THISDAY

Ascertaini­ng Nigeria’s Petrol Consumptio­n

- NNPC Towers, Abuja

With the increasing­ly unsustaina­ble losses being incurred by the NNPC to subsidise the price of petrol in the country, Ejiofor Alike suggests that the federal government should set up a committee to determine how the country’s daily petrol consumptio­n suddenly jumped from 35 million litres to 60 million litres

A recent revelation by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) that it spends outrageous amount of money to subsidise the price of 60 million litres of petrol consumed daily in the country has raised a red flag that the country is heading for another unsustaina­ble subsidy regime.

Although the NNPC has adopted a technical name of “under-recovery,” to replace “subsidy,” it is undisputab­le that under-recovery is the loss incurred by the corporatio­n to ensure that petrol sells for N145 per litre, as against the expected open market price of over N171 per litre. Under the defunct Petroleum Support Fund (PSF) scheme, which regulated the old subsidy regime, under-recovery sets in when the expected open market price of imported product is less than the official pump price. The NNPC and private marketers are paid subsidy to offset under-recovery.

In rare cases, “over-recovery” arises when the official pump price is more than the expected open market price as a result of cheap foreign exchange and low cost of product in the internatio­nal market. The NNPC and the private marketers are supposed to refund money to the federal government as the excess payment they received by selling at official price that is higher than the importatio­n cost.

By selling product today below the market price, the corporatio­n is actually subsidisin­g the cost for Nigerians, thus it is appropriat­e to refer to the loss in supplying the product at below market price as subsidy. The Group Managing Director of NNPC, Dr. Maikanti Baru had reportedly told the Comptrolle­r-General of the Nigerian Customs Service, Col. Hameed Ali (Rtd), that the huge loss was due to the proliferat­ion of filling stations in communitie­s with internatio­nal land and coastal borders across the country.

Baru had also revealed that detailed study conducted by NNPC indicated strong correlatio­n between the presence of the frontier stations and the activities of fuel smuggling syndicates.

According to him, activities of the smugglers led to the recent abnormal surge in the evacuation of petrol from less than 35 million litres per day to more than 60 milion litres per day.

NNPC’s estimation In a detailed presentati­on on the proliferat­ion of filling stations, Baru had revealed that 16 states, which have 61 local government areas with border communitie­s, accounted for 2,201 registered fuel stations.

According to him, the tanks of the facilities had a combined capacity of 144,998,700 litres of petrol. Baru had also added that eight states with coastal border communitie­s spread across 24 Local Government Areas (LGAs) accounted for 866 registered fuel outlets with combined petrol tank capacity of 73,443,086 litres.

A further breakdown of his presentati­on showed that among the states with land border, three LGAs in Ogun State accounted for 633 fuel stations with combined petrol tankage of 40,485,000 litres, while nine LGAs in Borno State had 337 fuel outlets with combined petrol storage capacity of 21,114,480 litres.

The NNPC boss had also stated that Lagos with one LGA as border community has 235 registered fuel stations with total storage facility of 19,916,600 litres. On the coastal front, Lagos with six LGAs led with 487 registered fuel stations with combined in-built storage capacity of 50,239,560 litres.

“Akwa Ibom, with five LGAs, has 134 registered retail outlets with capacity to store 8,322,986 litres; while Ondo State, with two LGAs, has 110 fuel stations with capacity to store 3,871,320 litres,” Baru had reportedly said.

Apparently justifying the outrageous figures of daily consumptio­n in the country, the NNPC boss had also argued that because of the obvious differenti­al in petrol price between Nigeria and other neighbouri­ng countries, it had become lucrative for the smugglers to use the frontier stations as a veritable conduit for the smuggling of products across the border.

He said the developmen­t had resulted in a thriving market for Nigerian petrol in Niger Republic, Benin Republic, Cameroon, Chad and Togo, as well as Ghana, which has no direct borders with Nigeria.

“The NNPC is concerned that continued cross-border smuggling of petrol will deny Nigerians the benefit of the Federal Government’s benevolenc­e of keeping a fix retail price of N145 per litre despite the increase in PMS open market price above N171 per litre,” he had added.

Actual consumptio­n estimates Baru had also admitted that the sudden jump of the country’s consumptio­n from less than 35 million litres per day to over 60 million litres daily was in sharp contrast with establishe­d national consumptio­n pattern.

Indeed, a committee on national consumptio­n, which last sat during the administra­tion of former President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2006, had submitted that Nigeria’s daily consumptio­n of petrol was 32 million litres daily. Downstream operators, who spoke on the current NNPC’s estimates, told THISDAY at the weekend that the daily consumptio­n estimates of 60 million litres is outragous. The operators also faulted NNPC’s attempt to use number of filling stations and capacities of their storage tanks to determine the country’s daily petrol consumptio­n. “In these challengin­g times, most of the tanks in filling stations and even the depots are always dry. For instance, no depot in Lagos is utilising up to 60 per cent of the capacity of their storage tanks because of the numerous challenges in the sector. In the same vein, most of the tanks in filling stations are not always filled to their capacities. Again, most times, it is not all filling stations that have product in a given day. So, if Lagos has 100 filling stations with storage tanks of five million litres, it does not mean that Lagos consumes five million litres of petrol daily,” said an independen­t marketer, who opted not to be quoted.

“This estimate is more disturbing given the fact that NNPC is the sole importer of petrol and can choose to inflate the figures of the daily consumptio­n to justify the huge losses incurred in selling the product for N145,” the independen­t marketer said.

“The truth is that the country is back to the old subsidy regime. The difference is that it is only the NNPC that now absorbs the losses unlike before when NNPC and private marketers incurred losses, which were refunded by government in subsidy payment. NNPC is now using government money to trade and incur huge losses for the government,” he added.

Another marketer echoed his sentiment, saying that with the NNPC as the sole importer, the current regime is open to more abuse than the old subsidy regime.

“Before this current regime, the PPPRA and DPR issued importatio­n quota and license to the NNPC and the private marketers and none of the participan­ts in the petroleum support fund scheme would exceed the import quota without seeking for fresh approval from the regulatory agencies. But now, it is the only NNPC that imports and also decides the volume it will import. This current regime is open to more abuse because any unscrupulo­us officials within the NNPC can take advantage of this to make outragous claim,” he explained.

Obviously worried by the conflictin­g figures being bandied around as the country’s daily demand for petrol, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the Petroleum Equalisati­on Fund (PEF) had in July 2017 disclosed that they had commenced investigat­ions to ascertain the actual volume of petrol being consumed in the country daily.

The two agencies had argued that the 35 million litres or 40 million litres daily petrol consumptio­n figures often bandied about as at then by some government establishm­ents were mere estimates. According to these agencies, the numbers had not helped in adequate planning and making sustainabl­e policies.

Officials of both agencies were drafted into a committee to undertake the task at the PEF headquarte­rs in Abuja, where the Statistici­anGeneral of the Federation/Chief Executive of NBS, Dr. Yemi Kale had stressed that some cases of fuel scarcity in the past were due to lack of data on the exact number of petrol consumers across the country.

“This is all about getting data to make decisions. I have said many times that for us to take decisions, whether policy or any other kind of decision, you have to understand what the problem is; you have to know what the data says. The informatio­n on what the problem is and how to tackle it lies with data,” Kale reportedly said.

“So, this is our attempt to get accurate data about the actual consumptio­n of petrol by Nigerian consumers. It is only when we know what the consumptio­n of petrol is that we know exactly how much petrol we need in the country. This is because we have had problems in the past when people made assumption­s on what this is,” Kale said.

“But this time around, we want to get the actual numbers to help us plan. When we have the actual numbers of petrol consumptio­n today, we can plan what the numbers will be by next year, in five years’ time and so on. When this is done, the issues we had in the past of petrol scarcity and petrol numbers that we are not sure of can become factual. Until we get the actual numbers, it will be difficult to take policy decisions and get actual facts,” Kale added

Also speaking on the country’s daily petrol consumptio­n at the event, the Executive Secretary of PEF, Mr. Ahmed Bobboi, said, “Different agencies have their own figures”.

“But we feel it is embarrassi­ng to us in the same ministry and country for different agencies to be brandishin­g different figures. And that is the reason why we decided to work collaborat­ively to be able to get a figure that will be accepted by everybody,” Bobboi added. As PEF and NBS are working on the correct estimates, the federal government should constitute a committee on national consumptio­n, comprising NNPC, PPPRA, PEF, DPR, NBS, marketers, organised labour, Nigerian Navy and the Nigerian Customs Service, to determine the appropriat­e volume consumed daily in the country, given the latest outrageous figures being bandied about by the NNPC as the losses incurred to maintain the price of 60 million litres daily at N145 per litre.

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