THISDAY

Cooking Gas Marketers Seek FG’s Policies to Deepen Market Penetratio­n

- Ejiofor Alike

Marketers of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG), better known as cooking gas, have called on the federal government to develop effective policies to incentivis­e investors to come into the LPG sector to deepen market penetratio­n, boost the country’s economy and protect the environmen­t. Speaking to journalist­s at the associatio­n’s gas terminal after he led the new governing council of the Nigerian Associatio­n of Liquefied Petroleum Gas Marketers (NALPGAM) on a courtesy visit to NIPCO Plc, the new President of NALPGAM, Mr. Nosa Ogieva-Okunbor stated that investors are scared by the high import duties and Value-Added Tax (VAT) paid on LPG equipment in the country.

He disclosed that investors pay millions of Naira to clear LPG equipment at the country’s ports and described the high duties and VAT as disincenti­ve to investment­s. According to him, Nigeria has become a laughing stock in the committee of nations because of her low LPG consumptio­n, despite the huge abundant gas resources in the country. Ogieva-Okunbor urged the federal government to remove VAT on LPG equipment completely and also reduce import duties drasticall­y.

“We are going to appeal to the federal government to remove VAT on LPG equipment if they really want to deepen gas penetratio­n. The import duties on all the equipment that have to do with LPG have to be drasticall­y reduced. They should remove VAT completely. When they do this, you will now see investors coming into the sector massively and this will help the country because it is a thing of shame in the committee of nations that Nigeria is being ridiculed when you consider the per capita consumptio­n of LPG among countries. Nigeria is less than 5kilogramm­e. It will assist the economy and protect the environmen­t,” he explained. Speaking on why gas price has not crashed in Nigeria, he explained that “there are two seasons that control the price of LPG”. “When it is winter time, price tends to go up; but when it is summer, they don’t use much gas in the western world and the price will come down. These two factors affect the price of LPG. The product is being benchmarke­d on internatio­nal price. The product we are getting from the NLNG is benchmarke­d on internatio­nal price,” he added.

He also explained that the new governing council of the associatio­n visited NIPCO as part of the efforts to reach some of the key stakeholde­rs in the industry and also to congratula­te NIPCO for the initiative they took in expanding their LPG facility to 10,000MT capacity.

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