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Nigeria blocks oil export permits to producers that do not meet refinery quotas

Nigeria's upstream regulator of oil said Monday that it will deny export permits to producers who do not meet their stipulated quota for local refineries. This includes the Dangote Refinery in Nigeria, Africa's biggest.

The Petroleum Industry Act of Nigeria, which governs the oil industry in Nigeria, requires oil producers to supply domestic refineries with a certain volume of crude oil before they export it. This requirement is called the domestic crude supplies obligation.

Oil producers claim that they haven't complied because refiners don't offer competitive prices. The Dangote Refinery has called on the regulators to enforce the law.

In a statement released on Monday, the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission stated that Gbenga Komolafe (the head of the commission) wrote to oil exploration companies and production companies reminding them of their obligations as well as penalties for non-compliance.

The commission stated that it met with refiners and producers last week. Komolafe stated that refiners accused producers of not fulfilling their obligations under the Supply Obligation, while producers claimed refiners were offering them insufficient prices and forcing them to explore alternative markets.

Komolafe has warned that "the diversion crude cargoes designated for domestic refineries contravenes the law, and the Commission will subsequently disallow export permits of designated crude cargoes for domestic re-fining."

According to an oil regulator's schedule, Nigerian refineries will need 770,500 barrels per day in the first half 2025. The Dangote Refinery is expected to need 550,000 bpd. (Additional reporting and writing by Isaac Anyaogu, Editing by Rod Nickel.)

(source: Reuters)