Four oil refineries will resume
production in July, a spokesman for the state-owned Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) said on Friday.
Spokesman Ohi Alegbe said the two
refineries in Port Harcout would begin operations after turnaround
maintenance, followed by those in Warri and Kaduna.
“Even when the refineries work at full capacity, they can only produce around 19 million litres of petrol per day,” he said.
“There will still be a shortfall of
about 21 million litres,” he said, pointing out that Nigeria consumes
about 40 million litres of petrol per day.
Nigeria, one of Africa’s top two oil
producers, is forced to import most of its petrol products due to its
ailing refinery system, which generally runs well below capacity,
sometimes at just 20 percent, due to neglect and pipeline sabotage.
Major cities in Nigeria are recovering
from a gasoline shortage despite the end of a fuel distribution strike
as fuel marketers, who are still not importing due to money owed them,
have agreed to distribute fuel brought in by the state oil company,
NNPC.
Alegbe said the turnaround maintenance for the four refineries had been ongoing since November.
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