The Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) has accused the Federal Government of covering up “huge
sleazes directly involving the All Progressives Congress (APC) intere
sts.”It
said it was reprehensible that the APC and the Federal Government have stuck to
lying on the real reasons behind the current fuel scarcity and “their exposed
attempt to pilfer $1bn from the Excess Crude Account (ECA)”.
The PDP
charged the government to tell Nigerians the truth on its handling of fuel-
related funds “particularly the circumstances surrounding the exposed diversion
of funds in sleazy oil subsidy payouts” and “speak out on reports of fraud in
the oil regime whereupon 18 unregistered companies were used to lift and divert
$1.1 trillion worth of crude oil in the last one year.”
In a
statement yesterday, PDP National Publicity Secretary, Kola Ologbondiyan,
alleged the current government is “not only grossly incompetent and corrupt but
also a champion in the use of lies and manipulations against innocent and
unsuspecting citizens”.
The
statement adds: “We all know that it was convenient for the APC presidency to
promise Nigerians that it will no longer import fuel only because the PDP
government had already laid the foundation including revamping the refineries
and ensuring a domestic production of 5 million litres out of the 25 million
litres daily domestic consumption. Sadly, this incompetent APC government, in
its almost three years, has not added one litre to the 5 million which the PDP
administration was producing.”
Contrary to
the notion that the APC government has scrapped fuel subsidy, the
administration is in fact paying itself about N1.4 billion daily for importing
fuel through the NNPC.The corporation’s Group Managing Director, Maikanti Baru,
recently confirmed that a N26 subsidy was being paid on every litre imported.
The landing
cost of petrol into the country stands at N171 per litre, as against the N145
retail price. Considering that the country’s daily consumption moved from an
estimated 35 million litres per day to about 52 million litres, it would mean a
total of about N1.4 billion is currently being paid to the exclusive importer.
When the
Federal Government scrapped subsidy about two years ago and ushered in a regime
of partial deregulation of the downstream sector of the oil and gas industry,
the expectation was that private importers and market forces would have a
freehand. The government, through the NNPC, however has been the sole importer
and price modulator.
The weakness
of the naira against the dollar and increasing price of crude oil on the
international stage are compounding the fuel crisis in Nigeria, creating an
unsustainable market. And with NNPC’s monopoly and the challenge of accessing
foreign exchange, private importers have been forced out.
The Guardian
learnt that despite the fact that the government is faced with the reality of
growing prices of refined products at the international market, the current
administration might be maintaining the current pump price for political
expediency.Crude oil price currently stands at about $65 per barrel. On the eve
of subsidy removal, it was around $40 while the exchange rate hovered slightly
around N200 to $1. Today, the rate is almost double.
Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo had justified the removal of the subsidy, saying: “The
CBN simply did not have enough. (In April, oil earnings dipped to $550 million.
The amount required for fuel importation alone is about $225 million!)”Experts,
including the President of the Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists
(NAPE), Abiodun Adesanya, insisted the administration has worsened the plight
of Nigerians by pegging the foreign exchange rate and the pump price of petrol.
Adesanya
said the Buhari administration made two mistakes. First, it did not allow
foreign exchange to flow. “The second is that the petrol subsidy should have
been totally removed. What is making subsidy come back is primarily because of
foreign exchange and increasing crude oil price.
“I am not
surprised at the current situation. The quicker they let go, the better for us.
Then, competition would come and ordinary Nigerians would become beneficiaries.
Anything else will not work,” said Adesanya.
According to
the Executive Secretary of MOMAN, Obafemi Olawore, the crisis is getting worse
because there is no adequate supply in the country.”Our problem is that
government is owing us and government has not paid. Nobody is talking to us
about payment. We are left in the dark. Where are we going to get the money to
import? If they are saying they will pay us by January, then we will come into
the importation scheme in January,” said Olawore.
He added:
“They have been giving us one ship per day, which is not enough. If the queues
must go away, they should give us more than the national demand. The national
demand is estimated to be about 35 million per day. There is already a very big
gap. We have to fill that gap before we can have any improvement.”
The Vice
President of IPMAN, Abubakar Shettima, noted that about 80 per cent of the
association’s members did not have supply.He said: “We are not getting products
the way we used to. There is not enough supply, and the problem will not end
until we have enough. Our supply gap is down by about 80 per cent.”It is only
the NNPC that import products. That is a monopoly. The problem is caused by the
inability of the private importers to bring products. If they allow us to bring
in products, it would be good. There would be availability. They currently owe
us. Besides, we can’t bring in products and sell at the rate of 145 per litre
because of the high price of crude oil.”
The Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) meanwhile has denied a report that it is
depriving members of the Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association
(DAPPMA) of the supply of products, especially petrol.The corporation in Abuja
yesterday insisted it supplied substantial volume to DAPPMA, Major Marketers
Association of Nigeria (MOMAN) and Independent Petroleum Marketers Association
of Nigeria (IPMAN) to end the ongoing scarcity.
It regretted
DAPPMA’s indictment of the NNPC when members had taken receipt of products from
the Petroleum Products Marketing Company (PPMC), an NNPC subsidiary, and owed
the company N26.7 billion as at December 21, 2017.The corporation said the
statement by DAPPMA that the current crisis was due to the inability of the
Direct Sale Direct Purchase (DSDP) partners of NNPC to deliver on their
business obligations was unfounded and self-indicting.
Despite a
concession by government to DAPPMA to obtain forex at an official rate of N305
per dollar for petrol import, its members have not been able to do so, leaving
NNPC as the sole supplier to the Nigerian market.
NNPC assured
the public that notwithstanding the increased supply it made in December 2017,
it would provide 1.2 billion litres in January 2018, translating to about 40
million litres per day. Ordinarily, Nigeria consumes an estimated 700 trucks.
That is about 27 million – 30 million litres per day.
Despite the
current challenge, the NNPC has assured Nigerians there is no plan to increase
pump price above N145 per litre. It said it would continue to maintain the
ex-depot price of N133.28 per litre and that this would guarantee the pump
price does not exceed government’s N145 per litre cap.
It implored
stakeholders to support government’s efforts to bring a speedy end to the
scarcity, stressing this is not a time to trade blame.Reacting to NNPC’s claim,
DAPPMA’s Executive Secretary, Olufemi Adewole, told The Guardian: “We have read
the NNPC statement and would not respond to all the issues raised by the
corporation. We insist that petrol be made available to our members, so the
country can overcome the supply hiccups.”
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