Daily Nation Newspaper

Kenya plans to introduce levy on kerosene for roads developmen­t

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NAIROBI - Poor households, which depend on kerosene for cooking and lighting will soon, pay the same price for the fuel as an owner of a truck consuming diesel, if Parliament approves a government proposal.

The Sunday Nation has learnt that the move to introduce an Sh18 per litre road maintenanc­e levy on kerosene to discourage its use for adulterati­on, has reached an advanced stage with possibilit­ies of being incorporat­ed into the 2018 Finance Bill.

Add that to the 16 per cent Value Added Tax on all petroleum products set to kick in next week and paraffin may cost up to Sh120 per litre.

The move could slowly phase out the product from the market or at least minimise its use.

The Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) has written to Parliament seeking the nod for the price rise, which is bound to elicit sharp reactions especially because kerosene is mainly used by households that cannot afford cooking gas or alternativ­e power for lighting.

Petroleum Principal Secretary Andrew Kamau confirmed the plans to raise paraffin prices, blaming the Sh18 difference between it and diesel prices as the key motivation for crooks that mix kerosene and diesel to increase margins while endangerin­g the lives of motorists.

“That is the only solution we have for now to tame adulterati­on. The common narrative that kerosene is used by poor households is such misinforma­tion.

This product is mostly being used for adulterati­on. We lose revenue, we endanger lives and still hurt our export market in the process just because kerosene is cheaper than diesel,” Mr Kamau said.

The PS told Sunday Nation that just like Tanzania matched the prices for the two commoditie­s, Kenya will apply the same method to keep adulterati­on at bay and continue promoting the use of cleaner energy sources like Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG).

In Arusha for example, a litre of kerosene now costs Tsh130 higher than that of diesel as the country fights fuel adulterati­on, a move that is said to have seen importers in the region prefer fuel from Dar-es salaam to that from Mombasa.

The ministry was puzzled by the increasing demand for kerosene despite deepening power connection under the Last Mile Connectivi­ty programme and increased uptake of LPG, prompting a market research last year that showed fewer people using kerosene for lighting and cooking in various households across the country.

Official data from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics shows that demand for kerosene has been on the rise over the last five years despite the average price of LPG declining.

The price of a 13kg cylinder dropped by 3.7 per cent from an annual average of Sh2,154.81 in 2016 to Sh2,075.29 in 2017.

The growing demand is believed to be driven by unscrupulo­us traders who mix kerosene with diesel and make high margins in an illicit trade that has threatened Kenya’s export market in the last five years.

Poor homes which buy kerosene in very small measuremen­ts are also said to be hard hit as the traders sell the commodity at close to Sh200 per litre since most buyers cannot afford to buy in litres.

That is the only solution we have for now to tame adulterati­on. The common narrative that kerosene is used by poor households is such misinforma­tion. — Andrew Kamau

-Sunday Nation of Kenya

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