. by baralatie(m): 12:22pm On May 11, 2015 |
Sunnybobo3:I get your point but refineries don't sell products that way. at the refinery end the final cost of product is "stable".it is the cost of lifting and discharge to the downstream operators that differ.that is where you have Benin 140/145 and Lagos 130(just saying) but in the private hands it is dangerous to stockpile product over time because of 10(the losses on the installation is immense,so the best business is to pump the products with turnover sales in shortest times possible.(as long as it is not a monopolised market).hence the closet Mark et like Nigeria enjoys a more sustainable product price regime. |
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