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CORAN Tells Federal Gov’t To Stop Issuing Import Licences For Diesel, Petrol

by Royal Ibeh
1 year ago
in News
CORAN
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Owners of refineries in Nigeria, under the auspices of the Crude Oil Refinery-owners Association of Nigeria (CORAN), have urged the federal government to stop issuing licences for products like diesel and petrol that the country has the capacity to produce locally.

They made the call amid complaints by depot owners that the Dangote Petroleum Refinery was planning to monopolise fuel supply in the country.

Speaking in an interview with journalists, the publicity secretary of CORAN, Eche Idoko, said Nigeria should no longer be talking about how to protect the businesses of depot owners.

“For the products that we have in-country capacity, the Federal Government should stop issuing import licences on them, like diesel and petrol,” said Idoko.

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While agreeing that depot owners are also investors, Idoko questioned the value they create in the value chain aside from mounting pressure on the currency. “I agree they are investors too, but it is an opportunity cost here. What value do depot owners create? Depot owners will ask you for a foreign exchange. Because of their cost of operation, and because of the middlemanship, depot owners will push the price up by about N150.

“Right now, I can tell you that independent marketers are buying petrol from depot owners at almost N800. If you remove these depot owners, it can’t be like that. An oil depot cannot be a viable plan for any country that wants to survive. A depot should be a placeholder pending when the refining capacity will increase,” he stated.

Idoko maintained that depot owners have refused to partner with refineries despite having the capacity. “Depot owners can build refineries, but they have refused. They can partner but they refuse. What is viable is, they can partner with any of the refineries to do bulk storage for them,” the CORAN spokesman insisted.

When told that the fuel importers were there for the country for many years with no refinery, Idoko disagreed, “They were not there for the nation, that is what they tell us. They were not there for us, and I stand by what I said. They’re not there, they’re doing business. They are the reason why we are where we are today. The point here is, how long will you be doing depot business, why won’t you grow? If we will have to continue to accommodate the depot owners, it means we will continue to import, and the naira will be under perpetual pressure.”

He spoke further, “The depot owners should evolve. We should see them entering into strategic partnerships with refineries so that those depots will graduate from an import hub to an export hub. For instance, if the Dangote refinery wants to export, it can do throughput with the tank farms that are at the waterfronts and people who want to buy Dangote fuel will buy from them and they get throughput money. They can decide to diversify; a lot of refineries here are looking for investors. Why can’t the depot owners partner with them and buy liquidities in these refineries and be relevant?”

Idoko emphasised that Nigeria cannot continue to keep depot owners’ businesses. “How many people does an average depot employ compared to over a thousand people that an average refinery will employ? If you look at the economic values of the two options, I don’t think we should be having conversations on how to protect the businesses of the depot owners at the time. We should be talking about how we can rescue the country,” he maintained.

He challenged the depot owners to a debate, saying, “We are calling them to come and debate this openly with us. Let’s put the figures before Nigeria and we will see.”

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