Marketers seek N165 petrol price, FG says no
Petroleum product marketers have demanded an upward review in the pump price of the Premium Motor Spirit (also known as petrol).
This, they said, would make importation of the product profitable.
They said the free fall of the naira
against the dollar had made it unprofitable for them to import petrol
and sell at the current rate of N145 per litre.
But the Federal Government said there was no immediate plan to raise the pricce of petrol.
This is coming nearly four months after
the government increased petrol prices from N86 and N86.5 per litre to
between N135 and N145 per litre.
Some marketers had early last month said
Nigerians should prepare for another increase in petrol prices due to
the continued scarcity of foreign exchange to finance the importation of
the product.
According to a source close to the Major
Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria, N165 is the pump price that will
cover the cost of forex required for fuel importation.
The Petroleum Products Pricing
Regulatory Agency had, in its template based on 30 days’ moving average
Platts posted price for April 23 – May 23, 2016, put the landing cost
and total cost of petrol at N122.03 and N140.40 per litre, respectively.
The costs of the product and freight,
which are the elements mostly affected by the exchange rate, were put at
$534 per metric tonne of petrol or N111.30 per litre, using an exchange
rate of N280/dollar.
Using an exchange rate of N314.20/dollar
at the interbank market on Monday, according to FMDQ OTC Securities
Exchange, the cost of product plus freight was N125.12 and the total
cost of petrol stood at N151.93 per litre.
With an exchange rate of N350/dollar,
the cost of the product plus freight stood at N139.37; while the total
cost amounted to N167.15 per litre.
The naira plunged to all-time low of 420/dollar on the black market last month.
An official of one of the marketers’
associations, who spoke on condition of anonymity to one of our
correspondents, said, “Let the government do the needful. We have
already said it before that the price is not sustainable. When they
fixed that price, dollar was N280 – N285; now the dollar is almost N400
and they want us to bring in products and sell at N145. It is not
possible.
“But right now, most of us are getting
the product from the NNPC; that is why you still see that there is
product everywhere. It is an indirect case of subsidy. It means the
government is subsidising it through the NNPC and we are buying at local
price. Had it been that we were the ones that sourced the foreign
exchange, we can’t sell it at N145.”
The Head of Energy Research, Ecobank
Capital, Mr. Dolapo Oni, noted that the current template was adopted
when the dollar was about N315 in the parallel market and the naira had
not been floated then.
He said then the CBN was still selling
at about N220 or so and marketers were augmenting what they got from the
CBN with the parallel market supply, adding, “Thus, a range of N275 to
N295 was used to arrive at the template price range of N135 to N145.
“The official market is N310 this
(Monday) morning while the parallel market is N422. This gives a range
of between N151 and N200. I think they’ll probably adopt a range of N330
to N370 (per dollar) so we have a fuel price range of N160 to N170.
Oni added, “The best solution, in my
view, however, will be to take the last plunge and just remove cap on
prices. It is probably the best in this market. Let competition regulate
prices.”
Another source, who is an official of
one of the marketing companies in Lagos, said, “The position of the
marketers is that if the guaranteed exchange rate of N285 to a dollar
will not be met, selling at that N145 is not profitable. And that is the
more reason most of the chief executives or finance directors are still
going cap in hand to the NNPC to facilitate the forex they promised
through international oil companies instead of going to the black
market.
“With the current situation in the
country, I don’t see the government increasing the pump price of petrol,
although it is not profitable to marketers. It would have been very
easy if forex is available to marketers at N285/dollar.”
On marketers’ reliance on the NNPC for
petrol, the source said, “The advantage in depending on the
Officials from the Federal Ministry of
Petroleum Resources and the PPPRA stated that it was difficult for
marketers to buy forex at over N350/dollar and still sell the PMS at
N145 per litre.
“There must be some form of subsidy
somewhere, either from where they are getting the product or from the
major importer of the PMS into Nigeria, because you cannot buy a dollar
at N350 and still sell petrol at N145 if you want to remain in
business,” a PPPRA official, who spoke to one of our correspondents in
confidence, said.
But the Minister of State for Petroleum
Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, and the Group Managing Director of the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Dr. Maikanti Baru, said there
was no immediate plan to increase the pump price of petrol.
Some former NNPC GMDs had last week said
that due to the dollar scarcity and the falling naira, it would be
unrealistic to expect the petrol price to remain the same.
However, Kachikwu and Baru, who met with
President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja on Monday,
said there would be no increase in the price of petrol.
Baru, when approached by reporters, declined to speak at length, referring journalists to the PPPRA.
Asked if there would be a review of the price, he said, “There is nothing like that.”
When Kachikwu was approached for
comment, he revealed that there was no memo before the Federal
Government asking for a review of the price.
Ex-NNPC GMDs had made the suggestion of
fuel hike at a one-day meeting called by Baru, where they argued that
the ýcurrent price cap of N145 per litre is not in line with the
liberalisation policy especially with the foreign exchange rate and
other price determining components such as crude cost, Nigerian Ports
Authority charges, among others, remaining uncapped.
In a related development, the Chairman,
Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Sabi Abdullahi, on
Monday asked Nigerians to hold former GMDs of the NNPC responsible for
the non-functional state of the country’s refineries and the
non-profitability of the NNPC.
Sabi, who stated that he was not making
his submission as the spokesman for the Senate but as the Senator
representing Niger-North Senatorial District, in a chat with journalists
in his office, said he was very disappointed with the recent comments
credited to the ex-GMDs on fuel price.
He said, “As we have all known,
refineries that we have in Nigeria have not been functional because if
they had been functional and if that institution had been up and doing
in tandem with its peers in other countries that have similar resources,
for crying out loud, all of these former GMDs, can they be said to be
free of blame on how we got here? Can they?
The Senator lamented that the refineries
had failed to perform maximally under the military rule and the 16
years of Peoples Democratic Party’s administration.
Abdullahi said, “I think on this note,
let me make it very clear that all of them that are speaking, they do
not have the moral standpoint to even advise us on what to do because
they had a hand in it (the problem) and I cannot see how you can solve a
problem under the same condition that created it
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