VON DG supports rehabilitation of Port Harcourt refinery

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The Director General of Voice of Nigeria, Mr Osita Okechukwu said that he supports the decision of the Federal Executive Council to rehabilitate the moribund Port Harcourt refinery.

Mr Okechukwu was answering reporters’ questions in Abuja on Tuesday over the criticisms trailing the decision of the Federal Executive Council to rehabilitate the moribund Port Harcourt Refinery with a whopping $1.5 billion.

He emphasised that experience has shown that those State owned enterprises privatised, more or less did not advance economic development of our dear country as canvassed by World Bank and IMF in 1986.

Reminded of wastage of public funds that is the trade mark of government in Nigeria, which maybe the case of the rehabilitation exercise, Okechukwu answered.

“We need efficient functional public owned refineries, therefore one is fully in support of the rehabilitation exercise. Yes, NNPC had disappointed us in the past with failed Turn-Around-Maintenance (TAM), which consumed mind boggling billions of Naira. Yes, NNPC reported operational losses running into billions over the years; however the gigantic Dangote Refinery, a worthy private enterprise needs strong competition to avoid monopoly.”

When asked whether it is not better to privatise the refineries and save funds for other competing items like social infrastructure in the budget?

Okechukwu quipped, “Am one of those who still regret the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) and its malcontent outcome like privatizations which had led to exit of local industries, gross unemployment, abject poverty and hunger in the land. For example, we privatized our cement factories, did it reduce the cost of cement in Nigeria? Or did cement manufacturing in private hands accelerate the building industry in Nigeria?”

 When he was posed with the query that the refinery is too old, why pump further public funds into it, as nothing good will come out of the rehabilitation? Okechukwu replied that the 119 years old Chevron Richmond Refinery in San Fransisco, California is still functioning, talk less of 32 years old Port Harcourt Refinery.

“The Chevron Richmond Refinery was completed in July, 1902, was processing 10,000 barrels of crude per day, with a tank capacity of 185,000 at inception, later 250,000 barrels. And it is still in operation.”

 

 

PR/Dominica Nwabufo

 

 

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