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Dangote says refinery has 500 mln litres of fuel in storage, can meet Nigeria's demand

Nigeria's Dangote oil refinery has a stockpile of 500 million litres of fuel, its billionaire creator stated, countering claims by online marketers who asserted they required to supplement Dangote's supplies with imports to meet fuel lacks.

Nigeria's President, Bola Tinubu, had summoned oil regulators, the head of the state-owned NNPC, the finance minister, and Aliko Dangote to a meeting in Abuja on Tuesday.

The function was to examine a policy requiring NNPC to offer petroleum to the Dangote refinery in local naira currency in an effort to ease forex pressure and help the mega refinery safe sufficient crude to meet its 650,000-barrel-per-day capacity.

Following the meeting, Dangote clarified that his service is not involved in retailing gas and he must not be blamed for fuel scarcities in Africa's top oil producing nation.

He also stated that keeping fuel in storage tanks is costing him money.

I anticipate the NNPC and marketers to stop importing. They ought to come and gather; we have whatever they require, said Dangote.

Two weeks back, local fuel traders began increasing imports, claiming that the Dangote refinery was unable to satisfy domestic demand, exacerbating fuel shortages.

The Dangote Oil Refinery in Lagos started processing petrol in September, at first setting out to supply 25 million litres per day. The objective is to gradually increase production to 35 million litres daily, which Dangote thinks will suffice to satisfy regional need.

At an oil conference in Lagos on Monday, nevertheless, the sector regulator stated Nigeria's daily petrol demand is in between 45 and 50 million litres.

In a declaration issued by a government representative, President Tinubu advised stakeholders to focus on supplying enough gas for local intake to reduce dependence on imports.

He likewise directed them to utilize Afreximbank, the monetary advisor for the naira unrefined sale scheme, as the settlement bank for naira prices of crude and fine-tuned products.

Dangote formerly needed to purchase crude on the global market, however it filed a complaint saying oil majors were obstructing its access to locally produced oil by offering it above market cost or declaring it was unavailable, forcing the refinery to depend on expensive imports.

Wale Edun, Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, said the strategy to sell crude in naira would remain in place, and the government would not intervene in figuring out the exchange rate for the oil sector.

Nigeria aims to end the importation of petroleum products as soon as the Dangote Refinery reaches full functional capability.

(source: Reuters)