Hehe....Oil marketers have given an indication that the pump price of petrol will crash in the next one month.
Already, some filling stations
belonging to independent marketers in major cities such as Abuja and
Lagos are beginning to sell petrol below the N145 given last week by the
Federal Government as the benchmark price per litre.
The Federal Government had penultimate
Wednesday announced a new price regime of N145 as the maximum amount for
a litre of petrol. This has prompted the Nigeria Labour Congress to
declare a nationwide strike, demanding the return to the old prices of
N86 and N86.50 per litre for fuel outlets controlled by the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation and major/independent marketers,
respectively.
The Executive Secretary, Major Oil
Marketers Association of Nigeria, Mr. Obafemi Olawore; the President,
Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, Chief Obasi
Lawson, and an executive member, Reconciliation Committee of the
Independent Marketers Association of Nigeria, Mr. Dibu Aderibigbe, in
separate interviews, said the cost of petrol would fall in the near
future as a result of the competition, which the new price policy had
created.
Olawore said, “I just returned from
Abuja and I discovered that there are two retail outlets around Jabi (in
Abuja) that were selling at N137 per litre. This is because they needed
to offload the stock and get more.
“So, when we get to the point where
everybody has the product as we are doing now, those who want to quickly
turn their tanks round will choose the price they want to sell. I am
very confident that in spite of the unfavourable exchange rate, we will
get to the point where prices will be moving up and down.”
Lawson also stated that the current
partial deregulation policy of government would liberalise the oil and
gas industry and engender competition that will warrant a reduction in
price.
He said, “In less than one month, we
will start reaping the benefits of the new policy. This new policy of
the Federal Government that effected the change in price of the PMS is a
welcome development and the PMS prices will start coming down very
soon.”
Similarly, Aderigbigbe stated that the
price of petrol would fall soon because independent marketers were
gearing up to import the product in large volumes.
He said, “Independent marketers are
going to import large volumes of petrol and any filling station that
sells at high prices may lose customers. In fact, competition will be
high and I can assure you that within the space on one month or two, the
price of petrol will fall to the point that people will start making
choices.”
The marketers have continued to laud the
partial deregulation of the downstream industry, stressing that the
initiative would not only liberalise the sector but also force down the
pump price of petrol as a result of competition.
To make funding available for petrol
importers, it was gathered that the Federal Government had to pair the
upstream arm of the oil giant, Total E&P with its downstream company
involved in the sale of the Premium Motor Spirit (petrol) at filling
stations.
Specifically, some senior officials at
the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources and the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation told our correspondent that the government had
paired Mobil upstream with its downstream firm.
They stated that other major marketers
were also linked up with selected IOCs in order to access the United
States dollars at reasonable rates.
“The pairing of upstream and downstream
companies by the government is to ensure that the downstream businesses
access forex at considerable rates, which are far better than what you
get at the parallel market,” an official at the Petroleum ministry, who
spoke on condition of anonymity said.
In one of the latest bulletins of the
NNPC, which was made available to our correspondent by an official, the
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, stated that
he had been able to get the buy-in of the upstream companies operating
in Nigeria to support the growth of the downstream sector.
Kachikwu, in the bulletin, said, “This
specifically is to enhance domestic supply of refined petroleum products
by seeking the upstream companies to make available additional funding
to support the importation of products being an innovative solution to
address the current challenges in fuel supply and distribution.
“I have tied Total upstream to Total
downstream; Mobil upstream to Mobil downstream; Agip Eni to Oando; and
Shell to ConOil, to provide the needed funding.”
When asked if marketers had started
getting forex from upstream oil companies, Olawore confirmed that the
government had kept its words, stressing that some majors had benefitted
from the initiative.
The Federal Government recently
announced that marketers were permitted to source for forex from the
secondary or parallel market in order to purchase petroleum products.
But marketers, some of who got their
petrol import permits from the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory
Agency last week, told our correspondent that the parallel forex market
in Nigeria didn’t have enough United States dollars to meet the demand
of the PMS importers.
It was learnt that some marketers were
already making arrangements on how to access the greenback with forex
dealers in countries such as Ghana and Liberia.
A senior official with one of the oil
majors that got import permits last week stated that the pressure
exerted on the parallel market by the PMS importers was a major factor
that warranted the crash of the naira against the dollar.
Petrol importers had urged the
government to intervene in the oil sector, particularly with respect to
accessing forex, as they noted that the over N360 to a dollar rate at
the parallel market was unhealthy for the business.
Aderibigbe said despite the government’s
directive that marketers should source for forex, it was still
important for the government to support oil dealers.
He lauded the pairing of upstream with
downstream companies by the government, but stressed that many
independent marketers still had to contend with the challenges of
accessing forex.
Aderigbigbe said, “If you use N365 as
the exchange rate to buy a dollar-denominated product, won’t the price
of that product increase? That is the problem we have and which
government must do something about. You cannot just say that people
should go to the parallel market to source for dollar.
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