Another fuel scarcity is looming in Nigeria threatening to cut short the steady fuel
supply experienced in the country since the Federal Government hiked the pump
price of petrol from N86.50 to N145.
The imminent scarcity of petrol is being induced by sharp
disagreements between the Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association (DAPPMA)
and the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) over an alleged
debt of N660 billion reportedly owed the oil marketers by the Federal
Government.
The amount comprises N500 billion debt on imported fuel and
N160 billion accumulated interest on bank loans.
The oil marketers say the debt is hindering petroleum
importation and causing trucks to queue endlessly to load at Dockyard and Apapa
depots in Lagos.
While DAPPMA declared that the debt will lead to the
resurgence of fuel scarcity as its members had stopped importing petrol into
the country, the PPPRA said this was not true.
DAPPMA Executive Secretary, Mr. Olufemi Adewole, explained
that the debt, coupled with the inaccessible foreign exchange, had forced most
marketers to stop importing the product. According to him, marketers owe some
Nigerian banks over $1 billion in loans for petrol import.
This situation is said to be compounded by the Federal
Government which has reneged on its agreement to pay the marketers or the
accumulated bank interest on the loans. Right now, “the huge debt owed
marketers has eroded our operating fund,” Adewole said.
He said: “We are appealing to government to urgently pay our
outstanding debt, which is long overdue. Our banks are threatening to debit our
accounts at the current forex rate of N360 per dollar as against the N197 per
dollar that government allocated for importation to marketers. This means
that we are the ones subsidising the imports.”
According to him, “the inability to pay or service the loans
has not only stalled further importation of fuel but is threatening the
operations of the affected banks and the nation’s financial industry at large.
“If government fails to address these lingering challenges
on price differential, it’s not only marketers that will go down, the banks
will also collapse because our exposure with the banks is in excess of $1.95
billion.
“Foreign exchange remains another big challenge. We don’t
have forex to import the product. For now, landing cost on petrol stands at
over N145 due to high forex rate, which poses serious concern to marketers over
the price to sell the product”.
Adewole disclosed that the marketers were reluctant to
import fuel due to the landing cost (at over N145), stating that most marketers
now depend on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), which will
also determine how much they would sell.
But in a swift reaction, PPPRA stated “unequivocally” that
DAPPMA’s claims were “gross misrepresentation of available facts at our
disposal, hence misleading.”
The agency said in a statement: “The National Petroleum
Products Stock data and import plan currently indicates that the country has
two months of PMS sufficiency, hence we want to assure motorists and commuters
alike that the products supply situation is robust and able to cater for the
fuel needs of all Nigerians, pending when ongoing challenges are addressed.”
PPPRA added that contrary to a widely-held belief on the
status of kerosene, the product was fully deregulated.
“We hereby appeal to all Nigerians to remain calm and desist
from any form of panic buying, as we assure of our total commitment to adequate
products supply and distribution across the country, in line with our mandate.
“We also appeal to all depot owners to adhere strictly to
the subsisting truck-out principle in order to ensure that products get to
retail outlets across the country in a seamless manner. The Agency shall not
hesitate to apply appropriate sanctions where necessary”.
The NNPC is the only entity currently importing the product
and has started perfecting plans to import the first batch of petrol for the first
quarter of 2017, which would come under the new exchange rate of N305 set by
the Federal Government.
Ordinarily, the first quarter importation allocation ought
to have been done last month (December) by the PPPRA but that did not happen
as the NNPC no longer has competitors in the importation of petroleum products.
-bt
No comments:
Post a Comment
All rights reserved. This material and any other material on this site may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, written or distributed in full or in part, without written permission from WISEMEN
<===============================================>
WISEMEN is highly honoured to have you as our esteemed reader.
You are encouraged to make comments to any post herein.
However, we shall not be responsible for use of foul language, it is against our professional ethics.
Help build a better Society!