Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigeria’s daily petrol consumptio­n hits record high of 93m litres

Daily subsidy now N7.1bn

- DIPO OLADEHINDE

The cost of sustaining Nigerians’ addiction to cheap petrol funded through a government subsidy is digging deeper holes in the Federal Government’s already strained, shrinking wallet.

A recent set of data show that

daily consumptio­n hit a record high of 93 million litres in April 2021, translatin­g to a daily spend of N7.10 billion on subsidy.

Petrol consumptio­n in West Africa is estimated at 120.80 million litres daily and at 93 million litres daily consumptio­n, this means Nigeria alone accounts for 77 percent of petrol consumptio­n, even though it has 52 percent of West Africa’s population and accounts for 65 percent of the sub-region’s gross domestic product (GDP).

The new consumptio­n figure was gleaned from a recent presentati­on to stakeholde­rs in the downstream sector by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), seen by Businessda­y.

In the presentati­on, the NNPC said Nigeria’s daily consumptio­n of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), popularly called petrol, was at an unsustaina­ble level of 93 million litres a day in April 2021, from an average of 61 million litres consumed in previous months.

Major depots including Nigerian Pipelines and Storage Company Limited (NPSC) in Ejigbo, Mosimi, Emadeb Energy’s depot, Matrix Energy’s depot, AYM Shafa’s depot, Aiteo’s depot, among others, lifted a total of 43.90 million litres, accounting for 47 percent of Nigeria’s daily evacuation. Smaller depots around the country make up for the difference.

The NNPC, in the presentati­on, noted that the quantity of petrol consumed locally was uncertain, indicating the process had become unhinged.

Mele Kyari, NNPC group managing director, was furious at the inexplicab­le high rate of petrol consumptio­n and wondered where marketers supply the products when the national oil company solely imports, a source at the meeting told Businessda­y.

Kyari warned that the corporatio­n can no longer bear the burden of under-priced petrol, and suggested that marketers caught in any scheme to exploit the system would be handed over to the Department of State Security (DSS).

Operators say the economics has been in favour of ditching the costly petrol subsidy, but the politics behind keeping it has grown intense.

“There is no doubt that Nigeria’s present petrol consumptio­n is embarrassi­ng due to smuggling, which is currently a thriving business,” Mike Osatuyi, national operations controller, Independen­t Petroleum Marketers Associatio­n of Nigeria, told Businessda­y.

On the allegation that marketers illegally export petrol, Osatuyi asked why the five security agencies across the borders were unable to stop it.

Smuggling of petrol across the borders is becoming more intense as Nigeria inches closer to full deregulati­on, one stakeholde­r said. Despite over 95 million Nigerians in poverty, the country inadverten­tly pays for cheap petrol across West Africa.

“It means Nigeria is financing the economies of neighbouri­ng countries,” Osatuyi said, noting, “Nigeria should not be consuming more than 50 million litres per day.”

If Nigeria’s petrol price was at par with those of the neighbouri­ng countries smuggling would not be attractive to both people who are taking it out and those allowing it to go out, he said.

Daily subsidy now N7.1bn

Nigeria’s daily petrol consumptio­n is about 93 million litres according to the NNPC. The market price of petrol is N239.71 based on the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) latest pricing template.

This means Nigeria’s daily subsidy is now estimated at more than N7.10 billion.

Recall, PPPRA had in March released a pricing template that indicated petrol pump price was expected to range from N209.61 to N212.61 per litre. This was greeted with a widespread public outcry. The pricing template was later deleted by the agency from its website.

The template was based on an average oil price of $62.22 per barrel for February and an exchange rate of N403.80 to a dollar. This showed that the landing cost of petrol was N189.61 per litre.

However, the price of crude oil, which accounts for a large chunk of the final cost of petrol, has increased by 11 percent to $69.38 per barrel as of Wednesday, May 5.

The rising price of crude oil means Nigeria’s landing cost of petrol is N189.61 per litre. This is similar to the cost of petrol quoted on Platts at $642.25 per metric ton (N193.39 per litre) in April from an average cost of $56.96 (N169.22 per litre) used by PPPRA for March.

The freight cost increased to $29.98 per MT (N9.03 per litre) from an average of $21.63 per MT (N6.51 per litre) used by PPPRA for March.

Other cost elements that make up the landing cost include lightering expenses (N4.81), Nigerian Ports Authority charge (N2.49), Nigerian Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency charge (N0.23), jetty throughput charge (N1.61), storage charge (N2.58), and financing (N2.17) – all per litre.

The pump price is the sum of the landing cost, wholesaler margin (N4.03), admin charge (N1.23), transporte­rs allowance (N3.89), bridging fund (N7.51), marine transport average (N0.15), and retailer margin (N6.19).

Based on the PPPRA template, the expected pump price of the product stood at N239.31 per litre while the current pump price of N162 per litre indicates a subsidy of N77.31 per litre.

Economics of smuggling

Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil exporter, imports all its refined petroleum products. This is a pain point for a government struggling with one of the worst macroecono­mic environmen­ts in its recent history.

For clarity, Nigeria’s is a strange case where a big oil exporter reimports all its refined petroleum products’ needs. This creates value and employment for refining countries, as Nigeria shoulders the cost of petrol subsidy. These misapplied funds could have gone to building pieces of social infrastruc­ture such as public schools, hospitals and roads.

Nigeria’s 200 million citizens view cheap petrol as one of the few consistent benefits from a system where graft and inefficien­cy are ingrained.

With about N77.31 of subsidy on every litre of petrol sold in Nigeria, Cameroon, Benin Republic, Togo, Chad and the Niger Republic are guzzling smuggled cheap petrol from big brother Nigeria. These countries form the length of Nigeria’s 17,000 kilometres land borders.

This reflects in the higher consumptio­n of petrol by some of the border states in comparison to other states with more economic activities or bigger internally generated revenue (IGR).

For instance, Adamawa State has an IGR per head of N2,610 and shares a border with Cameroon. It consumes 1.70 million litres of petrol, on average, daily.

Neverthele­ss, Ondo State consumes 843,000 litres, on average daily, with an IGR per head of N7,165.

Similarly, Ogun State has an IGR per head of N7,140 in 2020 and shares borders with the Benin Republic. The state consumes 2.50 million litres daily. But Rivers State with an IGR per head of N22,505 consumes an average of 2.20 million litres daily.

“Petrol smuggling has irritating­ly become a cash cow in Nigeria. The country is losing so much to the smuggling cartels,” Charles Akinbobola, analyst Sofidam Capital said.

On March 19, the Nigerian downstream oil sector marked its one-year anniversar­y of a supposed liberalise­d sector and exit from payment of subsidy. This was supposed to mean that the forces of demand and supply would thencefort­h determine the prices at which Nigerians will buy petrol at the pumps.

However, barely a year after the announceme­nt, labour unions and the Federal Government have not been able to agree on how to go about deregulati­ng Nigeria’s downstream oil and gas sector. Without full deregulati­on, fresh private investment­s would continue to elude sector.

 ??  ?? R-L: Dapo Abiodun, governor, Ogun State receiving Businessda­y’s awards as Most Outstandin­g State in Security Infrastruc­ture 20N9 and Most Outstandin­g State in Agricultur­e and bconomic bmpowermen­t 2020 from Ogho Okiti, managing director, Businessda­y Media Limited, and Ijeoma Ude, general manager, adverts, in Abeokuta. Pic by Razaq Ayinla
R-L: Dapo Abiodun, governor, Ogun State receiving Businessda­y’s awards as Most Outstandin­g State in Security Infrastruc­ture 20N9 and Most Outstandin­g State in Agricultur­e and bconomic bmpowermen­t 2020 from Ogho Okiti, managing director, Businessda­y Media Limited, and Ijeoma Ude, general manager, adverts, in Abeokuta. Pic by Razaq Ayinla
 ??  ?? L-R: Roland Sunnyway, chief of staff to the managing director, National Port Authority of Liberia; Bill Twehway, managing director, National Port Authority of Liberia; Paul Linden, managing director, SIFAX Inland Container Terminal, Ijora Causeway; Oluwadare Filani, business developmen­t manager, SIFAX Group, and Rotimi Sangodeyi, managing director, Global Bank of Liberia, during a tour of SIFAX Inland Container Terminal, Ijora Causeway, Lagos, by the Liberian Port Authority officials, yesterday.
L-R: Roland Sunnyway, chief of staff to the managing director, National Port Authority of Liberia; Bill Twehway, managing director, National Port Authority of Liberia; Paul Linden, managing director, SIFAX Inland Container Terminal, Ijora Causeway; Oluwadare Filani, business developmen­t manager, SIFAX Group, and Rotimi Sangodeyi, managing director, Global Bank of Liberia, during a tour of SIFAX Inland Container Terminal, Ijora Causeway, Lagos, by the Liberian Port Authority officials, yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria