Daily Trust

NNPC: Petrol now N130/ltr at depots, N142/ltr at stations

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NNPC Group General Manager, Public Affair Division, Ndu Ughamadu in a statement yesterday said the drop was due to a sustained strategic interventi­on in the sector.

The efficient supply and distributi­on of petroleum products by the Corporatio­n led to the significan­t fall in the prices of petrol and Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG), also known as cooking gas, nationwide.

The statement said efforts are also ongoing to revamp other critical pipelines and depots across the country to further push down the prices of petroleum products for the benefit of consumers.

The statement said a national survey by Oil and Gas Forum, an NNPC weekly TV programme, indicated that in the last few weeks, the price of petrol has fallen steadily from N145 per litre to between N142 and N143 per litre across the country.

The study showed NNPC Mega and affiliate stations sell at N143 per litre, while the pump price range from between N142 and N145 per litre in some major and independen­t marketers in Lagos, Abuja, Sokoto, Enugu, Delta and other major cities.

One of the respondent­s in the survey and a manager at an independen­t fuel retail station in Abuja, Mohammed Abdullahi, said the station currently sells petrol at N142 per litre in line with the prevailing market situation in order to sustain the turnover of the business and to attract more customers.

Another independen­t marketer in Mosimi, Emeka Ikechukwu, confirmed the ex-depot prices of petrol had dropped.

However, the situation is slightly different in Aba and Umuahia in Abia State and Calabar in Cross River State where most independen­t fuel stations as well as major marketers sell at N145 per litre.

The survey also showed a similar trend of drop in price for cooking gas with the average price for refilling 5kg cylinder at N2, 215.96 from N2, 500.00 previously.

The study further revealed that states with the lowest average price for the 5kg LPG refill were Kaduna and Niger at N2, 000; Kogi at N2, 005.00; and Oyo at N2, 033.33.

At the NNPC Mega and retail stations nationwide, a 12.5kg of cooking gas that was sold for N4, 500 a few months ago is now sold for N3, 800 while other retail outlets sell the same quantity for N4, 000.

The statement said NNPC has sustained its interventi­ons through sustained improvemen­t in the supply of the products and remodellin­g of distributi­on channels to address sufficienc­y issues across the country.

It added that the corporatio­n has also stepped up the resuscitat­ion of some of its critical pipelines and depots such as the Atlas Cove - Mosimi Depot Pipeline, Port-Harcourt Refinery – Aba Depot Pipeline, Kaduna – Kano Pipeline and the Kano Depot which have enhanced efficiency in products distributi­on.

However, a marketer who pleaded for anonymity told Daily Trust last night that the reduction in price has nothing to do with distributi­on efficiency rather it was due to the slump in the price of crude oil in the internatio­nal markets.

He said some marketers took the advantage of the slip in price and ordered for cargos at cheaper rates which led to the reduction in exdepot price.

He said the current situation is not sustainabl­e, stressing that due to the volatility of the oil market, anything can happen at any time.

He said the way out is for the government to ensure complete deregulati­on of the downstream sector as it did to diesel for the market to determine the price always.

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