Tag: Fuel scarcity

  • Fuel scarcity: FG, oil marketers resolve conflicts

    Fuel scarcity: FG, oil marketers resolve conflicts

    … Products lifting to begin within six hours

    The Senate on Monday recorded a major breakthrough in its efforts to resolve the lingering fuel scarcity in parts of the country

    The upper chamber brokered an agreement between the Federal Government and oil marketers to ensure immediate lifting of available petroleum products by marketers in Lagos, Port Harcourt, Warri and Calabar depots.

    The Senate had mandated its joint committee on Petroleum Resources (upstream and downstream) to meet with stakeholders including the federal government to find immediate solution to the lingering fuel scarcity in the country.

    The resolutions were read by the Chairman, Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) Senator Magnus Abe.

    Part of the resolutions reached at the well attended meeting included the immediate call off of the strike by the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association (PNGASSAN).

    The resolution said the suspension of the strike was made possible due to the intervention of the Group Managing Director (GMD) of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Joseph Dawha.

    The resolution also mandated the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, to give an undertaking to the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN) and Depot Owners Association (DAPPMA) that the work of the committee being headed by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) will be concluded.

    The committee is charged with the responsibility of verifying the N200 billion MOMAN claimed the government owes its members.

    The resolution said if the committee “concludes its verifications of the outstanding claims before the end of the life of this administration, it would be reflected in the handover notes to the new President. “

    “If it is not concluded, then, the fact that such a committee was set up and is working, will be reflected in the handover notes and a copy of the letter, conveying the existence of this committee will be sent to MOMAN and DAPPMA and also, a copy will be sent to us in this committee.”

    It added that “On the basis of that agreement, MOMAN will offer whatever cooperation that is needed to enable lifting of petroleum products to begin nationwide within six hours.

    “MOMAN has also agreed to give a similar undertaking to National Association of Road Transport Owners (NARTO) to pay existing transport costs as has been determined by them.

    “MOMAN will give a written undertaking to NARTO and a copy will also be sent to this committee.

    “NARTO and its affiliates nationwide will commence lifting of petroleum products from available fuel depots within the next six hours.”

     

  • NLC wants companies involved in fuel scarcity ‘blacklisted’

    NLC wants companies involved in fuel scarcity ‘blacklisted’

    The Nigeria Labour Congress has asked the government to blacklist all private sector companies involved in what they called massive blackmail of Nigerians in the wake of the nationwide fuel scarcity and revoke their licenses as a punitive measure to serve as deterrent to other operators.

    The congress also said President Goodluck Jonathan should within the few remaining days in office pinpoint the officers in his government who have failed so spectacularly in performing their duties and had led to current mess.

    President of the NLC, Dr. Ayuba Wabba, said in a statement entitled: “Fuel Scarcity: Let Government Act Now,” said the government should within the few remaining days carry out a quick investigation on the matter with a view to identify the officers behind the current situation and hand them over to the incoming administration to further investigation and made to face the law.

    “The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has watched with utter disgust and dismay how business and commercial activities in the country have been brought literally to a halt as a result of the activities of a mindless and cruel cabal that had taken absolute grip of the petroleum import business.

    “Clearly, the objective of the cabal in the current impasse is to arm-twist the Federal Government to part with billions of dollars, which it had not earned, in the name of fuel subsidy payments.

    “More curious, however, is the fact that the federal government has allowed this cabal to continue to hold the entire country to ransom thereby escalating the regime of impunity and unimaginable corruption which had taken complete hold of the operations of our petroleum sector causing the country to lose billions of dollars over the years.

    “As Mr. President has had cause to remind Nigerians in the weeks following the March 28, 2015 presidential election, that he was still in charge of running the country, the NLC hereby call on him to take firm and decisive action by calling to order all those in the petroleum sector that have one way or the other brought this crisis upon the nation.

    “The implicit message in such a definitive action will show that no one – business men and women and their collaborators, in and out of government – is strong enough to hold the entire people of Nigeria and its government to ransom.

    “We therefore urge Mr. President to, in the few days remaining of his tenure, pinpoint the officers in his government who have failed so spectacularly in performing their duties which has led to the current mess.

    “Given that Mr. President has been very active of recent in the sacking and appointment of officers to less significant functionaries of government; we expect him to within these few days carry out a quick investigation on the matter which should identify the officers behind the current situation and hand them over to the incoming administration to further investigation and made to face the law,” the statement reads.

     

  • Fuel scarcity:  More domestic airlines cancel flights

    Fuel scarcity:  More domestic airlines cancel flights

    The scarcity of aviation is biting harder as more domestic airlines cancel flights.

    At the general aviation terminal of Lagos Airport passengers remain stranded as airline officials run around to scout for fuel.

    DANA Air yesterday said it was cancelling its flights due to the scarcity of Jet A- One.

    A statement by the airline reads: “Dear Esteemed Guest, due to the current scarcity of Jet-A1 fuel, we regret to inform that our flights cannot operate as scheduled. Visit www.flydanaair.com or contact the call centre and airport offices for updates.

    “We sincerely apologize for all inconveniences this might have caused you and wish to assure that normal operations will resume as soon as aviation fuel is available. Thanks for your understanding and patronage.”

    Speaking at forum Monday minister of aviation, Chief Osita Chidoka said there is need to work a permanent solution to end the problem of fuel.

    He said Nigeria with its huge potentials should not have problems with fuel supply when countries like Ethiopia without crude oil have fuel to run its airlines.

  • Fuel Scarcity: Black marketers source product from Cotonou

    Fuel Scarcity: Black marketers source product from Cotonou

    The lingering scarcity of petroleum products in the country which has caused petrol to be sold at between N4, 500 and N5, 000 per five litres has forced Nigerians to source the product from Cotonou.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the country which is the world’s sixth largest oil producer has been in fuel crisis for more than two weeks.

    On Monday, petrol sold for between N4, 500 and N5, 000 per five litres along the Lagos-Badagry Expressway as black marketers claimed they sourced the product from neighbouring Cotonou in the Republic of Benin which is not an oil producing country.

    NAN also reports that hundreds of passengers were stranded at bus stops while vehicle owners groaned under the high price of the products occasioned by the ongoing strike by petroleum marketers.

    A petrol hawker, who identified himself as Simpson Samuel, told NAN that he bought five litres from Cotonou and resold it for N5, 000 in Lagos.

    “I purchased this fuel for 800 Cedis a litre, which is equivalent of N3,500.

    “We have been at filling stations along this Badagry road, but we did not get fuel. Some of our colleagues directed us to Cotonou and that is where we bought these ones.

    “Many people who have also gone there cannot buy because of the rush by our people,’’ Samuel said.

    NAN reports that in other parts of Lagos, some black marketers sold between N5, 000 and N6, 000.

    At a filling station located at the Agric bus top, along the Badagry Expressway, fuel was sold for N300 per litre.

    Mr. Francis Johnson, General Secretary, Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association (PENGASSAN), advised the incoming government to declare a state of emergency in the oil and gas industry.

    Johnson attributed the leakages in the nation’s revenue to the importation of refined petroleum products.

    He added that the situation was creating jobs for the nations Nigeria was importing the refined product from and causing unemployment for Nigerians.

    According to him, the continued importation of refined petroleum products was putting the Naira under pressure and creating social problems for the economy.

    He said that there was the need for stakeholders to meet and fashion out a strategy to be adopted in stopping the importation of petroleum products.

    NAN reports that the Chairman of Capital Oil, Mr Ifeanyi Uba, had on Sunday promised to release 13 million litres fuel which amounts to 400 tankers of fuel.

    He also promised to release 70 million litres subsequently, while denying knowledge of the ongoing strike by petroleum marketers and tanker drivers.

    Uba said it was sad that Nigerians, especially those that provided healthcare service were suffering because of the scarcity.

    Meanwhile, banks and other financial institutions have announced that they would close business at 1 p.m. because of the situation.

    The telecommunications companies have also announced closure of some of their services from today till the situated improves.

  • NLC may direct workers to stay at home – Aremu

    NLC may direct workers to stay at home – Aremu

    The Nigerian Labour Congress (NLC) on Monday threatened to direct workers to stay at home if the fuel scarcity being experienced across the country persisted.

    The NLC Deputy National President, Isa Aremu stated this in a statement made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Kaduna.

    The NLC statement is coming barely four days before the PDP led government would hand over the affairs of the nation to the new President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari on Friday, May 29.

    “If the Current scarcity and price robbery of Nigerians continues NLC will have no choice but compel workers to stay at home.

    “Workers certainly cannot fuel themselves to work with their blood. There is limit to slavery and state marketers’ extortion.

    “With an outgiong president and incoming one, five past heads of state alive, 36 state governors and hundreds of legislators and scores of ministers, no country on earth parades the highest number of state actors like Nigeria.

    “Yet there is no governance with respect to distribution of basic products like petroleum and Kerosene,”

    According to him, it is time Nigerians stop agonising in the hands of cabals holding the nation to ransom for several weeks through deliberate deprivation of petroleum products.

    “What is happening in Nigeria amounts to economicide, which is a conscious subjugation of 170 million people to economic ruination through unsustainable petroleum import-based racket.

    “This is an unofficial declaration of war against the citizens by combined forces of irresponsible ruling elite and business crooks.“

    “This agony of capitalism must be mass resisted by all Nigerians, “ he said

  • Taxi drivers protest fuel scarcity in Akure ‎

    Following the prevailing fuel scarcity nationwide, members of the Taxi drivers’ union in Akure, Ondo State, staged a protest round the city on Monday morning.

    Already, fuel is now being sold at the rate of N200 and N250 per litre at the few filling stations that opened for business.

    Mobile policemen have been deployed to the streets of the state capital to prevent break down of law and order.

    Details later….

  • Fuel scarcity bites harder in Ondo

    Fuel scarcity bites harder in Ondo

    Ondo State residents are complaining of the scarcity of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), otherwise known as petrol.

    The scarce product is sold at between N200 and N350 per litre.

    Commercial drivers and motorcyclists are having a field day as they charge exorbitant fares.

    In most of the filling stations in Akure, PMS was not available.

    At the few stations where the commodity was sold, there were  long queues of vehicles and kegs, despite the exorbitant price.

    The situation was the same in Ore, Ondo, Owena and Okitipupa. The situation has affected social and commercial activities.

    The mega station of the Nigeria National Petroleum Company (NNPC) in Akure was locked up.

    It was however gathered that petrol was not supplied to the mega station since last week.

  • Beat FM, others groan as fuel scarcity bites harder

    The lingering fuel scarcity across the nation is having a negative effect on businesses as they are not able to operate at optimum capacity.

    Among those who have been groaning under the fuel scarcity is a radio station-Beat 99.9 FM. Following the persistent scarcity, the station has shortened its length of transmission.

    Yesterday, the station via its Twitter handle, announced it was going off air, a situation most likely to be the shortage of fuel.

    ‘We’re going off again,’ the station tweeted at around 2pm yesterday. ‘We’ll be back tomorrow at 6am.’

    This was a repeat of how the radio station operated on Saturday when it announced it was shutting down by 8:30pm as against its normal operating hours.

    ‘We will be shutting down at 8.30pm today due to diesel shortage,’ the station’s Twitter account @THEBEAT999FM tweeted on Saturday. This is as a result of a lack of electricity with a combined lack of fuel to power the generating sets. ‘We have to ration. We will be back on tomorrow. We will keep you updated.’

    Other stations in Lagos such as Classic FM, Naija FM and City FM have also cut their transmission times as a result of the persistent fuel scarcity.

  • Fuel scarcity and the agony of Nigerians

    It started like a trivial development that would soon fizzle out with time. Most government officials that spoke about it gave glimpse of hope that all will soon be well. We were told that within a couple of days the market would be flooded with petroleum products and that the pains of Nigerians would soon be over.

    But quite surprisingly, the fuel scarcity being experienced across the country lingers on. After almost about two weeks of waiting in vain to get this all important product Nigerians are becoming agitated because of the ensuing agonies and frustrations associated with the scarcity of petroleum product. Most filling stations in major cities across the country have become a beehive of activities with multitudes of people waiting endlessly for the scarce commodity. In the few places where the product is available, it is being sold in very exorbitant prices which make it to be beyond the reach of the ordinary folks.

    In Lagos, motorists and commuters are groaning under the heavy yoke of fuel scarcity. From all indications, this particular occurrence might take a bit longer before it subsides. Feelers from experts in the sector have revealed that this current shortage might last for sometime bearing in mind the fact that fuel marketers are not really sure about the likely attitude of the incoming Buhari administration towards fuel subsidy and other related matters. According to experts, the major marketers might want to be very careful with regards to fuel importation until they are certain about Buhari’s policy direction for the industry.

    A major by product of crude oil, the availability of petroleum is crucial to the continuous survival of the country’s economy. Factories, companies, industries and, indeed, homes hugely rely on accessibility to this product, on a daily basis, for optimal performance. In essence, its non availability could disrupt economic activities considering the un- reliable state of public electricity. For some time now, Fuel scarcity is one plague, like corruption, that we are yet to find a lasting solution to in the country. Successive governments in the country have had to contend with this problem without achieving much success. At some point, especially when the fuel refineries in the country were no longer functioning at best possible capacity, the crisis became so alarming that Nigerians were spending days at filling stations just to get access to this all important product.

    Characteristically, the few filling stations and ‘black market’ operatives that are selling the product are ripping off Nigerians by selling at cut-throat prices in spite of the stress that people have to pass through to obtain the product. Consequently, civil servants, lecturers, students, health workers among others, are presently battling with the adverse effects of the lingering scarcity. As it is customary, transport fares to various locations in the metropolis have sharply increased, with commercial bus drivers readily fingering inability to access the product as justification for the increase. Similarly, security at various homes, in the state, is being threatened as most people could no longer get the fuel to ‘power’ their generating sets. The implication is that Nigerians could no longer sleep with their two eyes closed.

    It is sad that Nigerians have to suffer so much to get a product that nature has endowed the land with. Those that actually benefit from the oil wealth of the country are the few political and economic elites who get engrossed in many dubious oily deals. What the masses often get is incessant increase in the pump price of the product. Of course, Nigerians are not new to such as succeeding administrations in the country have had to increase fuel prices on various occasions. A chronicle of increase in the prices of petroleum products in Nigeria reveal that every regime since Gowon has, at one time or the other, tampered with fuel prices for one reason or the other.

     The Gowon regime that administered the oil boom era in the country increased fuel price from six kobo to nine and a half kobo.  Obasanjo, in his first coming as a military leader, jerked the price from nine and a half kobo to fifteen kobo while the General Ibrahim Babangida led military junta moved it up from15 to 70k .  the interim government of Chief Earnest Shonekan also increased fuel price from 70k to N5. The Sani Abacha led military regime moved it from N5 to N11 while the General Abdusalam administration took it up to N20. Obasanjo, in his second advent, increased it to N70 while the administration of late President Yaradua reduced it to N65. His successor, President Goodluck Jonathan, moved it to N141 before slashing it to N97 having met with stiff opposition from Nigerians.

    In recent time, the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, has come under heavy criticisms in view of its gross ineptitude and lack of accountability and transparency. It is rather shameful for a country reputed as the sixth oil exporting nation, in the world, to continually subject its citizens to the annual agony of fuel scarcity.    The question, of course, is for how long Nigerians would continue to bear the burden of the incompetency of those who rule us? It is bad enough that our lives are being endangered as a result of security challenges. It is bad enough that public electricity supply has remained epileptic, in spite of several reforms and fund committed into the sector. It is, however, undesirable that Nigerians should continue to suffer before they could get access to fuel, a product that providence has blessed the country with.

    It is hoped that the incoming Buhari administration would look into the various allegations of incompetence, lack of transparency and accountability being levied against NNPC. Let the change that Buhari and his party clamoured for begin with the country’s oil sector. This is the time to sanitise the sector to ensure that probity and transparency become the order of the day.  Nigerians do not deserve this continuous suffering in the midst of plenty.

    Ogunbiyi is of the Features Unit, Ministry of Information and Strategy, Alausa, Ikeja.

  • Senate begins probe of fuel scarcity

    Senate begins probe of fuel scarcity

    THE Senate has mandated its joint committees on Petroleum Resources (Upstream and Downstream) to investigate the biting fuel scarcity in the country.

    This followed a motion by the Deputy Senate Leader Abdul Ningi (Bauchi Central), who drew the attention of the Senate to the biting fuel scarcity.

    Ningi told his colleagues that it was obvious that the fuel crisis was creating immeasurable hardship for Nigerians.

    The Senate, he said, should take it as a matter of priority to find out what was behind the lingering problem.

    He added that Nigerians should be told whether fuel scarcity has come to stay in the country and whether they have to brace for the hardship it brings.

    He noted that the best thing to do in the circumstance was to ask relevant committees to dig into the crisis so that the Senate would be in a position to brief the citizens.

    Ningi said the Senate should not pretend not to be aware that Nigerians are suffering for no fault of theirs due to prolonged scarcity.

    He noted that since the Seventh Senate still had the mandate of the people until June 1, the upper chamber had the responsibility to intervene in the crisis of fuel scarcity in the interest of the people.

    Ningi said: “We need to know whether fuel scarcity has come to stay. We need to know whether it has become part of our life so that we can plan.

    “By planning and talking about it, we will be able to sensitise Nigerians to brace for the impending issue of fuel scarcity, whether it is going to be here permanently or temporary.

    “But we can’t know all these things until we hear from the experts. Therefore, my prayer is to ask the committees on Downstream and Upstream to come up with explanations next Tuesday through, which Nigerians will know and plan their future.

    “Otherwise, I think it is legally and morally wrong to keep silent about it, sweep it under the carpet and to continue to believe these things are usual.”

    Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, who presided over the plenary, did not allow debate of the motion.

    Ekweremadu said that since Ningi raised the motion under personal explanation, the Senate would not debate it.

    Ekweremadu said: “Ningi’s prayers are simple and straightforward. He is asking us, as representatives of the people, to direct our committees on Petroleum Upstream and Downstream to find out what is currently going on in the oil sector and possibly find a way of addressing it.

    “In that regard, we now ask our committees on Petroleum Resources (Upstream and Downstream), to find out what is going on and what the government is doing about it and report back on Tuesday next week.”

    When Ekweremadu put it to vote, the motion was unanimously carried.