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Nigeria's Dangote refinery says that the reduction in crude inflow is due to high prices and not faults

Nigeria's Dangote Refinery stated on Friday that the recent reductions in crude inflows was a strategic reaction to high global prices and not a result of operational failures.

The comments were made during a tour of the media to address concerns about crude volumes and possible outages at this facility.

Edwin Devakumar said that the refinery adjusted crude purchases in response to price fluctuations and stock levels. The 650,000-barrel-per-day refinery, built by billionaire Aliko Dangote, has undergone several rounds of maintenance this year, leading to reduced crude demand.

Devakumar stated that "no factory is 100% fault-free every day." What matters is whether the problem has an impact on final production.

He said that the refinery, which started operations in early 2018, is designed to undergo turnaround maintenance every five year, unlike older installations, which require more frequent shut-downs.

The refinery's gasoline division has been shut down four times this year, which is unusual for an old plant. The company usually declines to comment on the maintenance schedule.

Devakumar, who was speaking about recent dismissals of staff, said that the company had recorded 22 sabotage efforts, including attempts to start fires or tamper equipment. The refinery's automated control and fire protection systems, he said, prevented damage.

He said: "We have dates and units of attempted fire incidents documented." "Some people tried to destroy instruments, but they were overruled by the system."

According to the Crude Oil Refinery Owners Association of Nigeria (a trade association representing domestic refiners), sabotage is rare in local refineries. Nigeria's state owned refineries are still mothballed after years of neglect and corruption. Reporting by Isaac Anyaogu, Editing by Chijioke Ahuocha and Rod Nickel

(source: Reuters)