Source: THE GUARDIAN NIGERIA
THERE will no longer be a uniform price for petroleum
products, according to a new regulatory framework released by the
Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) in Abuja,
yesterday.
Effective January 1 till the end of March 2016 at least,
petrol will be sold at N86.50 kobo at retail outlets owned by
independent and major marketers while outlets owned or operated by the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) will sell at N86.
However, the possibility is becoming more likely by the day that
Nigerians may witness an industrial strike in 2016 as the Nigeria Labour
Congress (NLC) has rejected the planned fuel subsidy removal in
2016.There was no identifiable provision for subsidy payment in the 2016
budget as presented to the National Assembly by President Muhammadu
Buhari.
According to Ahmed while unveiling the new template , the 50 kobo
differential between marketers and NNPC stations is informed by the
lower cost at which the corporation brings petrol into the country.
“Accordingly, the ex-depot price of PMS shall be N77 per litre, while
the pump price shall be N86.50 kobo per litre in line with the
prevailing market trend. This new price regime is with immediate effect
from January 1, 2016. However, NNPC retail stations would sell at N86
per litre. All marketers are hereby advised to adhere strictly to the
PPPRA approved ex-depot and pump prices, as the PPPRA in conjunction
with relevant government agencies shall enforce compliance”’, he said.
The new template shows that there is no longer a trader’s margin
which before now was N1.47 per litre. Lifting expense is now N2 per
litre from N4.07 while Nigeria Port Authority charge of 77 kobo is now
down to 36 kobo. Jetty throughput charge is now 40 kobo per litre from
80 kobo and storage charge, which was N3 per litre, is now N1.50.
Retailers’ margin has been moved up to N5 from N4.60 kobo while transporters now get N2.99 kobo from N3.05 kobo.
Dealers margin reduced to N1.75Kobo from N1.95Kobo and bridging fund is now N4 per litre down from N5.85Kobo per litre.
Under the new import regime, the NNPC has been allocated 78% of the
total three million metric tons volume while marketers are left with 22%
for the first quarter allocation.
The PPPRA boss said the paucity of dollars influenced the decision to
increase the allocation of NNPC, which hitherto was 40%. He explained:
“In allocating the first quarter 2016 import to the NNPC and other
marketers, the agency took into consideration retail outlets’ ownership,
marketers performance of previous quarterly allocation, as well as the
challenges in sourcing foreign exchange. This measure is to guarantee
uninterrupted supply nationwide.
Consequently, the NNPC is granted 78% of the total allocated volume
for first quarter, while the balance of 22% is to be supplied by other
oil marketing companies.”
According to him, the performances of the importers will be reviewed
quarterly to ensure non-performing companies are sifted. The PPPRA boss
warned that any marketer found selling above the approved price should
be appropriately sanctioned by being “excluded from future participation
in product importation and revocation of licences.”
In a statement by its General Secretary, Peter Ozo-Eson, in Abuja
yesterday, the NLC said the discordant and confusing statements from
government officials were meant to confuse Nigerians on the actual stand
of government on deregulation.
He said: “In the past few weeks, we have heard discordant tunes from
government officials and chieftains of the ruling APC on what the future
portends for the prices of petroleum products and the management of the
subsidy scheme. Party chieftains who supported and encouraged the
massive protests against subsidy removal in 2012 are now preaching the
inevitability of subsidy removal!
‘‘The Honourable Minister of State for Petroleum first announced that
come next year, the price of petrol will revert to ₦97 per litre and
that subsidy will be phased out. Two days, thereafter, he denied this
and stated that what he said was that the price will operate within a
band of ₦87 to ₦97 and that this did not mean removing the subsidy. The
same minister now says that the price of petrol will now be ₦85 in
January signifying the deregulation of the sector.”
While restating the opposition of NLC to subsidy removal, Ozo-Eson
hinted that state councils, industrial unions as well as civil society
allies had been put on notice just as the National Executive Council
(NEC) of the worker’s union had been summoned for the first few weeks of
the New Year.
“In the meantime, we wish to restate our opposition, adopted at our
Central Working Committee Emergency Meeting of 22nd December, to any
attempt by the government to increase the price of or remove subsidy on
petrol.
‘‘We reiterate our directive to our state councils and industrial
unions to commence the process of mobilisation prior to a meeting of the
National Executive Committee to be convened in the New Year,” Ozo-Esan
said.
He explained that the vacillations and flip-flops were designed to
confuse Nigerians and pave the way for the deregulation of petrol prices
through the back door.
“The fact of the matter is that as long as we continue to depend on
imported refined products, deregulation and the abandonment of a subsidy
scheme will unleash hardship on Nigerians. In any case, according to
our laws, the determination of the recommended prices of petroleum
products is the responsibility of the Petroleum Products Prices
Regulatory Agency (PPPRA).
‘‘By law, the board of PPPRA is made up of stakeholders. None of the
contradictory prices the minister is throwing up is a product of the
agency. Indeed, the board of the PPPRA has not operated for over two
years although we have made repeated demands for the convening of the
board,” the NLC scribe noted.
NLC therefore, called on the government to be guided by the rule of
law and constitute and convene the board of PPPRA in accordance with the
law without further delay
The congress said this would enable the agency to examine and agree a
new pricing template based on the realities of today, adding: “Any
price unilaterally determined and announced by the minister is in
violation of the law.”
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