High Efficiency Oil Refinery Equipment in Niger
- Use: Cooking Oil
- Type:Cooking Oil Refinery Machine
- Production Capacity: 35~450kg/h
- Power(W): 28KWh/T
- Dimension(L*W*H): 190*130*200cm
- Temperature of deodorization: about 280 degree
- Certification: CE/ISO/BV
- Market: Niger
Niger: an attractive nation with an emerging oil industry
An investor-friendly environment . Niger offers a favourable business environment to its investors in the oil sector, including a protective legal regime (the 2017 Petroleum Code, a standard Production Sharing Contract, stabilisation and arbitration clauses, etc), an exploration phase of up to 10 years, a minimum production period of 25 years, a proactive administration, a well-controlled
Main energy consumers at a refinery are fuel (heaters) – 74%-78% of total refinery consumption; steam generation (HpS, MpS and LpS) – 18%-20% of total refinery consumption; and electricity (motors, tools, lighting) – 4%-6% of total refinery consumption. For example, increased plant capacity implies a proportional increase in raw material
Artisanal refining of crude oil in the Niger Delta: A challenge to
Crude oil is the major source of revenue in Nigeria with the vast majority of exploration from the Niger Delta. Illegal refining of stolen oil is a major cause of oil spills and comes with steep
artisanal refineries in the Niger Delta 1, which complicates historical pollution by transnational oil companies and crude oil theft in Nigeria. Based on research findings and engagements with community actors, public officials and security agencies, Social Action proposed policy options for addressing artisanal crude oil refineries and pollution2.
Artisanal refining of crude oil in the Niger Delta: A challenge to
This review examines the concept of oil theft and artisanal refining and their environmental implications and concluded that Oil theft and artisanal refining in the Niger Delta are massive and growing problems. It is estimated that between 200,000 and 300,000 barrels of oil is lost daily to theft, known in the country as illegal bunkering.
The Niger Delta happens to be the epicenter of hydrocarbon pollution due to the proliferation of oil companies, refineries, chemical industries, etc. There are many pollutants in the aquatic environment, including mangrove forests and mangrove-associated organisms, e.g., crabs, periwinkle, fish, bivalve, etc.
An analysis of the efficiency of the oil refining industry in the OECD
The efficiency in the 30 OECD countries is worsening. Crude oil production has a negative effect on the efficiency of the refining industry. If crude oil production increases by 1%, the efficiency of the refining industry will decrease by 0.1551%. This can be understood as the “Resource Curse” mentioned above.
Given the widespread nature of the artisanal oil-refining economy in the Niger Delta region, we assess its contribution to the growing environmental pollution in the region. By artisanal oil refining, we mean small-scale crude oil processing or subsistent distillation of petroleum that is often outside the boundaries of the state law.
The Socio-Economic Implications of Oil Theft and Artisanal Refining in
Some oil industry participants at a round table discussion on oil theft in the Niger Delta (UK Niger Delta Working Group, 2013) argued that artisanal refining had a very limited economic impact on
To achieve this, a wealth of knowledge and wisdom must be combined, and a platform based on AI, machine learning, data science, and other technologies are used (Figure 1). This paper first looks at the challenges in the oil refining and petrochemical industries, then introduces specific cases of applying AI to respective challenges (1)(2),