The development could trigger an uptick in the pump price of
petrol as local refineries — including Dangote — will now rely on international
suppliers for feedstock, gulping huge costs in dollars.
The NNPC reportedly told the refineries it has forward-sold
all its crude, although production is now said to be higher than when the deal
commenced.
Nigeria officially commenced the sale of crude oil and
refined petroleum products in naira to local refineries on October 1, 2024.
The move was meant to improve supply, save the country
millions of dollars in petroleum products imports, and ultimately reduce pump
prices.
However, multiple sources said the initiative will be
suspended until 2030.
TheCable quoting a high-level source confirmed that the NNPC has notified
Dangote Petroleum Refinery and other local refiners that it will no longer
provide crude oil to them, as it has forward-sold all of its crude supplies
until 2030.
Despite recent attempts to bolster domestic refining
capacity, the country has spent “over $4.3 billion importing 6.38 billion
litres of premium motor spirit (petrol) and automotive gas oil (diesel) in just
five months”, industry sources said.
The NNPC is said to be among the entities still importing
products, an act backed by the recent deregulation of the downstream sector.
Another source said at a time when Nigerians are hoping for
further price reductions, “the NNPC unilaterally decided to end the
naira-for-crude initiative”.
While the Dangote refinery has declined to comment on the
NNPC’s recent move, an official said the company will carefully assess its
options and decide on the appropriate course of action.
The decision to stop the naira-based crude supply might lead
to volatility in the foreign exchange (FX) market, thereby eroding recent
gains, according to market analysts.
THE TROUBLED CRUDE-FOR-NAIRA DEAL
Under the scheme, the NNPC was expected to supply 385,000
barrels per day of crude oil to the Lekki-based refinery.
However, the national oil firm has been accused of
consistently failing to meet the allocation.
In November 2024, the refinery said the crude-for-naira
initiative was faltering, as it was still unable to secure adequate supplies.
“We need 650,000 barrels per day, (state oil firm NNPC Ltd)
agreed to give a minimum of 385,000 bpd but they are not even delivering that,”
Edwin Devakumar, the vice-president of Dangote Industries Limited (DIL) had
said.
He further described the NNPC’s supply as “peanuts”.