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How Yar’Adua canceled Dangote’s $750m deal to revive Nigeria’s refineries – Obasanjo

Afolabi Hakim by Afolabi Hakim
January 2, 2025
in National
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Former President Olusegun Obasanjo
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  • He explained how he reached out help to multinational oil company, Shell, to rehabilitate and manage the facilities but faced resistance

Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has once again weighed in on the controversies surrounding the viability or otherwise of Nigeria’s refineries.

Recently, the NNPC announced that the Port Harcourt and Warri refineries are now operational and are refining petroleum products.

While many hailed the state-owned oil company for the development which is expected to wean the nation of its dependence on imported refined Petroleum products, the news was greeted with skepticism and doubts among others owing to NNPC’s insincerity and opacity on the matter in the past.

Speaking on Nigeria’s refineries woes, Obasanjo recounted failed efforts to privatise the country’s refineries and the subsequent financial losses under government management.

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He explained how he reached out help to multinational oil company, Shell, to rehabilitate and manage the facilities but they declined.

Obasanjo, who disclosed this in an exclusive interview with Channels TV on Thursday, spoke on the Port Harcourt, Warri, and Kaduna refineries during his presidency.

He recalled, “I asked Shell to come and run it for us and Shell said they wouldn’t I said, Please come and take equity they said no. I said okay, don’t take equity, come and run it, they said no.

“Later on, I called them. I called the boss of Shell to come and tell me what the problem was and he gave me four or five reasons. He said, first of all, they make a major profit from upstream, not from downstream. He said they run downstream just to keep their head above water.

“Two, our refineries were too small: 60,000 barrels 100,000 barrels and I think 120,000 barrels. He said that at that time, the average refinery was going for 250,000 barrels.

“Three, he said our refineries were not well maintained. Four, he said that there was too much corruption around the activities of our refinery and they would not want to get involved in that.”

Obasanjo shared that after Shell’s refusal, Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, assembled a team and paid $750 million to operate the refineries through a public-private partnership.

“Aliko got a team together and they paid $750m to take part in PPP (Public–Private Partnership) in running the refineries. My successor refunded their money and I went to my successor, I told him what transpired, he said NNPC said they wanted the refinery and they could run it and I said but you know they cannot run it,” he stated.

The former president expressed confidence in Dangote’s ability to manage his privately owned refinery effectively, contrasting it with the government’s inefficiency.

“I was told not too long ago that since that time, more than two billion dollars have been squandered on the refinery and they still will not work.

“If a company like Shell tells me what they told me, I will believe them. If anybody tells you now that it is working, why are they now with Aliko? And Aliko will make his own refinery work; not only make it work, he will make it deliver.”

Obasanjo concluded with a Yoruba proverb, comparing inflated claims about the refineries’ performance to planting 100 heaps of yam but falsely claiming to have planted 200.

“They say after he has harvested 100 heaps of Yam, he will also have 100 heaps of lies. You know what that means,” he said.

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