Some oil marketers have started buying petrol directly from Dangote Petroleum Refinery without a recourse to the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL).
According to reports, more oil marketers were intensifying efforts to buy the product directly from the plant, while others were importing the commodity, as hundreds of millions of litres of imported PMS should hit Nigeria’s shores in two weeks’ time.
Punch reported on Monday that no fewer than four vessels carrying imported PMS arrived at seaports situated along the nation’s borders between Friday, October 18, and Sunday, October 20.
According to the report, a document obtained from the Nigerian Port Authority, showed that about 123.4 million litres of PMS were berthed at two seaports to improve fuel supply nationwide.
An earlier report had said that oil dealers intend to import the commodity to supplement the supply from the $20bn Dangote refinery.
Meanwhile, as major oil marketers import the commodity, their counterparts have started lifting PMS directly from the Lekki-based plant.
A senior official at the refinery said marketers are now allowed to approach the company for direct business transactions on a willing-buyer, willing-seller basis.
An official, who spoke in confidence due to lack of authorisation to speak on the matter, stated. “Marketers are already coming to the refinery to lift PMS. They are lifting directly from the refinery, not through a third party.”
The source, who could not tell the price at which marketers were lifting the product, noted that the oil dealers would not come if the price was not favourable to them.
“We have reached agreements with some of the marketers and more are still ongoing. I don’t know the exact price, but if the price is not good, the marketers would not be coming to us,” the official stated.
He maintained that things are improving, especially as the Federal Government commenced the supply of crude to the facility.
Another official at the facility showed one of our correspondents the trucks of some marketers loading the product directly from the plant without going through NNPC.
“Some of the trucks you saw there today were from marketers purchasing the product directly from Dangote, without recourse to NNPC. So the direct sale has started,” the source stated.
The official explained that due to the high demand for petrol in Nigeria and other countries, the refinery had focused on ensuring 53 per cent of PMS production from its crude oil supplies.
“This could be reviewed in future if the demand for other finished products increases more than the demand for petrol, but right now about 53 per cent of our crude is used for petrol production, while other products account for the remaining percentage,” the official stated.
When asked if marketers had started the direct purchase of petrol from Dangote without recourse to NNPC, one of the notable major marketers in the country replied in the affirmative.
“Yes, everyone is in the process. This was advised that it would happen soon and is a normal business transaction,” the source stated.
But this is contrary to claims from some quarters that the refinery would not be able to sell petrol to marketers unless the deal between it and the NNPC is terminated.