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Dangote’s Refinery Increases Capacity To 650,000BPD

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Africa’s richest man and president of the pan-African conglomerate, the Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, has announced that he was increasing his refinery capacity to process 650, 000 barrels per day, thus making it the single largest stream in the world.

Dangote said that though the initial plan was to have 450,000 bed refining capacity, but that he has since gone back to the drawing board to have a bigger plant because he believes that Nigeria as a leading producer of crude oil should also be credited with local refining capacity.

Describing the present situation where Nigeria produces crude but goes abroad to buy refined products as unacceptable, Dangote, who spoke through his group executive director, Devakumar Edwin, said that Dangote refinery was ready to reverse the trend just as it has successfully done in other sectors like sugar and cement.

His clarification came even as the company’s executive director in charge of stakeholders’ management and corporate corporation, Engr. Manure Ahmed, told stakeholders in South Africa that the refinery would run full swing in 2017.

Edwin, who spoke while receiving on behalf of Dangote, a group of oil and gas stakeholders who paid him a visit in Lagos at the weekend, also disclosed that the petrochemicals which are being developed alongside the refinery, had its capacity increased from 750,000 to 3.6 million.

“The entire petrochemical industry is history. Nobody has started with a 3.6 million tonnes capacity anywhere in the world. We are doing 2 million tonnes of polypropylene and 1.6 tonnes of polythene which is approximately 3.6 million tonnes which is a huge petrochemical complex.

“The consumption of petrochemical products in Nigeria and within Saharan Africa is quite limited today but in the future, there will be growth. If the cement industry has not developed like this today, if we were still living with a 3.4 million tonnes per annum capacity, today we would have imported about 16 million tonnes of cement and with that, you can imagine if we had imported this, it would have cost the country $2billion of foreign exchange.

“So that much of foreign exchange has been saved by the country and we can imagine how much of billions of dollars the country is spending in importation of products.

 

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Akin Akingbala is an international journalist based in Lagos, Nigeria. Aside being happily married, he has interests in music, sports and loves traveling.

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