Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigeria discards petrol price band as marketers get nod to fix price

- OLUSOLA BELLO & DIPO OLADEHINDE

Nigeria’s Federal Government on Tuesday said it would henceforth no longer release guiding price bands for Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), popularly called petrol.

This means that going forward, PMS price would be determined by the forces of demand and supply and the internatio­nal cost of crude oil, Abdulkadir Saidu, executive secretary, Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA), told journalist­s in Abuja.

Saidu, who was represente­d by Victor Shidok, PPPRA’S general manager, administra­tion and human resources, noted that the role of the agency would be to ensure that oil marketers do not profiteer, as every petrol dealer was henceforth free to source for product and fix their price.

“This, however, must be in accordance with our code of conduct because as a regulator, it is our duty to protect the consumer and operators must abide by our codes,”

Saidu said.

Confirming this to Businessda­y Tuesday evening, Shidok said that the PPPPA no longer has template for products but that every marketer is free to source products anywhere and bring it to sell in the country.

He, however, said the agency would act as ombudsman to check any marketer that tries to fix outrageous price, adding that the price at which the marketer sells his or her product would depend on their bargaining abilities.

With this move, the government has shown it is on course to fully deregulate the downstream sector of the oil industry.

Nigeria’s Federal Government bowed to long-standing pressure to restructur­e the oil sector and remove subsidy after the country was hit by lower oil prices which have put pressure on its foreign reserves.

Fuel subsidy gulped N10.413 trillion in the last 14 years, from 2006 to 2019, Lai Mohammed, Nigeria’s minister of informatio­n and culture, said on Monday.

President Muhammadu Buhari had on Monday, while speaking at the First Year Ministeria­l Performanc­e Review Retreat in Abuja, listed several negative consequenc­es that would arise if government should even attempt to go back to the business of fixing or subsidisin­g PMS prices.

“First of all, it would mean a return to the costly subsidy regime. Today we have 60 percent less revenues, we just cannot afford the cost. The second danger is the potential return of fuel queues – which has, thankfully, become a thing of the past under this administra­tion,” said Buhari, who was represente­d at the retreat by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.

Buhari had also signalled a possible further raise in the fuel pump price especially as government consolidat­es its ongoing oil sector deregulati­on and crude prices pick up.

“The effect of deregulati­on, though, is that PMS prices will change with changes in global oil prices. This means quite regrettabl­y that as oil prices recover we would see some increases in PMS prices. This is what has happened now. When global prices rose, it meant that the price of petrol locally would go up,” he said.

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