The Federal Government on May 11, 2016
announced the removal of fuel subsidy, with a new petrol price band of
N135 to N145 per litre, up from N86 and N86.50.
It said with the liberalisation of the
downstream sector, “any Nigerian entity is now free to import the
product, subject to existing quality specifications and other guidelines
issued by regulatory agencies.”
Following opposition by many Nigerians
to the fuel hike, Kachikwu said by opening up the space for people to
perform, to practise their trade, “you will be amazed at what will
happen to your N145 price because it will go downwards.
“We mean well and Nigerians should
please trust us. Give us a chance; you will be surprised what will
become of your PMS’ price over the next six to eight months.”
More than a year after the hike, a litre of the PMS is still being sold for N145 or more in many parts of the country.
States with the highest average price of
the PMS in August were Plateau (146.4), Rivers (145.5) and Zamfara
(N145.4), according to the latest Premium Motor Spirit Watch obtained
from the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics.
It said states with the lowest average price of the PMS were Nasarawa (N143), Oyo (N143.2) and Lagos and Ondo (N143.3).
The NBS said the average price paid by
consumers for the PMS decreased by 1.9 per cent year-on-year and by 2.5
per cent month-on-month to 144.4 in August from N148.2 in July.
Asked when the price of fuel would come
down at a media chat on Twitter on Monday, Kachikwu said, “Anything can
affect the pricing either way as recently seen in the US where the
hurricane induced an almost 15 per cent increase.
“Efficiency of refineries will
definitely help,” the minister said, adding that there were plans to
refurbish the nation’s existing refineries.
Early this month, the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation claimed that its sustained strategic intervention
in the efficient supply and distribution petroleum products had led to
“significant fall in the prices of the Premium Motor Spirit nationwide.”
It said a national survey by Oil and Gas
Forum, the NNPC’s weekly TV programme, indicated that in the last few
weeks, the price of petrol had fallen steadily from N145 per litre to
between N142 and N143 per litre in some stations across the country.
The corporation said the study showed
that the NNPC mega and affiliate stations across the country were
selling the product for N143 per litre, while the pump price ranged
between N142 and N145 per litre in some major and independent marketers
in Lagos, Abuja, Sokoto, Enugu, Delta and other major cities.
Energy specialists at Ecobank Capital,
in a new report, noted that the NNPC recently started stockpiling the
PMS with aim of securing a stable supply while the refineries would
undergo some rehabilitation and to prevent any significant social,
economic and political problems in the event of oil supply shortages.
According to the report, there is an
accumulated 1.64 billion litres of petrol in stock which will last the
country up to 46 days of petrol consumption, with an additional 1.125
billion litres expected to be delivered by the end of this month,
raising the country’s storage to about 79 days of petroleum consumption
(35 million litres daily).
The Head of Energy Research, Ecobank,
Mr. Dolapo Oni, said, “In our opinion, the presence of this stockpile
could considerably support further reduction in the pump price of
petrol. However, the reduction is based entirely on the NNPC’s decision
to sell at a lower price as against a market-driven reduction in prices.
“This is largely because as the largest
importer of petrol at the moment (about 99 per cent of imports), the
NNPC also decides in conjunction with the Petroleum Products Pricing and
Regulatory Agency what the ex-depot and, by extension, the pump prices
should be.”
According to the Ecobank analysts, the
actual landing price of petrol is likely higher than the current
N130/litre at which marketers are able to lift products at the depots.
They said adjusting for transport time
(thus, using prices from July/August), the average tonne of petrol from
Europe would have landed offshore Nigeria at N143.55/litre.
“Pump prices would have risen to N161,
if current distribution margins were retained. This implies an implicit
subsidy of about N31/litre on products. This explains, to some extent,
the NNPC’s under recovery of about N79.5bn by the end of June 2017,”
they said.
The analysts said with most marketers
unable to source adequate foreign exchange to import, commercial storage
levels were at an all-time low with most depot owners recording
all-time low levels of throughput flows at their storage depots.
According to them, the potential shock
from supply shortages could easily force pump prices to rise above
current national average of N144.44 in August.
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