The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Govt secures 100m litres fuel, supplies improve

- Felex Share Senior Reporter

THE fuel supply situation in the country has stabilised after local petroleum giant — Sakunda Holdings — and its partners, last week provided Government with 100 million litres of fuel, which will only be paid for after 12 months.

This comes amid revelation­s that to ensure adequate fuel supplies over the next 18 months, Government and Sakunda are finalising a deal that will see the latter supplying the country with 1,6 billion litres of fuel.

Independen­t Petroleum Group (IPG), Glencore, Engen and Total have also chipped-in and are working on various structures with the Government.

Energy and Power Developmen­t Minister Dr Joram Gumbo yesterday said the improvemen­t in fuel supplies came after the interventi­on of major companies.

“The fuel situation is stabilisin­g and we hope that we continue on this path,” he said.

“As Government, we have put in place some mitigatory measures and these mainly include a facility we are concluding with Sakunda and its partner Trafigura. The deal is already in motion and it will stand for the next 12 to 18 months. The draw down began last week and we were given 100 million litres upfront and it is one of the facilities that have resulted in the stabilisat­ion being witnessed. We will be getting 50 million litres of fuel a week from that deal.”

“To cover the gap left by Sakunda, there is the IPG deal, which became operationa­l end of last week where we will be getting about 20 million litres per month . There are also other players, which are giving us their facilities for example Engen and Total have also come up with their facilities. The market is liberal and we urge those with similar facilities to come forward and present them to us. We welcome them.”

A survey by The Herald yesterday showed that queues had disappeare­d at most service

stations and fuel was available.

Experts yesterday said structures like the one sealed with Sakunda will give Government ample time to rebuild its export receivable­s over the next 18 months and cover the loans.

They said the interventi­on by Trafigura also showed the confidence the internatio­nal community had in Zimbabwe in terms of debt repayment.

According to documents in our possession, Government will only pay for the 100 million litres provided by Sakunda and Trafigura upfront after a year.

When its starts repaying the loan, Government will be parting with $5 million a week and this means the repayment period will stretch for 20 weeks.

Documents show that on the 1,6 billion litres to be supplied over 18 months, Government will avail foreign currency to Trafigura for 50 percent of what the internatio­nal company would have sold into the market.

The balance will be paid after the consumptio­n period.

On all the structures, Sakunda will be servicing its own customers as agreed to with Government and allows other oil marketing companies to come in.

Dr Gumbo appealed to the public not to hoard fuel.

“My appeal is for the people to let us down buy haording, panic buying and charging high prices,” he said.

“Prices have remained the same and no one should charge in US dollars. We are grateful for the interventi­on that has come from fuel companies. It is something that has taken away pressure from Government and provided relief to our people, the industry, mining, agricultur­e and other users of this precious liquid.”

Win-win situation

Meanwhile, Secretary for Finance and Economic Developmen­t Mr George Guvamatang­a yesterday apologised for the manner in which they effected the Intermedia­ted Money Transfer Tax of 2 percent but insisted that the principle behind it was noble, writes our correspond­ent Nyemudzai Kakore.

Mr Guvamatang­a said there was room for the tax to be refined going forward if suggestion­s were proffered to create a win-win situation for everyone. He said this while answering questions to the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Budget, Finance and Economic Developmen­t, yesterday.

He said the tax was necessary as it covered the informal sector which was previsioul­y untaxed.

“Hindsight is always a good teacher and we actually believe that we could have managed it differentl­y, so I will offer my apologies for not having engaged initially. We did not anticipate the reaction that we got from the 2 percent tax which was our oversight on the matter. We should have handled it better with every stakeholde­r. In future we will do it differentl­y,” he said.

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