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FG breaks NNPC into four units
FG breaks NNPC into four units
CuteNaija
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Wednesday, March 09, 2016
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has been unbundled into four units in a major restructuring of the 39-year-old oil giant.
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Dr. Ibe Kachikwu yesterday announced the new structure at a briefing in Abuja.
The minister, who is also the Group Managing Director of the organisation, said President Muhammadu Buhari approved the restructuring.
He said: “The new NNPC comprises a lean headquarters and four autonomous business units.”
He told reporters that the restructuring will not lead to job losses.
The four units are: Upstream Company, Downstream Company, Refinery Company and Gas/ Power Company.
According to him, the Upstream Company will now comprise of NPDC and the IDSL. The Downstream Company consists of Retail, NPMC and NPSC, the Refinery Company consists of WRPC, KRPC and PHRC while the Gas and Power is now made up of NGPTC, NGMC and Gas and Power Investment.
Kachikwu said the Federal Government has approved the appointment of Chief Executives for the companies: They are: Bello Rabiu as CEO of the Upstream Company; Henry Iken Obih for Downstream; Anibor Kragha for Refineries and Saidu Mohammed for Gas and Power.
He denied announcing the unbundling of the corporation into 30 companies, saying the GMD is still the Chief Executive of NNPC.
He said what was ignored in his statement about the new structure of the NNPC is that there will be “subsets. Subset is the unbundling. It is not a direct unbundling of NNPC into 30. It means that the subsets of NNPC are being unbundled into smaller numbers of companies. It is totally a different thing and the press got it wrong, please.”
The minister attributed the cause of fuel scarcity to the independent marketers that have refused to import petroleum products that now resulted in NNPC embarking on 100 per importation and supply instead of 50 per cent.
He expressed hope that within one year, the NNPC would overcome fuel constraints and exit importation of products.
The minister said the Port Harcourt Refinery is back on stream, working at “minimal terms.”
He said the corporation has now embarked on supplying one cargo of products daily. Three refineries, he said, are configured now to produce 50% of PMS and 50% of other products.
“The hope is that at the end of the month, the three refineries would have got crude and begin to work. Hopefully, that will soften the pressure,” he added.
The minister explained that even if the refineries are producing at 100 per cent installed capacity there will still be supply gap, stressing that this situation can only be ameliorated when there is completion of Greenfield refineries and modular ones that could be coupled for production.
He said the refineries are operational, they will increase products to a level that Nigeria will commence building a reserve of refined products.
According to him, with the efforts being made to build modular and greenfield refineries Nigeria is targeting fuel export by 2020 when Dangote Refinery becomes operational.
The minister said “when the refineries begin to work, we will see how we can save up and continue our importation process and save up strategic reserves so that in the month of difficulties you can reach out to those before you get your next set of import.
“We are working feverishly trying to see with the Joint Venture Partners how we can come with refineries. We have advertised recently for the collocated refineries.”
On whether government has removed fuel subsidy, he said there is no removal of subsidy but price modulation.
He noted that the government is now saving from the price modulation and it could use the savings to stabilise the market when it is necessary.
According to him, the government will further review the prices of petrol by April, which may lower the cost of fuel.
He said he will always support a reduction of supply by members of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in order to increase the price of crude.
The minister said prior to the blast of the Forcados pipeline, Nigeria was producing 2.3million barrels per day Click to signup for FREE news updates, latest information and hottest gists everyday
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Fuel marketers have not "refused" to import fuel. The issue is that they are not getting the FOREX to import.
ReplyDeleteAs they say, "the devil is in the detail". We need to see the governance structure of these new entities, and whether they will still be subjected with the marathon approval processes of some "Group" Board - a process that has been a bottleneck to the JVs for years.
ReplyDeleteAnother point Kachikwu needs to understand is that no outside investor will put down his money into a venture being managed by a Nigerian-government-owned company. All those ventures from which IOCs divested and which NPDC insists on being operator will continue to languish for lack of investment.
Nothing is going to change in NNPC because these new appointees are largely from the same inefficient NNPC stock. Bello Rabiu used to be Technical Assistant to a former GMD and, being a product of that system, is unlikely to bring about any serious change. Anibor Kragha's appointment is a curious one. He is a Finance person from ExxonMobil - apparently a personal friend of Kachikwu from the same ExxomMobil. What the heck is a Finance person doing to head a struggling Refining company whose real challenge is technical?
ReplyDeleteThis announcement is an anti-climax for the NNPC.