Local Refineries Not Illegal – IPDI

Fri, Sep 23, 2016
By publisher
3 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Oil & Gas

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THE Ijaw People Development Initiative, IPDI, has urged the military to stop further destruction of local refineries in the Niger Delta, saying they were not illegal as charged.

Austin Ozobo, national president of the group, in a press statement, said the local refineries help in controlling price and availability of petroleum, diesel and kerosene products in the country and government should regulate, rather than destroy the technology.

 “It is, therefore, unfair to describe its operation as illegal, what is illegal about it, no innovation is illegal, and no technology is illegal in the world. The government can regulate its operation and earn revenue from it. It is subject to improvement. They should think of improving the robust local technology and stop destroying them. The army and navy, which destroy stolen crude or locally refined products are another set of economic saboteurs against the nation’ economic. They are not different from  oil thieves and  vandals  because both  efforts gear towards bleeding the nation’s economy.

“That the local refineries are not owned by the government do not make them illegal. The government is sectional and lopsided, that is why they fail to see the beauty of this local technology. Local refineries in the country complement other refineries in the country. They help in controlling price and availability of petroleum products in the country,  such as petroleum, diesel and kerosene products. Nigeria government does not see the beauty of it because it is being operated by people of the most neglected Niger Delta. But it would have been welcomed if it were operated by the northerners.”

“Local refinery bunkering business has created thousands of jobs for interested jobless persons and young school leavers all over the Niger- Delta region and the western part of this country and had drastically reduced crime rate in the region. The activities of local refinery have reduced poverty among aborigines in these regions. The so-called illegal refineries could be converted to Modula refineries. If the govt think it is illegal, let the government legalise it by either issuing operational lichens or permit. It can be regulated in such a way that the operators will be buying raw crude direct from NNPC at the local price,” the group stated.

The IPDI said: “Of what importance is the destruction of impounded stolen crude, it is unfair to destroy it, looking at its economic importance. Whether stolen or impounded, such does not reduce or devalue the crude or other locally-refined products. If the government is wise, such impounded products can be converted to assist the dying economy. Instead of burning it or wasting it, it is better to allow citizen to use it to develop themselves if the government is not being wicked.

“The local refineries help to checkmate activities of militancy and piracies in the region as thousands of jobless persons now earn a living from it. Operators of local refineries are not oil thieves, neither pipeline vandals, they buy to refine. They are different from oil thieves and vandals and saboteurs, who are seeking pipeline repair and surveillance contracts. Oil thieves are those, who use vessels and barges to siphon crude from pipeline and export it. These group of persons include NNPC top staff, top politicians, top army and navy officers,” it said.

It added: “Local refinery operators buy remnants or spill over from such cartels to refine. They buy to refine and do not siphon from pipelines to get their products. The government of Buhari, its military and navy should have a rethink and stop further destruction of the nation’s economic products.”

—  Sep 26, 2016 @ 01:00 GMT

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