The African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) has unveiled a $3 billion Revolving Intra-African Oil Trade Financing Program, aimed at reducing the continent’s reliance on imported petroleum products.
The initiative is expected to finance between $10-14 billion worth of intra-African petroleum trade – including premium motor spirit, automotive gas oil, heavy fuel oil, kerosene and jet fuel – bolstering the continent’s internal refining capacity. It supports key objectives of the African Continental Free Trade Area, including promoting trade, industrialization and job creation, while also advancing Afreximbank’s mission to enhance energy security and economic resilience across Africa.
“While the program will have a direct impact on the volume of the refined petroleum products produced and consumed in Africa, it will also have a multiplier effect on the downstream petroleum value chain as it will catalyze critical investments in shipping and marine logistics for intra- and extra-African trade of crude oil and refined products,” said Benedict Oramah, President and Chairman of the Board of Directors, Afreximbank.
The bank aims to help build a combined refining capacity of 1.3 million barrels per day across the continent. Projects benefiting from its support include Nigeria’s Dangote Refinery, the 210,000-barrel-per-day (bpd) Port Harcourt facility, the Bua and Azikel refineries, Angola’s upcoming 200,000-bpd Lobito and 60,000-bpd Cabinda refineries, and Ivory Coast’s SIR refinery.