The Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation’s three refineries in Kaduna, Port Harcourt and Warri have resumed
production of Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) and Dual Purpose Kerosene (DPK),
otherwise known as diesel and kerosene respectively.
The resumption of refining of AGO
and DPK is expected to balance the disequilibrium in demand and supply of the
white products being experienced in recent times in parts of the Country.
Speaking on the production level of
the Warri refinery, the Managing Director of the Warri Refining and
Petrochemical Company (WRPC), Engr. Solomon Ladenegan, said the plant had been
doing well since the Crude Distillation Unit (CDU) was revved up on Saturday, 7
January, 2017.
Ladenegan said the refinery resumed
production last Saturday at about 10:22hrs, with the plant’s CDU functioning.
The refinery MD stated that the plant now refines 2 million litres of kerosene and 3 million litres of diesel daily.
The refinery MD stated that the plant now refines 2 million litres of kerosene and 3 million litres of diesel daily.
“This morning, we have pumped the
products to PPMC and they have started loading. They are going to load up to 1
million litres of DPK and AGO. The products are there in the tank and we are
doing everything to get them to the market,” Engr. Ladenegan disclosed.
On his part, the Managing Director
of the Port Harcourt Refining Company (PHRC), Dr Bafred Enjugu, said Port
Harcourt Refinery was producing 3 million litres of AGO daily, in addition to
millions of DPK being churned out by the refinery daily.
Enjugu
enthused that his operators were thrilled having rehabilitated the old Port
Harcourt Refinery where production of AGO was being carried out by themselves
without foreign expertise deployment.
Meanwhile, the Kaduna Refinery has
also roared into action, producing millions of litres of white products to ease
out the situation in supply and distribution of petroleum products nationwide.
An independent marketer, Alhaji
Abubakar Usman Yahaya, of Yamoyus Nigeria Ltd who was at the PHRC Depot for
loading, described the refinery and the depot environment as positive,
affirming that he and his co-marketers had access to PMS, AGO and DPK in
sufficient quantities.
“I
think this is because the refinery has started working”, Alhaji Yahaya stated.
Beside the products from the
refineries, NNPC has made arrangements for additional supply intervention
through direct import of PMS, AGO and DPK to sustain products availability
across the country.
It would be recalled that NNPC broke
the jinx of end-of-year products shortage during the last Yuletide season by
ensuring copious products supply across every nook and cranny of the country.
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