The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited says negotiation is ongoing for a new naira-for-crude deal with Dangote Petroleum Refinery.
NNPC announced in a statement on Monday after TheCable
reported earlier that the government-owned oil company had reportedly suspended
the naira-for-crude deal until 2030, as it has forward-sold all its crude oil.
The discontinuation will force refiners to rely on
international suppliers for crude oil, gulping huge costs in dollars and
triggering an uptick in the pump price of petrol.
However, Olufemi Soneye, the chief corporate communications officer of NNPC, said the current deal will expire at the end of March.
“NNPC Limited has noted recent reports circulating on social
media regarding the alleged unilateral termination of the crude oil sales
agreement in Naira between NNPC and Dangote Refinery,” Soneye said.
“To clarify, the contract for the sale of crude oil in Naira
was structured as a six-month agreement, subject to availability, and expires
at the end of March 2025. Discussions are currently ongoing towards emplacing a
new contract.”
Under the current arrangement, Soneye said NNPC has made
over 48 million barrels of crude oil available to Dangote refinery since
October 2024.
“In aggregate, NNPC has made over 84 million barrels of
crude oil available to the Refinery since its commencement of operations in
2023,” he said.
“NNPC Limited remains committed to supplying crude oil for
local refining based on mutually agreed terms and conditions.”
The sale of crude oil and refined petroleum products in
naira to local refineries commenced on October 1, 2024, to improve supply, save
the country millions of dollars in petroleum products imports, and ultimately
reduce pump prices.