Nigeria's Dangote Refinery, others seek 597 700 bpd of oil amid tight supply
Nigerian refineries - including the Dangote Refinery - have raised their domestic crude requirements for the second half of 2024 to 597 700 barrels per day (bpd) from 483 000 bpd in the first half, the national oil regulator said - despite tight domestic supply.
The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) was only able to help secure 177 777 bpd from oil producers in the first six months of the year, way below what the refiners had asked for, it said in a statement on Friday.
The refineries' rising crude requirements and oil producers' struggle to meet demand has put the 650 000-bpd Dangote Refinery in particular at odds with the regulator.
Dangote Refinery has accused NUPRC of failing to enforce a law that requires oil producers to supply domestic refiners, saying in a statement that lax enforcement was raising its operational costs. The refinery, which is the largest in Africa, says it is having to increase crude imports due to the insufficient domestic supplies and this could impact its ambitions this year and its long-term prospects.
The NUPRC said oil producers could not satisfy the demands because some had operational challenges while others pledged most of their output to traders who financed drilling. It added that forcing them to raise their supply would violate their contracts.
In its statement, the regulator also projected national average crude oil production of 1.7 million bpd by December, higher than the 1.57 million bpd it projected for January through July, which producers did not meet.
"This comprehensive data provides insight into the projected crude oil needs for the refineries, crucial for understanding the energy landscape in Nigeria for the second half of 2024," Gbenga Komolafe, head of the NUPRC, said in the statement.
NUPRC data showed that eight refineries are expected to be operational from August, with a total refining capacity of 864 500 bpd, meaning that oil producers would be required to supply over half that.
A total of 52 oil producers, including majors TotalEnergies, Chevron, Shell and ExxonMobil will supply the crude, mainly from their joint venture operations with the Nigerian state oil firm.
- Reuters
The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) was only able to help secure 177 777 bpd from oil producers in the first six months of the year, way below what the refiners had asked for, it said in a statement on Friday.
The refineries' rising crude requirements and oil producers' struggle to meet demand has put the 650 000-bpd Dangote Refinery in particular at odds with the regulator.
Dangote Refinery has accused NUPRC of failing to enforce a law that requires oil producers to supply domestic refiners, saying in a statement that lax enforcement was raising its operational costs. The refinery, which is the largest in Africa, says it is having to increase crude imports due to the insufficient domestic supplies and this could impact its ambitions this year and its long-term prospects.
The NUPRC said oil producers could not satisfy the demands because some had operational challenges while others pledged most of their output to traders who financed drilling. It added that forcing them to raise their supply would violate their contracts.
In its statement, the regulator also projected national average crude oil production of 1.7 million bpd by December, higher than the 1.57 million bpd it projected for January through July, which producers did not meet.
"This comprehensive data provides insight into the projected crude oil needs for the refineries, crucial for understanding the energy landscape in Nigeria for the second half of 2024," Gbenga Komolafe, head of the NUPRC, said in the statement.
NUPRC data showed that eight refineries are expected to be operational from August, with a total refining capacity of 864 500 bpd, meaning that oil producers would be required to supply over half that.
A total of 52 oil producers, including majors TotalEnergies, Chevron, Shell and ExxonMobil will supply the crude, mainly from their joint venture operations with the Nigerian state oil firm.
- Reuters
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