Tag: Kachikwu

  • Fuel scarcity ends next week, says Kachikwu

    Fuel scarcity ends next week, says Kachikwu

    The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu yesterday expressed hope that almost every part of the country would be adequately supplied with fuel by next week.

    Kachikwu, who gave the assurance while briefing State House correspondents at the end of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, said the Ministry is mainly solving the problems the current administration met on ground.

    He said: “As at today, we are delivering about 1,200 trucks; by weekend we should be delivering same number of trucks, it will take a bit of days to even-out, but you can see improvement already.

    “I hope by the end of next week, with the refineries helping us to stay on course, every part of the country will get fuel.”

    He said some people, rather than sell products, send them into the hinterlands where they can sell at ridiculous prices and so you are having this price distortions where people are making a lot of money; some are internal and some are external but a lot of it is marketers trying to make quick returns on their investments wrongly.”

  • Kachikwu for offshore conference in U.S.

    Kachikwu for offshore conference in U.S.

    The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources and Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Ibe Kachikwu will declare Nigeria’s pavilion at this year’s offshore technology conference (OTC) holding in Houston, Texas, United States.

    Also, the Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN) that leads Nigeria’s delegation to the yearly event will address current realities and hidden opportunities in Nigerian oil and gas industry.

    The conference is scheduled for May 2-5.

    PETAN’s Publicity Secretary, Mr. Nik Odinuwe said the conference has as theme: The Nigerian oil and gas industry: Current realities, hidden opportunities.

    He said PETAN is expected to consolidate achievements recorded by the association in driving partnership of indigenous oil and gas companies by international oil and gas companies. The conference is an annual gathering of people from around the world with interest in oil and gas, comprising policy makers, operators, professionals, manufacturers, business executives, entrepreneurs and visitors, he added.

    Odinuwe said Kachikwu will declare the Nigerian pavilion open, while the Managing Director, Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company (SNEPCo) Mr. Bayo Ojulari and the Managing Director,  Seplat Petroleum Development Company, Austin Avuru, among other would be in attendance.

    He said that the OTC avails the attendees an opportunity for engagement with key players in the industry, adding that Nigeria’s delegation in this year’s edition includes the NNPC, Independent Oil Companies (IOCs), independent, international and indigenous service companies, investors and representatives of government agencies.

    He said PETAN is again at the forefront co-coordinating the Nigerian Pavilion. The OTC was founded in 1969 and now attracts over 150,000 visitors and 3,700 exhibitors from around the world each year.

    The OTC’s daily technical programme of presentations and the innovative breakfast and lunch sessions provide a dynamic forum for discussing the technical challenges facing the offshore oil and gas industry, he said, adding that PETAN members have exhibited at the OTC every year since 1999 making OTC 2016 its 17th.

    Speaking on the success of 2015 conference, PETAN President, Mr. Bank-Anthony Okoroafor stated that the conference creat opportunity for people to meet and interact with serious Nigerian players, business men, entrepreneurs and technocrats who have been in business for over two decades.

    Okoroafor said this was why PETAN is taking this extra step to bring Nigerian companies to exhibit and make new business negotiations.

    “We arranged elaborate programme through the OTC week. We had plenary session as well as a workshop with Nigerian oil professionals abroad, where issues in the country’s oil and gas will also be discussed.

  • Fuel queues  to end this week, says Kachikwu

    Fuel queues to end this week, says Kachikwu

    Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Dr. Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, yesterday said fuel queue will be over in Abuja and Lagos this week.

    He projected that queues in Kano, Katsina, Sokoto and Port Harcourt and other states will dissipate subsequently.

    The minister also hinted of a price adjustment next month.

    He told officials of the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) in Abuja that the ministry will take the right decisions however hard they might be. He added that the government will prevent the return of the subsidy regime.

    He said: “Today, we have the fuel queues and it is completely a nightmare for me. The reality is that I am hurt, I am very emotional about my job. And there isn’t still much. We just need to take the right policies as hard as they are and as difficult as they are to ensure we do not return to the policy of subsidy.

    “And hopefully, tomorrow  /Thursday, the fuel queues in Abuja must be over and thereafter Kano, Katsina , Sokoto, Port Harcourt and other states.”

    He added that there is price modulation that made government to save a lot of money in the first quarter which it will now use to fund the present excess.

    “In May, there will be a slight adjustment to match the current trend.”

    He explained that his major concern is not only the ongoing fuel queues but how to avoid a re-occurrence.

    According to him, the Federal Government needs to build strategic fuel reserves that it has not done in the last 20 years.

    Kachikwu said to avoid the reoccurrence, government needs to build strategic reserves for it to be able to respond to fuel shortage for six to nine days.

    He said: “We need to find the allocation of the resources to be able to complement the majors to be able to bring in products. But that is not a futuristic long term solution and there is no better way than to steer to the path of privatization. And it is not necessarily synonymous to increase in price. “

  • ‘Support Kachikwu to end fuel queues’

    ‘Support Kachikwu to end fuel queues’

    Nigerians  have been urged not to despair,  with petrol price  hitting N200 per litre in Delta and other states of the Niger Delta at the weekend.

    The oil industry monitoring group, Niger Delta Indigenous Movement for Radical Change (NDIMRC), which made the appeal, said the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, should be supported in his bid to end the lingering fuel crisis.

    The group hailed Dr Kachikwu for wading into the leadership crises in the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN).

    The group’s President, Nelly Emma, Secretary, John Sailor and Public Relations Officer (PRO), Stanley Mukoro, in a statement, said it was impressed with the presentation of the minister during the meeting with the Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream).

    “It is clear to all now that the oil cabals are out to frustrate the Petroleum Resources minister, but they will not succeed.”

    “As patriotic Nigerians, we should work against the oil cabals, who are making things difficult for our people. We should partner with the minister to end the lingering fuel scarcity. There are people out there deriving joy from the fuel crisis to give the minister a bad name, we should shame such people and give the required backing to the hard-working minister.”

    “There are entrenched interests opposed to reforms within the oil sector and they are behind the fuel crisis. We must not allow them to have their way and we are glad the minister made it clear to those calling for his head that he will not resign because he has has a job to do,” the group said.

    It added: “We should give the minister who is down to earth our support in this crucial moment. Dr Kachikwu is feeling the pains we are passing through, he is not insensitive to the plight of the people and he expressed theses pains when he appeared before the Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream). The like of Dr Kachikwu is rare and this is why he needs our support to end the fuel scarcity as he promised. Let us put those who may be out to ensure that there is no end to the fuel scarcity on check. The minister is pained over the fuel crisis and he is determined to end it, but we know there are some elements out there who are not happy with his efforts for Nigerians to obtain fuel without stress, they will fail in their mission”.

  • Kachikwu in the eye of storm

    Kachikwu in the eye of storm

    Until last month, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, who also doubles as Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), was thought to have the magic wand to tackle the ills of the corporation and the petroleum resources ministry.

    On assumption of office, he hit the ground running with far-reaching reforms and transformation of the national oil company primarily to cut cost, reduce corruption, plug wastage, increase transparency and accountability, and put the firm on a profitable pedestal.

    Kachikwu is, without doubt, a brilliant and personable individual. A first class law graduate who emerged the best of his set from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, he bagged a master and doctorate degrees with specialisation on Energy and Petroleum Law and Investment, and Petroleum and Investment Law Strategies from Harvard University.

    He is a Fellow, Society for Corporate Governance, Chartered Institute of Arbitration, Chartered Institute for Petroleum Policy and visiting professor for various universities, including Harvard Law.

    He is a thoroughbred professional with over 30 years experience in policy making positions in the petroleum industry. He was the General Counsel/Legal Adviser, Texaco Nigeria and Texaco Overseas Petroleum. He was also General Counsel/Secretary to the Board, Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited; Executive Director ExxonMobil Group of Companies; and Executive Vice Chairman/General Counsel ExxonMobil Companies in Nigeria as well as Oversight Counsel ExxonMobil Companies in Africa.

    At ExxonMobil, he influenced over $10billion in investment from ExxonMobil Group into Africa including Nigeria as Lead Negotiator on diverse issues for ExxonMobil in Africa including conclusion of Lease Renewal Negotiations for Mobil Producing.

    Attracted by the credentials, President Muhammadu Buhari fished Kachikwu out from ExxonMobil and made him the Group Managing Director of NNPC on August 4, 2015. His task: to clean the rot and unbridled corruption in the corporation and Ministry of Petroleum Resources. Last November, the president added another feather to Kachikwu’s cap as he made him Minister of State for Petroleum Resources.

    Recent developments suggest that Kachikwu has, however, struggled with the transition from a technocrat revered in ExxonMobil and the Nigerian oil industry to a political office holder as both helmsman of NNPC and minister of one of Nigeria’s most valuable ministries. He seemed to issue directives without considering their impact on the economy and the people whose interest and welfare he should protect.

    The trouble

    Kachikwu’s first major litmus test came last December when the country encountered one of its worst fuel scarcity periods. Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) or petrol, the country’s most consumed fuel, became scarce to the point of a litre selling for as much as N300 – clearly above the government’s approved retail rate of N87. In reaction, many families shelved holiday plans or postponed trips for the Yuletide celebration.

    The minister had to embark on inspection of retail outlets and monitoring supplies and sales to ensure marketers did not hoard the product. The situation was eventually brought under control in January this year, but adequate fuel supply has not been achieved since.

    This, according to the National Operations Controller, Independent Petroleum Marketers Association (IPMAN), Mr. Mike Osatuyi, led to rationing of supply to marketers. Making NNPC the sole importer of fuel was a policy somersault by the minister, Osatuyi said, adding that it caused serious operational disorder because the corporation lacks the logistics, storage and distribution facilities to assume such position.

    The decision caused all manner of sharp practices at the depots and retail outlets as marketers strove to get allocations and sell at a profit. It also created the current unmanageable nationwide scarcity that drew the ire of Nigerians who expend man-hours in queues and are subjected to untold suffering at retail outlets. People often resorted to leaving vehicles at filling stations in expectation of supply.

    The minister however, stirred the hornets’ nest when he recently said that fuel scarcity would last till May and that he was not a ‘magician’ to cause fuel queues to disappear overnight. Nigerians, he added, should be glad to have the volume of fuel available. The statement induced fresh panic-buying and hoarding of fuel by consumers and marketers, causing the price to soar.

    The scarcity bit harder and the queues lengthened. Amidst soaring inflation, public outrage ensued. Many condemned the minister for the careless utterance. Such statement should not come from a public officer of Kachikwu’s standing, they reasoned.

    National Leader of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, also cautioned the petroleum minister on the reckless statement.  He said the minister strayed from the progressives path of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration. Kachikwu could have been more creative about the issue, he argued.

    Tinubu said: “The art of governance is difficult and complex, especially during trying times. The steep reduction in global oil prices from over 100 dollars per barrel to roughly 40 presents a hard challenge. We can no longer afford past practices. Nigeria now requires creative reform, materially changing the substance of national economic policy as well as the objectives of that policy and how the policy is presented to the people. Therein lies the essence of progressive democratic governance.

    “The Buhari administration represents the last best hope we have to install such governance in Nigeria and avert the catastrophe that would have befallen us had the prior government remained in place. Had the nation continued with the spendthrift corruption and vagabond economic policies of that administration, we would have soon experienced such a collision with the harsh consequences of that government’s malign ways that our very institutions of government may have been distorted beyond fixture and repair.”

    The apology

    Obviously realising his mistake, Kachikwu apologised to Nigerians on the lingering fuel scarcity and his unguarded statements when he appeared before the Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream) on Tuesday, thus vindicating the position of Asiwaju Tinubu. He said his comment that he was not a magician to cause fuel queues to disappear overnight was not intended to insult Nigerians. “’I’m not a magician’ comment was made jocularly and was never intended to slight Nigerians,” he said. “I share the pains of Nigerians. I feel that pain everyday when I walk the streets. On Easter day I was in Lagos monitoring fuel distribution and the depots, I have given 24 hours attention to the problems.

    “I have continued to work with one sole purpose, which is that every problem must have a solution and I think that is the reason I was picked. I do apologise for the comment that I made jocularly with my friends in the press about being a magician and it offended Nigerians. It was not meant to be, it was a side jocular issue.”

    Lagos Zonal Chairman of the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), Comrade Tokunbo Korodo, while speaking to a TV station, said Kachikwu was using Nigerians as  an experiment. “The minister is just using Nigerians as  an experiment and we don’t need that. The way I’m looking at it, the NNPC is the main cause of the fuel scarcity; other stakeholders are not complementing the efforts of the Federal Government because they claim they don’t have access to fuel. The government promised to make fuel available to them, why are they not giving it to them and make the fuel available and accessible to Nigerians?”

    The minister promised to end the scarcity on April 7.

  • Kachikwu, PPPRA leadership crisis and fuel scarcity

    In the last 45 days, the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) has been bogged down by a leadership crisis. The tussle is believed to be fuelling the biting petrol scarcity. Stakeholders are worried that if not resolved, it may hamper PPPRA’s role in ensuring smooth operation of the downstream sector. EMEKA UGWUANYI reports. 

    All is not well at the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA). A leadership crisis, which is threatening to tear the agency apart, is believed to be partly responsible for the biting fuel scarcity.

    Since February 15, when the Federal Government sacked the heads of parastatals and directed the most senior officers to take charge, all of them complied, except PPPRA which then had two acting Executive Secretaries.

    This made many to question the  government’s sincerity to enforce reforms, PPPRA sources told The Nation.

    The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) wondered why the staff of operating/marketing companies should be drafted as Executive Secretaries of PPPRA, a regulatory agency, when there are competent hands.

    A meeting between PENGASSAN and the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, to resolve the issue ended in what the Union described as “mere promise”.

    The union also approached the National Assembly to protect the PPPRA. It insisted that it was wrong to  appoint staff of operating/marketing companies as Executive Secretaries.

    Earlier, the House of Representatives Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) invited the Secretary to Government of the Federation (SGF), the Acting Executive Secretary and PPPRA Management to appear before it last February 25 and March 22.

    The acting Executive Secretary, Mrs. Sotonye Iyoyo reportedly made efforts to douse the tension over what is hindering the agency’s performance, it was learnt.

    According to PPPRA sources, though Mrs.  Iyoyo is well known in the industry, Kachikwu is reportedly shopping for another acting Executive Secretary within the PPPRA management. This, it was learnt, is an attempt to pre-empt the union against the appointment of marketing companies’ officials.

    What is disturbing is the desperation in naming a Manager on level 14 over about eight level 16 officers without first redeploying or retiring them. This, a source said is in bad taste.

    The source alleged: “The new acting Executive Secretary is a novice in PPPRA’s operations. The aim is deliberate – to allow some faceless external forces to call the shots.The acting Executive Secretary runs a referral style of administration where she consults big wigs in operating companies before taking decisions. It’s unfortunate indeed.

    “Her appointment as the acting Executive Secretary has nailed the PPPRA and made it a lame duck and an appendage of marketing companies. PPPRA is a shadow of itself, from a robust, independent regulatory agency on its creation in 2003 to a rubber stamp organisation.”

    In a March 11 letter, Senate President Bukola Saraki referred the union’s agitation to the Senate Committee on Downstream.The union is hopeful that the National Assembly will end the impunity at PPPRA, which began after the removal of its pioneer Executive Secretary, Dr. Oluwole Oluleye, the sources said. According to the source, the fuel crisis, the lopsided allocation and unlevel operating environment are the antithesis of what the agency was set up to do.

    “The leadership of the PPPRA is a huge joke. The disturbing aspect is that Dr. Kachikwu was hoodwinked into believing that the choice of Mrs. Iyoyo was genuine. It is so glaring that the choice of another acting Executive Secretary buttresses the union’s allegation that there must be something cynical and curious about the manner of her appointment,” the sources added.

    The PENGASSAN-PPPRA branch Chairman and Secretary, Comrades Victor Ononokpono and Ghide Muhammad said the union would reveal the reasons for the haste in the appoinment.

    The union had advised President Muhammadu Buhari on how to appoint an Executive Secretary from a long list of those who understand the industry. The union alleged that there is a clique of  influential officials in the public service that determines who becomes what under Kachikwu’s leadership. They misguide the minister, who may not be in league with their grand plan, it added.

    The source said: “The greatest minus for Moses Mbaba, the most senior official when the presidential directive for CEOs to hand over to the most senior officers in their organisations came is his forthrightness. He is a disciplinarian and an honest public servant. There was the fear of his not willing to be part of a cover-up of so many untoward activities. So, to discredit him, a purported waiver was said to have been obtained to appoint another acting Executive Secretary under the pretext that he was not technical enough.

    “PPPRA is characterised by poor leadership and the lack of operational independence vindicates the Union’s agitation for independence. The PPPRA Board should be immediately constituted. It is unimaginable that petroleum marketers are not able to get foreign exchange (forex) from the Central Bank of Nigeria when the apex bank is on the board of PPPRA.

    ‘’How could distribution of import allocation be lopsided if all the stakeholders represented on the board participate in the process? Who protects the consumer against predatory tendencies of operators?”

  • Kachikwu sets April 7 deadline to end fuel scarcity

    Kachikwu sets April 7 deadline to end fuel scarcity

    •Minister apologises on ‘I’m no magician’ comment

    Nigerians have wrested an apology from Minister of State for Petroleum Resources  Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu over the biting petrol scarcity that keeps many at the pump for hours.

    Dr. Kachikwu, who appeared before the Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream) noted particularly that his comment that he is not a magician to cause fuel queues to disappear overnight was not meant to insult Nigerians.

    The minister said the “I’m not a magician” comment was made jocularly and never intended to slight Nigerians.

    The comment attracted the ire of Nigerians, including All Progressives Congress (APC) National Leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who insisted he must apologise to Nigerians.

    Kachikwu said he shared the pains Nigerians are going through to get fuel. He is  working round the clock to resolve the problem, he said, but rejected the call for him to resign. The fuel queues will disappear by April 7, Kachikwu promised.

    He also explained reasons for the scarcity and the plans to wriggle out of it.

    He said: “I share the pains of Nigerians. I feel that pain everyday when I walk the streets. On Easter day, I was in Lagos monitoring fuel distribution and the depots. I have given 24 hours attention to the problems.

    “I have continued to work with one sole purpose which is that every problem must have a solution and I think that is the reason I was picked.

    “I do apologise for the comment that I made jocularly with my friends in the press about being a magician and it offended Nigerians. It was not meant to be, it was a side jocular issue.

    “I did go on to explain what needed to be done. I did not know that it would create the kind of hyperbole that it did.

    “Let me first admit that I am not a typically experienced politician. I am a technocrat. I come to work.

    “Some of the phraseologies that I may use, while being acceptable in the arena in which I play obviously will not be acceptable in the public political arena.

    “So if anybody’s sensibilities were offended by those, I totally apologise.”

    ”I share the pains of Nigerians. I feel that pain everyday. I worked the streets and those who are following my trajectories since I resumed office would see that even on Christmas Day, I was at the refineries.

    “Like I said on the Easter Day, I was in Lagos, monitoring fuel distribution at the depots. I have given 24/7 attention to the problem in this industry which were unbelievable.

    “I have continued to work with one sole purpose in mind, which is that every problem will have a solution.

    ”I am a very humble person even imagining the thought that I dictate to Nigerians. I am not somebody like that.”

    On the reason for the current fuel scarcity he said: “Let me put the reasons for the scarcity in three categories. First, what did I meet? When we came in August, this country had arrears of unpaid subsidy claims that were in excess of N600 billion which were not paid for over a year.

    “So, progressively over a period of eight months, prior to my coming on board, people have been staying away from importation not at a heavy level but by about 10 to 15 per cent of allocation were not being met. But there was hope that ultimately, if the subsidy regime continues, they would get paid. So, some people continued to import, but by the time we came in, people had reached a breaking point and most of the companies didn’t have the liquidity even to go to the banks and open letters of credit and that became a major issue, and we succeeded in paying, late October last year, the N500bn subsidy.

    “Some element of the subsidy like the foreign exchange components, remained unpaid, which has been carried into this year’s budget. It became clear to me that having regards to the difficulty that we faced in terms of paying for the subsidy, the country can no longer, quite frankly, afford subsidy payment.

    “We were faced with the challenge of ensuring supply of petroleum products without the need for a subsidy regime. As of January 1 this year, the country is no longer paying subsidy, saving us a cumulative of over N1trillion in a one year period. That was the first major issue.

    “Second major issue was that once the N600bn subsidy money was paid, the ability of marketers to import the product became a challenge because they could not raise letters of credit and up to this point that still remains a major issue.

    “So even if they wanted to import, they needed letters of credit and adequate foreign exchange cover. Some of them were owing arrears of liabilities as a result of commitment I had made on petroleum importation prior.

    “So, whatever money they had was taken by banks to offset certain obligations. Going forward now, they didn’t have money to import fuel again. What that meant was that by late August last year, we moved from the expected obligation of the NNPC to bring in 50 per cent of the national consumption of about 45 to 50 million litres per day but we now have to cover a 100 per cent platform because nobody was bringing in the product, the consumption was still static and we needed to cover the gap.

    “We took up that challenge without increase in crude allocation, without any excess allocation as it were and we have to work exceedingly hard from August last year to cover the gap but we didn’t cover it 100 per cent because we didn’t have the ability to do so. So, the gap we could not cover was responsible for the queues. That was responsible for the 80 per cent of the problem.

    “Third issue is that of pipeline vandalism. We met pipelines that were in comatose, for instance Mosimi was not working. This morning, after a three months intensive work with private partners, we’ve just been able for the first time, to recover the Escravos to Warri pipeline and about a month ago, we recovered the Brass to Port Harcourt pipeline. For the first time, we will be able to pump crude to the refineries without the need to use vessels which are extremely expensive which I stopped as soon as I came. For the first time in six years, we are trying to recover the pipeline.

    “We have 18 depots across the country. 90 per cent of them are not in a state of use. They have not been maintained. They have been abandoned for years. Money was needed to work on them. But we have advertised for joint partners to come in and work with us to put in the required facilities to get depots working and get pipeline repaired. But through hard work we have been able to recover some pipelines from Mosimi up to Ilorin but with a few punctured points. The crude pipeline from the South to the North again being recovered. The absence of the pipelines makes movement of the products from Lagos taking up to a week.

    “Because the importers are not bringing in the product, the logistics of the NNPC had been expanded, creating great nightmare for us. Not only do we bring in the product but we also lighten it and take it to the storage tanks of the majors and some cases if you notice, we also are taking intervention trucks and taken products into the stations of this individuals because if they do not sell and the stations are empty, it is a challenge. NNPC basically over extended itself in terms of what it was set up to do and what it has the capacity to do.

    “Lack of infrastructure too is affecting us because we are moving up to 3, 000 trucks round the country everyday this is not the best way to circulate or distribute products in a civilised world but that is the only option that we had. NNPC was losing N40bilion every month when we came but this had been reduced to N3billion by December last year. We met a company with a debt profile of N4trillion and with that of NPDC which is about N1trillion. The access to open up letters of credit continues to be a challenge.”

    On diversion of products by marketers he said, “Marketers are diverting the product, some days we load 300 trucks from Lagos coming to Abuja and one third of that, are dissipated into areas where people could make quick returns and so they won’t get to Abuja. We do not have a computerized system that will enable us to track every truck that is loaded from our depots. We are however working on this. It has not been there for 20 years.

    “We are currently working very collaboratively with the oil majors that is upstream producing companies to see how they can sell us foreign exchange for the naira components they would require for their local operations. When they bring in the foreign exchange, they give us the first call. We are using that module to cover up the foreign exchange gap. We are also working collaboratively with the CBN within the limits of what it can tolerate to give us a little bit of foreign exchange.

    “Additionally we also brought in the DSDP programme because the number of litres of consumption as a nation was spectacularly false. We were carrying figure of 55 million litres per day that was geared towards creating opportunities for people to make more money during the subsidy regime. We did analysis and we discovered that we were consuming 45 million litres which means that we are saving about 10 million litres per day.

    “April begins the DSDP programme which will save us $1billon a year. This means that the contract upon which we were importing fuel in the past was extremely faulty. Once that begins from April 2, we have commitment of much more arrival of the product.

    That covers the 60 per cent that our crude allocation can deal with. There is still that 40 per cent gap which importers had got to bring in. That is being worked on through the collaboration of oil majors and the CBN.

    “We are also setting up, for the first time, strategic reserves in this country of close to about two million tonnes to provide products always. That would be operational as from May. It would contain between five to seven cargoes of fuel as a reserve. Once we do that, we should be away from the incessant fuel crisis that we have.

    “We expect that between now and about the 6th to 7th of April, the fuel queues will disappear, the DSDP will begin and the foreign exchange allocation will see us smoothly through the track.

    “The refineries will be working and the volumes they would be producing will be sent to the strategic reserves to address difficult times. In April we are expected to get to get 150 per cent of the volumes that would be needed. A lot of that will go to storage tanks. Hopefully that should sort out the problem.”

  • Fuel crisis pains go on as Senate invites Kachikwu

    Fuel crisis pains go on as Senate invites Kachikwu

    Petrol sells for N150 in Lagos, Ibadan, Ondo, others

    Our plan, by NNPC

    Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Ibe Kachikwu is to visit the Senate over the biting fuel scarcity  that is threatening businesses and making life difficult for Nigerians.

    Dr. Kachikwu, who is also the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC),  is to appear before the Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) today to state the steps being taken to stop the scarcity.

    Committee Chairman Jibrin Barau told reporters after an on-the-spot assessment of filling stations in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) that the invitation became necessary following the hardship Nigerians go through as a result of the scarcity.

    He said despite assurances by the ministry that the situation would be controlled, it had lingered. “We have invited the Minister of State (for Petroleum Resources) to appear before the committee tomorrow (today) to tell us about the fuel scarcity and the strategy he is employing to solve it.

    “`We will expect him to give a date when the problem will be resolved permanently. We are not satisfied because this problem has gone unabated for too long. The situation is appalling and it is a major problem. We gave the ministry enough time and space to put its act together to solve this problem.”

    Petrol prices have gone up to N170 per litre and above in some areas, especially during the Easter celebration as against the government’s approved N86.50 per litre.

    The crisis is believed to have got worse after Kachikwu’s statement that the scarcity will not end till May. The statement triggered panic-buying and hoarding. Many oil marketers started  hoarding and diverting to sell at a premium. Apart from very few filling stations owned by the major oil marketers that sell at the regulated price in Lagos, others sell at between N110 and N150 per litre. In most parts of Enugu State, petrol sold at N170 and above.

    As a result of rationing of supply at the depots, oil marketers resorted to lobbying the NNPC to get allocation.

    Fuel hawkers are all over Lagos, selling 10-litre kegs at between N2,500 and N3,500, depending on the area.

    The Senate Minority Whip and a member of  the committee, Senator Philip Aduda, said the situation should be arrested fast. “What Nigerians need is fuel and not blame game,” he said.

    Aduda said: “The government should look for petrol and ensure that it is given to the people.

    “It is unacceptable; we are Nigerians and it will be bad for us to continue remaining on queues. We want to see all these queues disappear “.

    Petrol marketers lamented that lack of supply and inadequate supply by the NNPC resulted the scarcity across the country.

    The manager of Forte Oil, opposite Transcorp Hilton in Maitama District, said only three fuel tankers were being supplied daily; it used to be five or six.

    Isa Friday, manager of Oando Filling station, Zone 4, noted that it had been long the station got supply from the NNPC depot in Suleja.

    In Ibadan, petrol sells for N150 per litre.

    The pump price, which is about double the official price, became popular due to the worsening scarcity.

    Aside a few major marketers selling the product at the official rate of N86, most filling stations, including those owned by independent marketers, were closed for the long weekend.

    At the very few filling stations selling the product at the official price, queues were long.

    A few independent marketers which opened for business, however, sold petrol at N150 per litre.

    Motorists continued to lament the situation as they are forced to pay more and travel long distances to get petrol.

    The situation was worse in other towns in Oyo State. In Ondo State, the product sells for N160 per litre.

    However, many of the filling stations failed to sell PMS to motorists, just as many passengers were stranded.

    The situation also affected Easter celebration as many people could not travel. They stayed indoors.

    Only the NNPC mega stations in Akure and Ore sell petrol at the official  N86 per litre.

    A long queue of vehicles was at the NNPC mega station in Oyemekun, Akure, causing a serious traffic jam on the popular Oyemekun Road.

    Many transporters slept at the station to get petrol.

     

  • Kachikwu lays an egg!

    Kachikwu lays an egg!

    Reading the flurry of responses to the statement credited to the Minister of State Petroleum Resources, Ibe Kachikwu, on the lingering fuel crisis last week, I must confess to struggling to understand what it is really that irked Nigerians the more: an alleged inscrutable arrogance in the face of damning failure; or the momentary candour of admitting that the extravagant placebo, or if you like, the outsized artifice which the Buhari administration had sought to count upon to deliver on the promise of stabilizing the fuel supply situation, is as unworkable as it is patently dated!

    Confronted by a battalion of reporters to tell them when he hopes the nation would get out of the latest cycle of fuel crisis, the minister, who doubles as the helmsman of the national oil corporation reportedly blurted out: “One of the training I did not receive is that of a magician, but I am working very hard to ensure some of these issues go away”.

    How, he didn’t say.

    The minister would nonetheless go on to remind the newshounds that: “… for the five or six months we have been here, NNPC has moved from a 50 per cent importer of products to basically a 100 per cent importer and the 445,000 barrels per day that were allocated were to cover between 50 and 55 per cent importation…So it is quite frankly by sheer magic that we even have the amount of products at the stations. We are looking to see how to get foreign exchange input; the President and I discussed extensively on how to get more crude directed at importation”.

    So much for the exaggerated self-score by the minister; the fact is that we are here: citizens of OPEC’s six largest exporter of crude can’t get fuel to buy at the pumps. From North to East, West to East, the story is the same – petrol has become the latest essential commodity to be procured at great pains. Officially, it is supposed to be selling at N86.50 a litre; now you’d be lucky to buy at N150. A friend in Lokoja, the Kogi State capital told me he bought at N200 a litre. That is the way it is. And to imagine that this is happening under an administration that promised change.

    By the way, it is no small matter that a minister of the republic, a supposedly first rate one, would dare to link the current situation with the calling of the practitioners of the high art of magic – going as far as to suggest that it is “sheer magic that we even have the amount of products at the stations”! Or his self-serving statement about two months waiting period for which Nigerians must necesarily endure after which fuel will thereafter flow ceaselessly! Can we ever get serious?

    There is certainly a sense in which the minister’s momentary candour – minus the hubris – could in fact be far more ‘beneficial’ than Nigerians could have imagined. I mean the carefully constructed edifice of make-believe, the castle of denials and the blame-game that have sustained the industry in the past months right up to the point of spawning a culture of abdication; all of these unravelling to the embarrasment of all and right before our very eyes. The development, if anything, comes to one basic but uncomfortable truth: the new NNPC team –headed by Kachikwu, has done practically nothing different on the basis of which it expected things to have changed! And this is despite being in office for more than six long months!

    This is why his resort to blaming the fuel crisis to dollar shortages, moribund refineries, and alleged misallocation of fuel imports by the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA), at best efforts at rationalization, is unlikely to impress Nigerians. While it is a long way from when we were required to throw up our arms in mock surrender to the the usual culprits: the ubiquitous pipeline vandals said to have practically brought the downstream sector to its knees; the club of marketers said to have made a habit of feeding feed fat on Nigerians’ misery, the latest development challenge us to focus on the lingering inertia as well as the criminal lack of responsibility by the NNPC and its principal, the Federal Government, which have fostered the current climate of despondency.

    Clearly, Nigerians didn’t expect the administration to work magic – and certainly not in six months. That is if magic means overhauling the extensive pipeline network, the disused depots and their ancillary infrastructure, the re-streaming of the moribund refineries – all of these within six months to even a year. Even at the best of times – and most Nigerians would readily agree that these are not the best of times – it would ordinarily be a tall order – to get these done. Of course, given the years of neglect, Nigerians certainly understand that it would take some time for changes to become apparent at least in these areas.

    Point is – Nigerians have learnt to see beyond appearances, the self-glorification of officials particularly when they mount the high roads to hold imaginary saboteurs responsible for what is essentially structural problem of inadequate supply; they are able to appreciate genuine efforts when they see one. At the moment, what they are being served daily is a menu of placebos that falls short of what is needed. The earnest expectation of Nigerians is that they will be served the real stuff soon.

    Are the latest supply hiccups inevitable? Only if the NNPC can convince that there are elements in the supply chain that are either unknown or unknowable or that Nigerians have suddenly found new uses for the liquid gold. Dollar shortages? Haba – NNPC! Moribund refineries? Since when did we begin to rely on the refineries for local supply? And now this new one – an alleged misallocation of fuel imports by PPPRA!  Would there ever be an end to the tale? Is Kachikwu no longer the supervisory minister for the PPPRA? The truth is, none of the activities as far as we can see, are unknown or incapable of being anticipated. We have a fair idea of our daily requirement of fuel; the same with the import cycle. To the extent that the situation didn’t happen overnight, there is sufficient lead time for the federal government to have taken action.

    This is where an apology instead of self-justification would have done the magic. But then, our minister, not being a magician, is unlikely to offer Nigerians the benefit of that simple but efficacious therapy.

  • TMG berates Kachikwu over comment on fuel crises

    TMG berates Kachikwu over comment on fuel crises

    The Transition Monitoring Group (TMG) has berated Minister of State for Petroleum Ibe Kachikwu over the persistent fuel crises.

    TMG, in a statement issued yesterday in Abuja by its Chairman, Ibrahim Zikirullahi, said it was miffed that at a time Nigerians were languishing in interminable queues across the country, the minister, instead of soothing their pains, decided to inflict more lacerations by his careless talk about not being a magician.

    The group said: “We recall that a few months after he was appointed by the President, Kachikwu spoke so glibly about how the nation’s refineries had started refining products, with some refining at up to 90 percent of installed capacity.

    “Weeks later, the nation was inundated with fuel queues, TMG is unimpressed by this kind of propagandist approach to engaging with the public.

    “TMG is also doubtful about Kachikwu’s strange talk about keeping what is refined locally in a strategic reserve, while imported products will be distributed.

    “It clearly does not make sense that a nation in dire need of products would be keeping some in reserve, while Nigerians are wasting precious man-hours in fuel queues across the country, not to talk of the adverse economic consequences of the scarcity.

    “TMG calls on the Minister of State to be forthright with Nigerians, because the people know that the standard-bearer of the change they voted for, President Muhammadu Buhari, does not engage in double speak.

    “It will therefore be incongruous for the Minister to be making caustic remarks capable of casting a slur on the good and patriotic intentions of the President.”