The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has ended its highly
controversial offshore processing arrangement (OPA) in favour of direct
sale-direct purchase (DSDP).
The OPA deals, which involved
middlemen in the crude-oil-exchange-for-product matrix, had been widely
criticised as opaque, dubious and corrupt by industry experts.
With
Nigerian refineries not producing enough to meet local demand, the NNPC
trades part of its daily 440,000bpd allocation in exchange for products
such as petrol, diesel and kerosene under OPA.
Announcing the
new arrangement on Tuesday afternoon, Ohi Alegbe, the corporation’s
spokesman,
said it is a “major steer designed to enshrine transparency
and eliminate the activities of middlemen in the crude oil exchange for
product matrix”.
The DSDP allows for the direct sale of crude oil
by NNPC as well as direct purchase of petroleum products from “credible
international refineries”, he said.
Alegbe said the NNPC came to
this “informed” position after the evaluation exercise of pre-qualified
bidders revealed that most of the 44 companies earlier shortlisted for
the next stage of the tender process only had affiliations to refineries
abroad, “a situation which introduces toll on the value chain”.
If
allowed to subsist, the development would in turn constitute a
significant value loss to the federation by way of accruals, he said.
“In
this regard, only bona fide owners of Refineries identified in the
ongoing OPA Tender Evaluation process will be further engaged. The
identified Refineries will be subjected to due diligence and analysis by
NNPC appointed consultants to confirm suitability in line with
International best practice,” Alegbe said.
The NNPC said the call
for commercial bids issued to the 44 shortlisted bidders made up of 34
international firms and 10 indigenous companies have been withdrawn.
Source: The CableNG
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