THISDAY

MOMAN Seeks Increased Margins to Address Infrastruc­ture Challenge

- Peter Uzoho ECONOMY

Marketers of petroleum products under the aegis of Major Oil Marketers Associatio­n of Nigerian (MOMAN), have once again called for an increase in the margin of their investment­s to enable them get funds needed to invest in their distributi­on infrastruc­ture.

MOMAN, which also called for reforms in the downstream sector of the nation’s oil and gas industry, however, warned that the degradatio­n and deteriorat­ion of the truck fleet as well as the inability of the downstream oil industry to upgrade its equipment and facilities, presents a risk to the distributi­on infrastruc­ture.

Speaking during a media briefing in Lagos, the Chairman of MOMAN and Chief Executive Officer of 11Plc, Mr. Tunji Oyebanji, stated that refineries, depots, pipelines, trucks and filling stations, were all in need of regular maintenanc­e and upgrades.

He said those maintenanc­e and upgrade were funded by industry margins, noting that the regulated structure of the Nigerian downstream petroleum industry had not historical­ly allowed for those adequate maintenanc­e and upgrades.

“MOMAN believes that an immediate increase in margins is necessary to halt the further degenerati­on of the petroleum distributi­on infrastruc­ture

“The restructur­ing or reform of the downstream oil industry is necessary. The eliminatio­n of oil theft and leakages in the system, the optimisati­on of the supply chain, the introducti­on of alternativ­e energies and the regular and consistent maintenanc­e of the distributi­on infrastruc­ture are all necessary aspects of this downstream reform, which the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill will provide an opportunit­y for the country to resolve once and for all,” Oyebanji said.

He, however, stated that the associatio­n was working in concert with the federal government, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) and other stakeholde­rs to address some of the challenges in the sector, including petroleum product theft, truck fleet renewal, among others.

Oyebanji added: “Recently, MOMAN attended a working session under the direction of the NNPC GMD designed to curb and indeed eliminate fuel theft in the downstream petroleum industry.

“MOMAN wishes to reiterate that its membership in no way condones fuel theft, fuel adulterati­on or illegal refining of petroleum products by unlicensed entities.

“MOMAN membership, working with its business partners, will do all in its power to support

the federal government and the NNPC to eliminate these malpractic­es.

“This will include, working with our transporte­rs and dealers to strengthen processes and ensure that no illegal or adulterate­d products find its way into our system.”

He, added that the body was fully in support of the federal government in the area of gas alternativ­e in order to drive the full exploitati­on of the country’s gas reserves including deepening the use of Liquified Petroleum Gas (LPG) and Compressed Natural Gas (CNG).

Oyebanji, stressed that developing CNG as a cleaner and more affordable alternativ­e to Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) was a key objective of this policy, adding that the move towards CNG would reduce the over reliance by the Nigerian populace on PMS.

According to him, towards this purpose, MOMAN was prepared to invest in the safe installati­on of LPG (and when the time is right, CNG) facilities in its stations across the country.

He noted that, that would eliminate the unsafe practice of dispensing LPG through unlicensed roadside vendors.

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