Oil majors granted long-term leases at key Durban fuel hub

South Africa has granted oil majors and traders, including BP and Vitol, extended access at its main petrochemical hub, ending years of wrangling over short-term leases that threatened investment and supply security, the national fuels body said.

Transport Minister Barbara Creecy extended the lease agreements at the Island View Precinct at the request of the Fuels Industry Association of South Africa. The minister used Section 79 of the National Ports Authority Act, which allowed her to circumvent normal procedures in the national interest.

About 70% of South Africa’s fuel imports flow through Island View Precinct, which is part of Durban port on the east coast and acts as the country’s main storage and supply hub.

“The Section 79 letter was issued to our members … It is in our favour. Remember we wanted a long-term tenure, so we got that,” said Fani Tshifularo, chief executive of the Fuels Industry Association.

A BP spokesperson said approval was granted to Sapref Pty Ltd, an entity jointly owned with Shell and focused since 2022 on fuel imports at Island View marine terminal after it shut down their refinery business and subsequently sold the plant to state-owned Central Energy Fund.

Engen, where Vitol is a majority shareholder, said the minister had agreed with conditions, but didn’t elaborate.

“For my members, I know that there are 25-year lease negotiations that are going to commence with Transnet National Ports Authority (TNPA),” Tshifularo told Reuters.

A transport ministry spokesperson said details of the letter could not be shared and a statement would be issued in due course. Transnet said it would respond later on Tuesday.

The Central Energy Fund did not respond to questions about its own, separate Section 79 application, or how the minister’s ruling could affect plans to revive the government’s flood-damaged Sapref refinery and boost its oil trading division, both led by the national oil company SANPC, a subsidiary of the Fund.

  • Reporting by Wendell Roelf
You have read 1 out of 5 free articles. Log in or register for unlimited access.

Newsday is taking a break

1 Mar 2026

Criminal industry worth R60 billion in South Africa

1 Mar 2026

The tiny South African town breaking free from Eskom

1 Mar 2026

One town in South Africa with almost no crime

1 Mar 2026

15% of South Africans can’t read a single word by Grade 4

1 Mar 2026

Julius Malema accuses ANC leader of killing children

1 Mar 2026

Easy way to make healthcare more affordable in South Africa

28 Feb 2026

R100 billion spent on BEE skills development and nothing to show for it

28 Feb 2026

Hidden tax on petrol in South Africa increased for first time in 5 years

28 Feb 2026

The SA Government wanted to reduce unemployment to 6%, but it increased to 33%

28 Feb 2026