Govt calls for synergy to tackle petroleum smuggling

Sylva

Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva has called for synergy among relevant government agencies to tackle the increasing smuggling of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) across the nation’s porous borders.

He underscored the need for collaboration among various stakeholders including Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Petroleum Equalisation Fund (PEF), Petroleum Product Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA), Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and other security agencies in the country.

Speaking at a stakeholders meeting organized by the NNPC in Abuja on how to stop smuggling in the country, Sylva said the only solution to halting the criminality surrounding the smuggling of PMS is for all stakeholders to work together to ensure that the trend is halted.

NNPC yesterday put the consumption of PMS at 103 million litres per day in the month of May.

“I will like to put it on record that whatever we are trying to do in the area of deregulation will not make sense without us exactly knowing the actual consumption of PMS,” Sylva said.

“When I first came in as minister,  I was informed that the daily consumption in the country was around  60 to 62 million litres a day, which to me sounded a little bit outrageous considering the number of cars we have on the road.

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“But somehow, the figures, I understand today have come down to around 52 million litres, may be the number of vehicles have suddenly reduced, but you will agree with me that something is wrong that is why the tracking of trucks loading products is essential for us to move forward on this issue of subsidy removal,’’ Sylva said.

He added that illegal export of products through the borders whether the land or sea must be stopped, adding that Operation White  that was commissioned in 2020 had not worked effectively until the EFCC came into the picture.

“I believe that with the EFCC in the picture, I think that the system will work better and know that Petroleum Equalisation Fund, is also working on product tracking arrangement. For me, I am happy to see that the EFCC is working with us and if we can get this right, I think our movement toward deregulation will be better assured,’’Sylva said

Group Managing Director (GMD), NNPC, Mele Kyari, who convened the meeting said the current situation had kept the country in a state of bleeding, as it could not sustain the payment of subsidy that accompanies the volume put at 100 million liters.

Kyari said that the introduction of Operation White and involvement of the EFCC had helped the situation adding that from the truck out report from the PPPRA data base , there have been collapse of load out average move from 70 million litres to 60 million litres just in one month, which means that the country can do with less than 70 million litres.

“In very recent data, we see what we really want in the beginning of May and June, there was a day we load out about 103 million litres of PMS within one day across the depots. We know it is not required, we know it is inappropriate and we also know that something wrong is happening that somebody is chasing something.

“But we in NNPC, we are not in control of that, we are not in every depot, we don’t keep products in all the depot but when the volume goes down, it comes down to us, when there is  tight in supply, it comes back to the NNPC and we solve the problem,’’ Kyari said.

He said that President Muhammadu Buhari had directed that smuggling must stop adding that it was the reason for inviting all stakeholders to chart the way forward.

He said that the corporation had incorporated the EFCC, the Department of Security Services (DSS), the Nigeria Customs services (NCS), the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), on a platform to achieve this.

Commenting on the current PMS and subsidy payment, Kyari explained that with the current exchange rate, the pump price of petrol should be N256 per litre.

“If we are to sell at the market today at current exchange rate, we will be selling the product at about N256 to a litre. What we sell today is N162, so the difference is at a cost to the nation.

“With the high volume of daily consumption, the country cannot sustain subsidy payment adding “as long as we don’t regulate volume, until we are able to exit this current level, which I know so much work is going on, then we have to manage the volume that we are exposed to between this price of N162 and N256,” Kyari said.

EFCC Chairman, Abdulrasheed Bawa, said the commission was happy to be part of Operation White since  part of its duty was to ensure closure of financial crimes in the country.

“It is quite disheartening to see what is happening, in 2012, we were faced with petroleum subsidy fraud, we at the EFCC were able to unravel a lot of fraud going on there.

“From  volume falsification to alteration of bill of laden, to the non-payment of over recovery and to what I call single importation and double subsidy payment.

“We are still trying to recover about N50 billion we have identified in the fraud but now it is a different ball game, NNPC has taking responsibility of importation of products but the issue of smuggling is there.

“We are assuring Nigerians that anything we have to do to stop smuggling, we will do to ensure that perpetrators are brought to book and justice is met for the benefits of Nigerians,’’Bawa said.

 

 

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