Africa Richest Man and Business Tycoon, Aliko Dangote 'plans Nigeria refinery'
Nigeria is Africa's main oil producer but has to import more
than 75% of its fuel
Africa's wealthiest
man, Aliko Dangote, says he aims to invest up to $8bn in a major new oil
refinery that would almost double Nigeria's oil output.
Nigeria is Africa's
biggest oil producer but lacks refining capacity and has to import most of its
fuel.
Mr Dangote, 56, told
Reuters news agency that those who should have invested in refineries were
benefiting from Nigeria's lack of capacity.
Building a major
refinery would help all of sub-Saharan Africa, he said.
The tycoon, who made
his fortune in cement, flour and sugar, is worth an estimated $16bn (£10bn;
12bn euros) and has topped the Forbes list of Africa's richest men for the past three
years.
In five years, when
our population is over 200 million, we won't have the infrastructure to receive
the amount of fuel we use” -Aliko Dangote
Work on constructing
the refinery would begin this year and it would eventually have the capacity to
produce 450,000 barrels per day, he said.
He stressed that a new
refinery was vital for Nigeria: "It has to be done."
"In five years,
when our population is over 200 million, we won't have the infrastructure to
receive the amount of fuel we use."
The BBC's Will Ross in
Lagos says it is a scandal that Nigeria has to import more than three-quarters
of its fuel despite being the continent's biggest producer.
Although it has two
refineries in the Port Harcourt area, neither runs at full capacity.
Previous efforts to
repair Nigeria's dilapidated refineries and build new ones have been scuppered
to protect the interests of powerful fuel importers, some of whom have been
linked to a subsidy scam costing the country billions of dollars a year, our
correspondent adds.
Fuel in Nigeria is
sold at a subsidised price. A government attempt to remove the subsidy in 2012
led to nationwide protests. The plan was subsequently dropped.
Last year an
investigation revealed that in two years, over $6bn was lost in a fuel subsidy
scam.
The inquiry into the
subsidy scam was then set up but the legislator leading it was later arrested
over bribery allegations.
Mr Dangote
acknowledged in his interview that his refinery plan may face opposition.
"The people who
were supposed to invest in refineries, who understand the market, are
benefiting from there being no refineries because of the fuel import
business," he said.
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