Environment & Safety Gas Processing/LNG Maintenance & Reliability Petrochemicals Process Control Process Optimization Project Management Refining

Nigeria to cut sulphur in fuels a year after UN deadline

LONDON, (Reuters) - Nigeria will begin cutting the sulphur levels allowed in imported fuels in July, a change long sought by health and environmental campaigners, a year after an initial deadline, an official at state oil company NNPC said.

West African nations had promised higher quality by July 2017 as part of a United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP)campaign, but only Ghana met the deadline.

Nigeria imports roughly 900,000 tonnes of gasoline every month, accounting for 60 percent of West African imports of the fuel, meaning its choices on fuel quality are likely to impact the entire region.

Nigeria will lower the top level of sulphur in diesel to 50 parts per million (ppm), from 3,000 ppm, by July 1, Anibor O. Kragha, NNPC's chief operating officer of refineries and petrochemicals said in a presentation to the African Refiners Association (ARA).

Gasoline sulphur level cuts, a cost that will be borne largely by the government due to capped prices for the fuel, will start in October, moving to 300 ppm from 1,000 ppm.

Nigeria is targeting a cut to 150 ppm by October 1, 2019, Kragha said.

The Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON), the body responsible for setting requirements for imported goods, published tighter quality rules last year, but another government body - the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) - did not issue revised specifications.

James McCullagh, analyst with Energy Aspects, said that meant "NNPC currently has the right — rather than the obligation — to actually import it (cleaner fuels)."

"This latest move would merely crystallise that obligation," he said.

Kragha told journalists in Cape Town that the ministries of Environment, Health, Petroleum Resources and Industry and Trade were working together to finalise rules that would be distributed to importers at some point in the second quarter.

UNEP, the ARA and health campaigners have been pushing West African nations to ban fuels that have been illegal in Europe and the United States for years due to what they say are significant health problems associated with sulphur emissions - particularly in dense urban areas such as Lagos.

The region is one of the last on earth where it is legal to sell fuels with sulphur levels at and above 1,000 ppm, as east and north African nations and major Asian consumer countries such as China and India have already tightened rules.

Kragha, in a presentation during ARA Week in Cape Town, said that while Nigeria was committed to cleaner fuel standards, "significant costs" complicated efforts to meet the deadline.

The presentation said that the first shift to cleaner gasoline would cost $11.7 million per month, and the second $15.7 million per month. The diesel reduction would cost $2.8 million per month.

Because gasoline prices are capped in Nigeria, and NNPC itself has been importing the bulk of it over the past year via crude for product swaps, the government is likely to bear much of the initial costs for a cleaner specification.

Diesel prices are deregulated, meaning consumers will pay directly for the better-quality fuels. Nigeria's own oil refineries will have until 2021 to meet the new sulphur levels, Kragha said.

(Additional reporting by Wendell Roelf in Cape Town; Editing by Alexander Smith and Mark Potter)

From the Archive

Comments

Comments

{{ error }}
{{ comment.name }} • {{ comment.dateCreated | date:'short' }}
{{ comment.text }}