Africa’s top oil producer
has been trying to restart its refineries, which hardly produce any petrol due
to decades of mismanagement and widespread graft. Motorists have been queuing
for fuel for months across Nigeria.
Nigeria’s state oil firm
NNPC has launched bidding to find partners to overhaul its ailing refineries,
it said in a tender published on Tuesday.
Last month, NNPC head
Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu said the firm was in talks with Chevron, France’s Total
and Italy’s ENI to revamp the refineries but would also launch a separate
tender in order to attract a maximum number of bids.
NNPC is seeking partners
for joint ventures to “fund, rehabilitate and jointly” operate the
210,000-barrel-per-day Port Harcourt refinery, the 110,000-bpd Kaduna refinery
and the 125,000-bpd Warri refinery, according to the tender which was published
in newspapers.
Bidding will end on May 30.
Investors would be paid
from proceeds from the sale of refined products, the tender said.
The revamp is part of
reforms started by President Muhammadu Buhari Kachikwu last year to overhaul
NNPC, whose opaque structures have allowed corruption and oil theft to
flourish.
In February, Kachikwu told
Reuters that NNPC was also in talks with oil companies and banks to raise
capital for new drilling and to repay its debt.

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