Another chapter will this year be opened in the downstream
sector of the petroleum industry, when business mogul Alhaji Aliko
Dangote kicks off his plan to establish a refinery in the country.
The
federal government had, in 2011, granted approval to 19 multinationals
for the setting up of private refineries in the country, but none of
them has come on stream due to the regulation of the price of fuel in
the country.
Though details of where the refinery will be sited
and its capacity were yet to be made known, work on the refinery, which
will cost $8 billion, will begin this year.
At a breakfast meeting
with some senior editors to mark his 57th birthday in Lagos, Alhaji
Dangote said work will start on the refinery once his company secured
the final approval from the federal government.
While
acknowledging the fact that only a mad businessman would consider
establishing a refinery in Nigeria under the present uncertain business
terrain of subsidising the downstream sector of the petroleum industry,
Dangote pleaded with the government to allow market forces to determine
the price of fuel to allow the private sector play a significant role in
the industry.
“We are all aware that the federal government had
issued 19 licences to the private sector to establish refineries in the
country, but how many of them have come on stream? There is uncertainty
in the sector and only a mad businessman will put up a refinery now, but
we are set to do that,” he said.
Alhaji Dangote urged the federal
government to put in place critical infrastructure in all sectors of
the economy to kick-start its rapid development.
He said that with
the country’s population expected to hit 200 million by 2015, there
were no serious plans to take care of the huge population.
He also called on the government to diversify the economy by intensifying reforms in agriculture.

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