GMD, NNPC, Dr. Joseph Dawha 
The
 Port Harcourt Refining Company Limited will start refining crude oil 
and will contribute to petroleum product availability by the end of this
 month, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation has said.
It
 also assured that on or before the end of this week, the scarcity of 
Premium Motor Spirit, otherwise known as petrol, will cease across the 
country.
The
 Group Managing Director, NNPC, Dr. Joseph Dawha, disclosed this in 
Abuja on Thursday after inspecting some petrol stations in the city.
He
 said, “Presently, the refineries are undergoing rehabilitation and we 
are undertaking what we call a new strategy to carry out the turn around
 maintenance on them. Basically, what this means is that we are carrying
 out phased implementation of rehabilitation of the refineries.
“We
 are taking the refineries unit by unit and carrying out turnaround 
maintenance on them. So in other words, the maintenance are being 
carried out on the run and we started a couple of months ago.
“Most
 of the refineries have advanced to a certain stage where they will be 
able to operate very soon. For example, the Port Harcourt refinery, 
which has reached an advanced stage, will start receiving crude by end 
of this month and then of course will start contributing to the 
available products in the country.”
NNPC
 has four refineries, two in Port Harcourt, and one each in Kaduna and 
Warri. The refineries have a combined installed capacity of 445,000 
barrels per day. A comprehensive network of pipelines and depots 
strategically located throughout Nigeria link these refineries.
Dawha said the maintenance exercise on the refineries were spontaneously taking place in all the facilities.
He
 said, “At the end of the target 18 months, most of the refineries would
 have been rehabilitated to such level where they can actually process 
crude optimally to make contributions to the availability of products in
 the country.
“I’ve
 heard some people say we have neglected the refineries, no, farther 
from that. We hope that at the end of the exercise, these refineries 
will be fully back into operation and we will minimise some of the 
problems we have with importation.”
He
 explained that why the refineries were not running was a conscious 
decision, adding that “we decided that if the refineries were not in 
good state to process crude for maximum gain, then there was no point 
sending crude to the refineries.
“Therefore
 what you do is to try and fix it so that by the time you start 
processing the crude, you will get real value for the crude you are 
sending to the refineries. We are satisfied with the level of work that 
has been carried out so far in the Port Harcourt refinery, so that if 
you start processing crude now you will get real value.”
The
 Managing Director, Pipelines Product Marketing Company, Mr. Haruna 
Momoh, stated that the NNPC imports 50 per cent of petroleum products 
into the country.
He
 noted that when the ongoing rehabilitation and turn around maintenance 
of the Port Harcourt refinery is completed in July, 2015, the plant 
would run at 80 per cent installed capacity and produce five million 
litres of petrol on a daily basis.
Meanwhile,
 Dawha called on marketers to start importing PMS, stressing that the 
distribution challenge of PMS was largely due to the non-involvement of 
marketers, a development which resulted in the scarcity nationwide.
The
 NNPC GMD said as of Thursday, the PPMC had a stock level of 1.1 billion
 litres, representing 27 days sufficiency, and noted that the stock 
excludes volumes with confirmed delivery dates within the next couple of
 days.
 
 
 
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