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Nigeria executes local fuel requirements, regulator clarifies

Nigeria's oil regulator on Thursday clarified that recent modifications to fuel sulphur material standards for diesel become part of a local harmonisation effort, not a relaxation of regulations for local refineries.

Last week, an S&P Global report noted a substantial shift in the West African fuel market after Nigeria altered its maximum diesel sulphur material from 200 parts per million (ppm). to around 650 ppm, triggering issues it might be lowering its. standards to accommodate locally produced diesel which. exceeds the 200 ppm cap.

But the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum. Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) stated it was only sticking to a. 2020 choice by the Economic Community of West African States. ( ECOWAS) which mandated a gradual shift to cleaner fuels throughout. the area.

High sulphur material in fuels can harm engines and. add to air contamination.

Currently, the ECOWAS rule permits in your area produced fuel to. have a higher sulphur material until January 2025. At that point,. an uniform standard of below 5 ppm will use to both domestic. refining and imports from outdoors West Africa.

NMDPRA chief Farouk Ahmed told the new limitations comply. with the choice by ECOWAS that mandated more stringent fuel. specifications, with enforcement starting in January 2021 for. non-ECOWAS imports and January 2025 for ECOWAS refineries.

We are simply carrying out the ECOWAS decision adopted in. 2020, Ahmed stated.

So a regional refinery with a 650 ppm sulphur in its product. is allowable and safe under the ECOWAS rule till January next. year where an uniform standard would apply to both the in your area. fine-tuned and imported products outside West Africa, Ahmed said.

Ahmed stated importers were notified of the progressive. decrease in permitted sulphur material, reaching 200 ppm this. month from 300 ppm in February, well before the huge Dangote. refinery started providing diesel.

Importers were previously allowed to generate diesel with. a sulphur content between 1,500 ppm and 3,000 ppm.

The shift to cleaner fuels lines up with global ecological. efforts and guarantees a level playing field for regional refiners.

(source: Reuters)