*Stakeholders
seek incentives for private refineries
Except the
Federal Government pays all petroleum subsidy arrears of over $2 billion (N720
billion) owed oil marketers, many employees in the downstr
eam sector may soon
be thrown into the labour market.
Already, the
oil marketers have disclosed plans to embark on mass retrenchment of workers as
government fails to pay the outstanding subsidy owed on the importation of
petroleum products, accrued interest on loans from banks and exchange rate
differential.
The
government’s delay in the payment of the over N720 billion debt has made
marketers to halt the importation of petrol, leaving the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to become the sole importer of the essential
commodity. The marketers said as a result of the non-payment of interest and
foreign exchange differentials, they had gradually become financially
handicapped to continue operating profitably.
Both the
Ministry of Finance and the Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency
(PPPRA) could not be reached for comments last night. Text messages sent to the
mobile phones of their spokesmen — Lanre Oladele (finance ministry) and Salisu
Saleh of the PPPRA— did not elicit any response as at press time, even as
several calls put to their phones rang out. But presidency sources had
confirmed to The Guardian that efforts were being made to settle all
outstanding issues in the sub-sector.
The
marketers, who operate under the aegis of Major Oil Marketers Association of
Nigeria (MOMAN); Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria
(IPMAN); Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association (DAPPMA); and
Independent Petroleum Products Importers (IPPIs), added that government’s delay
in settling all the debts was threatening massive investment in the downstream
sector.
A statement
by the marketers after their joint meeting in Lagos yesterday which was signed
by their legal adviser, Patrick Etim Esq, revealed that many petrol sellers and
oil companies are owing their workers over eight months’ salaries due to the
inability of the Federal Government to pay the debt.
The
marketers appealed for an urgent intervention of government by the
authorisation to pay outstanding interest and foreign exchange differentials
owed them to date to save their businesses from total collapse. They alleged
that government violated the agreement reached with them on payment schedule.
They claimed
that the commercial banks that lent money to them for the importation of petrol
were still in despair following the weight of the indebtedness of the oil
sellers, even as their operations nationwide were fast grinding to a halt. They
said the hope that the outstanding subsidy would be paid following the
intervention of the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, appeared to have been
shattered as the payment promised to be effected in July 2017 was yet to
materialise.
The
statement reads in part: “This is devastating to marketers as we are being
dragged daily by banks on debts owed and under threat of putting our tank farms
under receivership.
“The
condition of the contract is that the government shall pay the difference
between the landing cost and the selling price of petrol (as fixed by
government) provided that the landing cost is higher than the selling price.
“The government
approved the landing cost which fluctuated as it depended mainly on the
international price of petrol and exchange rate of naira/dollar. A key term of
the government’s contract with marketers is that the under-recovery payments
shall be paid to marketers within 45 days of submission of documents evidencing
discharge of petrol cargo and trucking out from storage.”
According to
the marketers, it was also agreed that after 45 days, the government should pay
the interest charges on the loans taken to finance the importation of petrol.
Explaining
their ordeal, the marketers said they opened letters of credit at the
approximate exchange rate of N197/$1.00 while petrol cargoes were supplied and
sold at the selling prices approved by government and the repayment was
calculated using the above exchange rate.
The
marketers stated that it was only in the first quarter of 2017 that the banks
were able to liquidate the letters of credit from 2014/ 2015 at N360/$ as
against the N176-195/$ at the time the LC’s were opened because of lack of
foreign exchange from the government, leaving their accounts with the huge
differential.
“The recent
further devaluation of the naira from N195 to N305, and later to over N365 to
US$1, while the Federal Government agencies based their reimbursement
calculation on N197 to $1, left petroleum marketers within our association with
additional debt burden in excess of N600 billion. This is in addition to the
over N250 billion arrears owed.
“The
downstream sector as a whole, is now saddled with a debt burden of over N850
billion which keeps rising because the banks are still charging interests until
the total debt is fully liquidated,’’ the marketers claimed.
On the
implication, they said the operations of the marketers had been halted with a
backlog of staff salaries remaining unpaid for about eight months now.
But the
other stakeholders called for dialogue, emphasising the need for the government
to provide incentives and create an enabling environment for the establishment
of private refineries.
The
Chairman, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) Petroleum Downstream
Group, Ken Abazie, described the planned retrenchment by oil marketers as a
normal business decision in a challenging environment.
He said that
the oil marketers were in business to make profit and therefore may be forced
to retrench if there were no returns on investment.
According to
Abazie, “if you are no more making money, I wonder why you should still be
keeping employees in the company. The current fixed price of N145 a litre for
petrol is not profitable for marketers. If we are not importing, automatically,
we are not in business and if we are not in business, there is no need to keep
the workforce. This is the current challenge for every investor in the
downstream sector.”
He said that
businesses were crumbling, as NNPC became the sole importer of petroleum
products in the country.
To Abazie,
the funds the government is using for the importation of petroleum products
should be directed to capital projects.
The
Executive Secretary of the association, Obafemi Olawore, urged the Federal
Government to pay the outstanding debts of $2 billion owed on the importation
of petrol products and the accrued interests on bank loans.
According to
him, the delay in the repayment of the loan debts owed the banks by marketers
has led to the retrenchment in the banking and the oil and gas sectors.
“The debts
have impacted grossly on marketers. Only a very few are presently importing
insignificant quantity of petroleum products into the country,’’ he said.
Olawore said
that the plea was to avert the scarcity of petroleum products in the country.
According to
him, the inability of the marketers to import fuel has impacted negatively on
loading activities at the Apapa and Dockyard private depots in Lagos.
Head,
Programmes and Membership, Institute of Directors’ Centre for Corporate
Governance, Nerus Ekezie, said that government should verify and pay all the
subsidy arrears.
He said that
the impact the retrenchment would have on the economy would be too much for the
country to handle, especially during this period of economic recession.
Ekezie
pleaded with the oil marketers to exercise patience and engage in a dialogue
with the Federal Government in respect to the settlement of the subsidy
arrears.
He stressed
the need for the Federal Government to find a lasting solution to the issues of
fuel subsidy arrears.
He said that
government should encourage the establishment of private refiners through the
provision of incentives to bring a lasting solution to the issue of petroleum
imports. “Government should pay what it is owes the oil marketers and fully
deregulate the downstream sector.,” he added.

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