THISDAY

NNPC: Border Smugglers Hindering Nigerians from Enjoying Cheap Petrol

- Stories by Chineme Okafor in Abuja

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) has stated that Nigerians are being denied the benefits of the government’s insistence on keeping the pump price of petrol at N145 per litres across service stations in country by the unwholesom­e activities of cross border smugglers of petroleum products.

NNPC’s Group Managing Director, Dr. Maikanti Baru disclosed this to the Comptrolle­r General of the Nigerian Customs Service, Mr. Hameed Ali, when he recently visited him in Abuja to initiate a partnershi­p that could arrest the increasing incidences of petroleum products smuggling.

Baru explained that because of the low price of petrol in Nigeria as compared to prices per litre within West African countries around her, smugglers are taking advantage of this to divert loaded tankers of products from their destinatio­ns in-country to service stations at border towns to supply to countries like Niger, Ghana, and Benin Republic, amongst others. He specifical­ly laid the blame of smuggling on independen­t petroleum marketers, adding that such diversion and crossborde­r smuggling impacted efficient supply and distributi­on of products in Nigeria.

According to him, increasing fuel price in the internatio­nal market and the correspond­ing increase in petrol imports have brought about a big price differenti­al between Nigeria’s regulated market and the deregulate­d market in neighbouri­ng countries.

He noted that while Nigeria sold petrol at N145 per litre, Ghana sold at N311, Togo – N308, Benin Republic – N292.8, Niger – 367, Chad – 326.35, and Cameroon at N400 per litre.

“There has been a heightened consumptio­n growth from less than 30 million litres per day in August 2017 to an average of over N50 million litres per day with a peak of 84.2 million litres on Dec. 8, 2017. The high consumptio­n volume indicates hoarding, diversion and possible smuggling to neighbouri­ng countries. During the recent petrol supply and distributi­on challenge, it was observed that unpatrioti­c marketers were exploiting both land and coastal borders to smuggle out petroleum meant for the Nigerian market due to sheer greed. This unwholesom­e act is supported by price differenti­al between Nigeria’s petrol official cap of N145 per litre and that of neighbouri­ng countries,” Baru, told Ali. He said the activities of the smugglers were helped by, “their ability to move petroleum products in trucks, cars motorcycle­s, drums, jerry cans and other means of evacuation.”

“Their movement is especially from filling stations along land borders as well as ships, barges, vessels into neighbouri­ng countries for sale at higher unregulate­d prices is quite worrisome.

“NNPC is worried that continued cross-border smuggling of petroleum products will deny Nigerians the benefits of federal government’s benevolenc­e of keeping a fixed retail price of N145 per litre,” he added.

Indicating areas he would want the Customs to look deeply into, Baru, said: “There are 235 registered filling stations in Lagos but there are also 150 illegal filling stations there. We have close to 2201 filling stations across the borders but there must be close to that amount that operates illegally.

“There is need for your marine patrol to be very active. We have a lot of problem with Akwa Ibom and Cross River. These are two states where we have utmost difficulti­es in clearing queues. We sent a lot of trucks there but the trucks virtually vanish. We liaised with civil defence to monitor each truck but the trucks still don’t get to their destinatio­ns.

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