The Nigerian lubricants market will earn an 
estimated N175 billion in revenues in 2014, up from the N150 billion 
generated in 2013.
Principal Partner, Lubeservices Associates, 
Mr. Kayode Sote, disclosed this at media briefing to announce Nigeria’s 
first lubricant summit and exhibition scheduled to hold in Lagos next 
week.
Sote said Nigeria is the third largest 
consumer of lubricating oils, amounting to about 600 million litres or 
one per cent of the world total demand with gross earnings of N150 
billion in 2013. According to him, revenue from the Nigerian Lubes 
Markets will rise to N175 billion in 2014 and has been projected to hit 
to N250 billion by 2015.
Giving an overview of the lubricants market 
in Nigeria, Sote said there are 32 registered blending plants with a 
total installed capacity of about 965 million litres per annum. He said 
the plants are all currently producing at a cumulative average of 45 per
 cent of their total installed capacity, adding that the cumulative 
assets base of the blending plants is about N20 billion, generating 
about N45 billion profit margin in 2013.
Furthermore, he noted that about 75 per cent 
of the total need of lubricating oils is produced in Nigeria while the 
remaining 25per cent are specialised products imported by marketing 
companies into the country.
He said despite the obvious contribution and 
potential of the lubricant market to the nation’s economy, the lubes 
market is awash with about 720,000 metric tonnes of base oils (240,000 
metric tonnes in excess of local requirement for lubes blending, 
different grades and types of products both locally blended by the 
majors, independents, fake and illegal producers.
Sote expressed concern that the lube market 
has become a dumping ground for sub-standard and off-specifications 
imported lubes of questionable quality, adding that these infractions 
are a threat to the survival of the lube manufacturers in Nigeria.
He said the summit, scheduled to hold between
 August 19 and 20 in Lagos, became necessary in order to draw the 
attention of the government, its statutory agencies, public and 
industrial consumers alike to the challenges in the lubricants market.
Moreover, he said the forum is an opportunity
 to showcase the fact that locally blended lubes meet and in some cases 
exceed both the national and international quality standards in the 
choice of raw materials, product formulations, packaging, quality 
sustainability, performance level and original equipment manufacturers’ 
(OEM’s) specifications and approvals.
He listed the challenges facing the lubricant
 market as indiscriminate importation of base oils far in excess of the 
installed capacity of the operating and functional lube oil blending 
plants; open market attraction that encourages the importation of 
finished lubricants of questionable quality and standards from the far 
east countries; low duty tariff on base oils and imported lubes both, 
which are housed under the same H. S CODE “2710. 1939” and thus attract 
duty tariff of 10 per cent; adulteration of lubes by illegal lube 
blending plants; and open marketing of base oils erroneously displayed 
as finished lubes and easy asses to customised moulds by third party 
marketers of lubes.
 [This Day]

 
 
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