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Nigeria's Dangote oil refinery extends US crude buying spree into July

Nigeria's Dangote oil refinery extends US crude buying spree into July

TimesLIVE02-06-2025

Nigeria's Dangote oil refinery will import at least 5-million barrels of US WTI crude oil in July, three trading sources told Reuters, extending its buying spree after a potential record tally for June.
The giant new 650,000 barrel per day capacity oil refinery is set to import around 161,000 bpd of WTI in July after awarding tenders in recent days, the sources said, off the back of a record 300,000 bpd booked in its June tenders.
Final totals for the month could change should the refinery make more purchases.
The buying spree highlights the increasing competition oil exporters face as the OPEC+ producer group increases output, with US crudes struggling to compete in Asia against a six-month low in spot premiums for UAE Murban crude, traders said.
Commodity trader Vitol supplied 2-million barrels for July delivery in the latest Dangote tender, Azeri state-owned Socar another 2-million barrels, and miner and trader Glencore sold the remaining 1-million barrels, the sources said.
Vitol did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the tender result, while Socar and Glencore declined to comment.

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Will SA bear the cost of Eskom's R257bn air quality compliance?
Will SA bear the cost of Eskom's R257bn air quality compliance?

IOL News

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  • IOL News

Will SA bear the cost of Eskom's R257bn air quality compliance?

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The Citizen

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  • The Citizen

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Denel's turnaround strategy shows promise as it seeks foreign contracts
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IOL News

time14 hours ago

  • IOL News

Denel's turnaround strategy shows promise as it seeks foreign contracts

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Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Although he did not go into detail on the retrenchments, the presentation to the committee indicated that Denel has completed the initial Section 189 process and filed critical vacancies. 'Further Section 189 process is going to be initialised,' reads the presentation. Monaheng told the MPs that Denel has lots of debtors and that debt was still a challenge. 'Even when we make money, the creditors take the money, while the banks demand their payments. It makes it difficult for us to execute the turnaround strategy,' he said, adding that their debts were four to five years old. 'When they threaten us with liquidation, we prioritise them. It hampers our progress.' In its presentation, Denel said it was looking to secure new revenue streams, improve management, commercial skills, and governance, as well as to source other funding sources, including the collection of outstanding debtors such as Armscor. 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