Dangote Fertiliser Ltd has begun countdown to the inauguration
of its $2 billion Granulated Urea Fertiliser complex located in the
Dangote Free Zone in Nigeria.
With a capacity of three million tonnes per year, the plant is the biggest project in the fertiliser industry’s global history.
Siapem
of Italy is the engineering, procurement and supervision contractor for
the project, while Tata Consulting Engineers of India, is the project
management consultant.
Critical
sections of the plant are currently going through various stages of
pre-commissioning and test-running, including the central control room,
ammonia and urea bulk storage, cooling tower, power generator plant and
granulation plant.
Already, Dangote
Fertiliser has started receiving gas supply from the Nigerian Gas
Company and Chevron Nigeria Ltd under the Gas Sale and Purchase
Agreement, to supply 70 million standard cubic feet per day of natural
gas.
MAJOR BOOST
The project, which will create thousands of
direct and indirect jobs in construction and related fields, is a major
boost to the agricultural sector as it will significantly reduce
fertiliser imports into Nigeria, and ultimately remove the need for
imports when the plant is in full production.
Dangote
group executive director of strategy, portfolio development and capital
projects, Devakumar Edwin said the country will save some $0.5 billion
from import substitution and provide $0.4 billion from exports of
products from the plant.
“I am happy
that by the time our plant is fully commissioned, the country will
become self-sufficient in fertiliser production and even have the
capacity to export the products to other African countries,” said Mr
Edwin.
He added: “Right now, farmers
are forced to utilise whatever fertiliser is available as they have no
choice; but we need to know that the fertiliser that will work in one
state may not be suitable in another, as the area may not have the same
soil type and composition. The same fertiliser you use for sorghum may
not be the fertiliser you will use for sugar cane.”
Mr
Edwin said that the fertiliser complex, which sits on 500 hectares of
land has the capacity to expand as it occupies a small fraction of the
allotted portion.
No comments :
Post a Comment