Tag: petrol

  • Petrol sells for N155 per litre in Auchi

    The price of petrol has gone up from the official pump price of N145 per litre to between N150 and N155 in Auchi, Etsako West Local Government Area of Edo.

    A News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) correspondent who observed the situation reports that some filling stations are selling the product above government approved pump price.

    NAN also reports that the price hike has caused an increase in transport fares within the area.

    Two transporters, Philip Ikhalomeh and Isaac Imodu, lamented that the  price hike would further worsen the economic situation in the area.

    They said some filling stations had adjusted metres to reflect the new pump price and called on government to intervene.

    “The Federal Government needs to intervene immediately to save motorists from further economic difficulties.

    “The agencies in charge of price regulation should arrest the dealers who are selling this product above government approved price of N145 per litre,’’ Imodu said.

    However, the Manager of Supreme Filling Station, Mr Idris Hassan, said that the hike in the pump price was due to the increase in depot price of the commodity.

    “The price of the product has increased in the depot as a result of the high exchange rate.

    “For us to remain in business we have no option than to increase the pump price,’’ he said.

     

  • Scarcity: Sokoto Govt. to sell petrol to motorists

    Sokoto State Government says it plans to commence the sale of one million litres of petrol to motorists weekly to stabilise the fuel supply situation in the state.

    The Chairman of the State’s Task Force on the supply of petroleum products, Alhaji Ibrahim Magaji, disclosed this to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Sokoto on Saturday.

    The task force chairman explained that the action was part of emergency measures being deployed by the state government to fully improve the fuel supply situation in the state.

    According to Magaji, the state government plans to renew its bulk purchase agreement licence with the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) in this direction.

    ”Consequently, the state government would start the bulk purchase of petrol and sell same to the motorists.

    ”Anytime the state government buys one million litres, it would get nothing less than thirty trucks of petrol.

    ” The state government has fuel dumps across city and its environs to sell the commodity to the motorists.

    ” The task force will do everything humanly possible towards ensuring the availability of the product across the state.

    ”We will ensure the effective monitoring and enforcement of all laws related to the sale and distribution of petroleum products.

    Magaji directed the petroleum marketers to open their filling stations and sell at the official pump price to motorists.

    NAN reports that although the fuel supply situation in the state was improving, some independent marketers were still selling the commodity between N160 and N 175 per litre instead of N145.

    A cross section of the motorists commended the state government for establishing the task force, and urged government to ensure the sustainable availability of petroleum products in the state.

  • Petrol sells for N138 in Calabar

    Petrol sells for N138 in Calabar

    Some filling stations in Calabar, the Cross River State capital, were selling a litre of petrol for N138, The Nation observed yesterday.

    The development, which was much to the delight of the residents, came after it was widely reported that a filling station had started selling the product for N139 per litre, as at last week.

    “It is really a welcome development, I must say. I just filled my tank here at Total in Ekpo Abasi in Calabar South Local Government Area at N138 per litre. A friend told me yesterday (Tuesday) that he bought at another filling station for N140 but was given a free litre for every 10 litres.

    “I am happy the way the price has been dropping gradually. I hope it continues until it becomes very affordable.

    “Although I am glad about the drop, I must say a litre of petrol selling for N138 is still too high. As you know, the cost of living has risen and the high cost of petrol is also responsible. In any case, it is a good sign,” a Calabar resident, Mr Akpanudo Ibanga said.

  • NSCDC arrests couple for illegally dealing in petrol

    NSCDC arrests couple for illegally dealing in petrol

    The Ebonyi State command of the Nigeria Security and Civil defense Corps, NSCDC, Thursday arrested a couple (names withheld) who has been in the illegal business of diverting, hoarding and sales of petroleum products from their residence in Abakaliki.

    The State Commandant of the Corps, Shuayb Jibril stated this in Abakaliki, the state capital.

    According to him, the suspects  had been into such illegal business for about 6 years in the state.

    According to the Commandant, they were caught with 4 thousand litres of petroleum products as investigation into the matter were still on to ascertain other facts revolving around the crime.

    “Following intelligent gathering of the command, a woman and her husband were arrested in Abakaliki for diverting large quantities of petroleum products and sales to black marketers above the official pump price. The woman was caught at the scene and later the husband who is the proprietor of the business was arrest.”

    The Commandant condemned the hoarding of petroleum products at residential areas.

    He explained that such initiative had the tendency of causing uncontrollable fire outbreak in the state, which could lead to loss of lives and property of innocent citizens. Ends

    He thanked Governor David Umahi his contributions and initiatives which had promoted peace and unity in the state.

     

  • 2 million tonnes of petrol stuck on high seas

    2 million tonnes of petrol stuck on high seas

    At least 75 ships with two and a half million tonnes of fuel are awaiting importers on the high seas as Nigerians can’t find the dollars they need to pay for the cargoes, according to ship tracking data and fuel traders.

    A Reuters report said some of the vessels arrived a month ago and their frustrated owners have almost given up hope and started to offer their fuel to buyers outside Nigeria.

    A slump in world oil prices has hammered Nigeria’s state income and because crude sales are the government’s main source of revenue the fall has caused crippling shortages of dollars within the economy that have been hurting businesses for months.

    In a bid to break the impasse and head off more fuel shortages, the government raised the price cap for petrol by 67 per cent officially sanctioned importers to use the black market to find the hard currency they need to get cargoes off the ships and allowed any Nigerian company to import fuel.

    Announced last week, the reforms were welcomed by some in the oil industry as badly needed steps in the right direction. The changes have largely eliminated the system of heavily subsidised fuel prices, removing one strain on Nigeria’s increasingly stretched finances.

    But the so-called parallel market has struggled to cope with the demand for U.S. dollars that followed the reforms.

    Nigeria consumes 45 million litres of gasoline a day, or roughly 280,000 barrels, which would require the market to provide some $18 million a day. Though importers cover about 30 percent of this, with the state oil firm covering the rest, it is still a big strain on the market for dollars.

    The naira has already weakened due to the spike in demand for dollars from fuel importers. Last week, the U.S. currency fell to N324 on the parallel market, whereas the official exchange rate has been held firm just under N200.

    “The risk is that the parallel rate will depreciate even more, giving the marketers a pretext for yet further price increases at the pump,” said Alan Cameron, an economist covering Africa with Exotix Partners.

    President Muhammadu Buhari has resisted International Monetary Fund (IMF) calls to devalue the naira, though Vice President Yemi Osinbajo sparked speculation a devaluation may be on the cards when he said the Central Bank had to change its policies.

    Nigeria has four refineries but decades of neglect mean it has to import most of its fuel, which was less of a problem when crude was at $115 a barrel and the OPEC member was the leading oil exporter in Africa ahead of Angola.

    As well as the slump in crude prices, which touched a 2016 low of $27 in January and were below $48 last week, Nigeria’s output has also been hit by instability in its oil producing Delta region, further reducing the state’s dollar revenues.

    Nigeria’s production dropped this month to 1.65 million barrels per day from 2.2 million and risks slumping to its lowest since 1970.

    In an effort to address the looming fuel shortages, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has begun talks with at least three international firms to swap more of its crude for gasoline, according to traders and oil executives.

    But the drop in output due to the unrest in the Delta – as well as the fact oil firms take more physical cargoes as payment for services when prices are low – means the NNPC has less crude to swap for fuel.

    “There aren’t enough cargoes available to NNPC,” said Dolapo Oni, head of energy research at Ecobank. “I don’t see how it can get more from international oil companies.”

    Signs of trouble ahead are growing. On Saturday, Nigeria’s two main labour unions called for an indefinite general strike from Wednesday unless the government reverses its plan to increase the price of petrol, which many rely on for power generation as well as transport.

    Raising fuel prices is sensitive because many Nigerians see the state subsidy as the only benefit they derive from living in a major oil producing country which is nevertheless gripped by endemic corruption and poverty.

    The West African country tried to end fuel subsidies in 2012, doubling the price of gasoline overnight, but later reinstated some of the subsidy to end a wave of protests.

    The only long-term solution for Nigeria is to build its own refineries and fix the infrastructure, according to Chinedu Ukadike, chief of staff to the national president of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria.

  • Group condemns increase in petrol price

    The recent announcement by the Federal Government of the increase in price of petrol has been described as an insensitive act that will be resisted by the Nigerian people at the appropriate time.

    This was disclosed by a non-governmental organisation, Campaign Against Impunity and Domestic Violence (CAIDOV), in a press release signed by its Executive Director, Gbenga Soloki.

    The organization said:”From the increase, the government is insensitive to the plight of suffering Nigerians who are daily being subjected to more hardship by the ruling party.

    Since this government came on board last year, there has not been appreciable impact on the lives of the people.”

    It further said: “The increment is irresponsible, callous and condemnable. How can this government be so insensitive to the plight of the people when prices of products are on the increase. Any government that does not take into cognizance the interest of the people in its policies and programmes is anti-people and such policies should be rejected.”

    The CAIDOV urged the Federal Government to speedily consider the reversal of the price in the interest of the vast majority of the downtrodden masses of the country.

  • Petrol is N145 per litre

    Petrol is N145 per litre

    Fuel price yesterday took a major leap, rising from N86 per litre to N145 per litre.

    With the new price, advocates of deregulation – the government’s antidote to perennial scarcity of petrol – have carried the day, even as they are pushing for “full deregulation”.

    Marketers are free to import products and sell but not more than N145 per litre, the government said.

    Before the announcement, petrol sold for N86.50 per litre at major filling stations and for N86 at Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) stations.

    Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Dr. Ibe Kachikwu broke the news at the State House, Abuja.

    He said the decision was reached at a meeting presided over by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. It was attended by the leadership of the Senate, the House of Representatives, the Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF) and Labour unions (the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), the Trade Union Congress (TUC), the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association (PENGASSAN).

    The new pump price, Kachikwu said, will ensure increased supply and stabilise the quantity of the product.

    Gone now is fuel subsidy, which guzzled billions of dollars in questionable deals.

    The meeting also approved all oil marketers to import PMS.

    The minister said: “Following a detailed presentation by the honorable minister of state for Petroleum Resources, it has now become obvious that the only option and course of action now open to the government is to take the following decisions:

    “In order to increase and stabilise the supply of the product, any Nigerian entity is now free to import the product, subject to existing quality specifications and other guidelines issued by Regulatory Agencies.

    “All oil marketers will be allowed to import PMS on the basis of FOREX procured from secondary sources and accordingly PPPRA template will reflect this in the pricing of the product.

    “Pursuant to this, PPPRA has informed me that it will be announcing a new price band effective today, 11th May, 2016 and that the new price for PMS will not be above N145 per litre.

    “We expect that this new policy will lead to improved supply and competition and eventually drive down pump prices, as we have experienced with diesel.

    “In addition, this will also lead to increased product availability and encourage investments in refineries and other parts of the downstream sector. It will also prevent diversion of petroleum products and set a stable environment for the downstream sector in Nigeria.”

    Stressing that the government shares the pains of Nigerians, he said the inherited difficulties of the past and the challenges of the current times necessitated the difficult decisions on the critical national issues.

    To cushion the current challenges, he said the Federal Government had made an unprecedented social protection provision in the 2016 budget.

    Kachikwu also stressed that improved supply and competition will drive down prices in the long term.

    According to him, the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and the PPPRA have been mandated to ensure strict regulatory compliance, including dealing decisively with anyone involved in hoarding petroleum products.

    Kachikwu noted that the meeting reviewed the current exorbitant prices being paid by Nigerians for the product, which ranged on the average from N150 to N250 per litre in the black market.

    The meeting, he said, also noted that the main reason for the current problem is the inability of importers of petroleum products to source foreign exchange at the official rate due to the massive decline of the government’s foreign exchange earnings.

    As a result, Kachikwu said, private marketers have been unable to meet their approximate 50% portion of total national supply of PMS.

  • IGP orders arrest, prosecution of black marketers

    IGP orders arrest, prosecution of black marketers

    The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase has directed all Zonal Assistant Inspectors-General of Police (AIG), FCT and other State Commands Commissioners of Police (CP) to arrest anybody found selling petrol and other petroleum products in plastic container.

    The Police High Command explained that the order became imperative following untold suffering and hazard emanating from the activities of black marketers.

    The IGP also noted that the act has led to fire outbreaks, thereby rendering many homeless.

    This is contained in a statement in Abuja Tuesday by the Force Spokesperson, Olabisi Kolawole.

    According to the statement: “…apart from the hardship this act is causing to fuel buyers, it has also rendered some innocent and law abiding citizens homeless due to fire outbreak from jerry-can petrol storage.

    Arase while warning fuel attendants at filling stations to desist from selling petrol inside jerry-can and plastic container added that the buyers and the sellers of the products if caught will be arrested and prosecuted under the law.

    He also noted that fuel products such as petrol are highly flammable and if not stored and handled properly, can seriously endanger people, property and the environment.

    The IGP who assured Nigerians of Police readiness to fulfill its constitutional mandate also solicited  for a cordial relationship between the Force and Nigerians.

     

  • Stop panic buying of petrol, NNPC urges

    Stop panic buying of petrol, NNPC urges

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) yesterday enjoined petrol consumers not to engage in panic buying because the Corporation has enough supply to go round the country.

    Its Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division, Malam Garba Deen Muhammad assured that the current petrol shortage would soon be over noting that the problem has been largely resolved in Lagos and the queues in Abuja are reducing by the day.

    Panic buying according to the statement is what is making motorists to converge in a particular filling stations thereby creating scarcity especially in Abuja.

    He said over 200 trucks laden with petrol were supplied to Abuja and its environs yesterday adding that the trend will continue.

    Muhammad gave the assurances that the corporation is doing everything possible to ensure supply and distribution of products is not disrupted in any way.

    He appealed to motorists to be orderly while waiting to buy petrol and also urged marketers not to hoard the product.

  • DPR detects petrol diversion of 100, 000 litres

    DPR detects petrol diversion of 100, 000 litres

    The Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) yesterday discovered that the  petrol stations on Kaduna Road, Gaoraka -Suleja in Niger State had diverted about 100, 000 liters the Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) that they loaded from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) depots on Tuesday.

    Leading an enforcement team on the Zuba -Kaduna expressway to  monitor the sale of the Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) , the Director of DPR , Mr. Mordecai Ladan stormed the Zen Hajad Limited (ZHL) Petrol station, he discovered that although the manifest showed that the company lifted 60,000 litres but it never delivered it to the station.

    The station looked deserted and the security guard revealed that no product had been delivered to that place in the last one month.

    Ladan was surprised about what he described as sabotage and diversion of the intervention product to cushion the fuel scarcity in the country.

    He said “From the manifest from the depot, the station yesterday (Tuesday) lifted about 60,000 litres of PMS as intervention for the crisis currently being faced. So as part of our monitoring activities we have come to confirm if the 60,000 liters were delivered but as you can see nothing of such.”