Nigeria’s minister of state, petroleum resources, Timipre Sylva, has called on Nigerians to be happy and proud that Africa’s biggest oil state is about to resume petroleum products importation from neighbouring Niger Republic.

Sylva said contrary to criticism from some quarters against the memorandum of understanding signed by Nigeria and Niger, the plan by Nigeria to resume fuel importation from its West African brother should not be seen as ‘an embarrassment’ but rather as a means of encouraging intra-regional trade.

The Niger Republic’s Soraz Refinery in Zinder, which is located some 260km from the Nigerian border, has an installed refining capacity of 20,000 barrels per day. The move by the federal government attracted steaming criticisms with many knocking the government over its inability to keep the country’s refineries running.

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But reacting on Monday evening while featuring on Channels Television’s Politics Today programme monitored by The PUNCH, the minister said Nigeria is a big market that needs excess fuel products processed in other countries.

Sylva said, “I don’t see that as an embarrassment at all. As a country, Nigeria is a big market, we need products, even if all our refineries were functioning, we will still need extra products.
“Niger Republic produces oil and they are landlocked as a country.

“They have a refinery that produces in excess of what they require as a country and they offered to sell to us in Nigeria because this is a bigger market.

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“In the spirit of regional cooperation, regional trade development, we decided to buy from them. I don’t see anything wrong with that. If your neighbour is producing something that is required in your country and you buy from him, why is that a big problem?

“So, we agreed with Niger to buy the excess of what they don’t require in Niger because this is a big market.” Nigerians should be proud that we are doing that to encourage sub-regional trade because we have been talking about sub-regional trade for a long time, and this is how it should be between neighbours.

Niger should import from us what we have and we should be able to import from Niger they have Let us encourage intra-regional trade and this is one good example of trading within West Africa,” the Niger Delta born minister said.

By Chibisi Ohakah, Abuja


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