The Guardian (Nigeria)

Labour seeks openness in determinin­g fuel price template

- From Collins Olayinka, Abuja

ORGANISED labour, yesterday, canvassed openness and public participat­ion in determinin­g petrol price template for the country, even as indication­s have emerged that a new price of petroleum products will emerge in March.

President of the Nigeria Labour Congress ( NLC), Ayuba Wabba, said the present pricing template for petroleum products was unilateral­ly determined by government’s agencies without recourse to the citizen.

The Guardian learnt that products being discharged now were imported in January and that new stock would begin to arrive the country in the first week of next month.

This might have been confirmed when the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n ( NNPC) said in a statement last week that there would not be price adjustment in February.

It, however, did not foreclose upward adjustment in March, even as prices of crude oil in the internatio­nal market had increased above $ 60 per barrel.

Speaking at the resumed negotiatio­n between labour and government on increase in the pump price of petrol and electricit­y tariffs in Abuja at the weekend, Wabba argued that the present pricing template, which is determined by the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency ( PPPRA), was not participat­ory and entirely determined by government.

“Government’s sole determinat­ion of the template is not appropriat­e. In arriving at the figures, Nigerians were not carried along. Labour thinks it is only appropriat­e for the people to be a part of the discussion­s that will lead to the determinat­ion of the pricing template.

“Labour recommends that government should allow the people to participat­e at a roundtable where all elements of the template are discussed and determined. That is the only way Nigerians will have faith in the process,” he said.

Wabba confirmed that the parties agreed that the issue of electricit­y tariff would be resolved through appropriat­e gas pricing and mass metering.

On the template for fixing the price, Wabba said efforts should be made to ensure that the current template served Nigerians instead of market forces.

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