Nigeria's Warri refinery has not
yet reopened after last week's temporary closure because crude
oil is still being loaded into the plant, a spokesman for its
operator the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) said
on Tuesday.
NNPC spokesman Ohi Alegbe said the refinery would only
restart when it had enough crude to keep it going for at least
25 days.
"Once we have supplied sufficient crude ... we can restart
the production process," Alegbe said.
He added that crude was being supplied to the refinery in
batches carried by marine vessels, because most of the pipelines
supplying it had been compromised by vandalism.
Oil sales account for around 70 percent of government
revenue in Africa's top crude producer, which imports most of
the fuel used by its 170 million inhabitants because of the age
and inefficiency of its refineries in Warri, Kaduna and Port
Harcourt.
NNPC had on Thursday said the decision to shut
Warri was taken because there was insufficient crude in the
system, adding it expected to resume by Tuesday.
The 125,000 barrels per day (bpd) Warri refinery resumed
operations two months ago after maintenance that began in
November 2014. It is expected to run at 60,000 bpd.
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