The
Dangote Group on Wednesday sealed a $3.3bn medium term deal with 11
local and foreign banks to finance the building of a petrochemical plant
consisting of a refinery and fertiliser plant in the country.
The investment initiative is in form of a
loan agreement for the construction of a petrochemical plant to be
located at the Olokola Free Trade Zone in Ondo and Ogun states.
The refinery, according to the
President, Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, will become operational
in 2016 and generate over 10,000 direct jobs and end the importation of
refined petroleum products into the country with the attendant
multiplier effects on the manufacturing sector.
When completed, he said the refinery would to be the largest in Africa, thus turning Nigeria into a petroleum exporter.
The loan facility was coordinated
globally by Standard Chartered Bank and was co-financed in Nigeria by
Guaranty Trust Bank Plc, Access Bank Plc, Zenith Bank Plc, Ecobank
Nigeria Limited and Fidelity Bank Plc.
Other co-financiers are First Bank of
Nigeria Limited, United Bank for Africa Plc, First City Monument Bank
Plc, Diamond Bank Plc, FirstRand Bank and Standard Bank of South Africa
Limited.
Speaking at the signing of the loan
agreement in Abuja on Wednesday, Dangote said the investment was a way
of dealing with the threat posed to Nigeria’s economy following the
discovery of shale oil and gas by buyers of the country’s crude.
The investment, he said, was also a good step to support the Federal Government’s efforts at diversifying the economy.
Dangote said “As an investor who
believes in Nigeria, knows Nigeria well and whose prosperity was made in
Nigeria, we have responded to the challenge with our recent decision to
invest over $9bn in a refinery/petrochemical and fertiliser complex to
be located at the OKLNG Free Trade Zone. This complex will be the
largest industrial complex project ever in the history of our great
nation.
“Funding for the project will come from a
$3.3bn medium term loan, the agreement for which we are signing today,
and also an additional $2.25bn from the Development Financial
Institutions to augment our equity contribution of $3.50bn.”
The business mogul pointed out that when
operational, 2.75 metric tonnes per annum of Urea and Ammonia would be
produced from the fertiliser plant, while the refinery would have the
capacity to process 400,000 barrels of crude oil per day.
Speaking after a meeting with President
Goodluck Jonathan at the State House, Dangote gave an assurance that
Nigeria would no longer import petroleum products once the plant
commenced operation.
Dangote met the President in company
with some officials of his company, members of the Manufacturers
Association of Nigeria and chief executives of the participating banks,
who raised the $3.3bn credit.
He said, “Now, Nigeria is going to be
taken out of the list of countries that import petroleum products. We
will produce 20 million metric tonnes, which is equivalent to what
Nigeria consumes currently.
“Today, we did the signing ceremony, the
vice-president came to witness the signing but we insisted on coming to
thank Mr. President so much for his policies.
“Without good government policies, there
is no way the private sector can invest in Nigeria, because we are not
Father Christmas at all. The policies have to be right.”
Also speaking at the event, the
Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Lamido Sanusi, associated the
deal to the success of the banking sector reforms by the central bank.
This, he noted, had boosted lending to the real sector.
Sanusi said the success of the reform
was a testimony to the fact that Nigerian banks could offer credit when
any project that could add value to the real sector was being provided.
No comments:
Post a Comment