The Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) on Sunday said that
the bureau would privatise the four refineries in the country next year.
Mr Chigbo Anichebe, the Bureau’s Head, Public
Communications, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja that the
refineries’ privatisation was part of the ongoing oil sector’s reforms.
Earlier last week, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs
Diezani Alison-Madueke, told Bloomberg TV Africa in London that the country
would privatise its four government-owned refineries in the first quarter of
next year.
The second time the Federal Government is disclosing plans
to privatise its refineries.
President Olusegun Obasanjo approved the sale of the
refineries during his administration but the late President Umaru Yar’Adua in
2007 reversed the sale of the refineries for lack of transparency in the
transaction.
However, President Goodluck Jonathan in November 2012
recommended that the refineries should be sold due to inadequate finance and
under-performance.
Anichebe, nonetheless, said that the privatisation plans
were currently at the preliminary stage, where the blueprint of the policy
would be decided.
“We are working with the NNPC and Ministry of Petroleum
Resources on the privatisation of the four refineries.
“We are just in the preliminary discussion with them and
very soon, we will make public the work plan for the privatisation processes,
including the engagement of advisers to advise us on the transaction.
“Once the work plan is fine-tuned, hopefully by the end of
the year or early January next year, the work plan as well as the schedule will
be unveiled to all stakeholders, including the media,’’ he said.
Anichebe said that the privatisation would be handled in
line with the usual strategy of the bureau, which was to sell a certain
percentage of shares and reserve a certain percentage for the workers, host
communities and Nigerians at large.
He urged Nigerians not to be apprehensive about the
refineries’ sale because only capable and visionary investors would be
considered in the privatisation process.
“People should not be edgy about this transaction because we
have done this over and over again. When we first started with the
telecommunications sector, people were worried that we will give it to the
wrong people.
“They were worried about the security implications and all
that. I believe that whether these companies end up with local, home-based or
foreign investors, what is important is the efficiency of whoever is handling
it.
“The criteria should be that the buyers have the financial
muscle and technical know-how to run these companies. We don’t bother about
where they come from, as long as they are coming with clean money to invest in
our economy.
“So, when we are doing our evaluation of investors for the
transaction, that is what we will look at,’’ he said.
The BPE spokesman also said that in 2014, the bureau would
also begin the privatisation of the housing sector, Abuja Security and
Commodity Exchange Plc., as well as the country’s transportation sector.
(NAN)
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