Fuel queues sprung up in most filling stations across Lagos, Rivers, FCT and the rest of the country |
The
current scarcity of petrol in most parts of the country is expected to continue
till next week, petroleum marketers claim Monday.
Based
on Agency / The Punch reports:
The
pump price of the product had risen to N120 per litre in most filling stations
in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, the few stations that had petrol
in Lagos on Monday maintained the N87 per litre official price except in some
remote locations where the attendants charged N100.
The report continues:
In
order to eliminate the scarcity, the Federal Government has approved the
payment of the foreign exchange differential to the marketers of the product.
Marketers
said the supply promised by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) only
got to them over the weekend and that it might take a week for the product to
go round and cushioned the effect of the shortage being witnessed currently.
Product
loading began on a slow note on Monday morning at depots in Apapa, Lagos but
picked up later in the day, with one of our correspondents gathering that three
vessels were offloading the product at the Apapa Port.
One
of the marketers said, “Most of the vessels came in late on the weekend; but
what I can tell you now is that three vessels are offloading as we speak.
“Cushioning
the effect of the product shortage, which has resulted in queues in filling
stations across the country, will be very gradual. It may not happen as quickly
as Nigerians want it because for the major marketers, they have to receive the
product in turns.”
The
Executive Secretary, Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria, Mr. Obafemi
Olawore, said the NNPC had already supplied 58 million litres of petrol to
Lagos, with the major marketers getting 40 million litres, while the balance is
for Nipco and Aiteo.
“The
situation will ease up definitely; but what we want to tell Nigerians is that
they should desist from panic buying of petrol,” he said.
Meanwhile
Lagos and Ogun states experienced longer queues of desperate motorists at
filling stations, as only few stations opened for business on Monday.
The
queues worsened the traffic situation in most parts of the states, with large
number of commuters waiting for buses at various bus-stops.
Obafemi
said the lingering scarcity was caused by the inability of marketers to import
petrol into the country since February due to the non-payment of arrears of
subsidy claims amidst rising costs.
He
said the Federal Government had yet to fulfil its promise to pay the first
batch of marketers, adding that the marketers were not importing the product
again because they had not money, and the banks were not ready to give
additional loans when the ones earlier collected had not been repaid.
Petrol
stations in Abuja sold the product at N120 per litre on Monday as the scarcity
of the product worsened in the city, leaving hundreds of motorists stranded for
hours on long queues.
But
the Group Managing Director, NNPC, Dr. Joseph Dawha, described the rush for
fuel by motorists as panic buying, adding that the Federal Government had put
all that was necessary in place to ensure seamless supply of petrol
The
GMD, alongside the heads of the Pipelines and Product Marketing Company,
Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency and the Department of Petroleum
Resources, said although there was enough stock to keep the country wet till
April, the major challenge of non-payment of subsidy claims to the marketers
and the differentials in foreign exchange rates had been addressed.
Explaining
how subsidy claims by marketers and foreign exchange rates were inhibiting the
supply of fuel, the Executive Secretary, PPPRA, Farouk Ahmed, said the Minister
of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, had approved the payments for the foreign
exchange differentials.
Ahmed
said, “The PPMC has over 800,000 metric tonnes that arrived in the month of
March, which is over a billion litres in terms of daily consumption. Now, the
issue with the marketing companies has to do with LC (letters of credit)
opening by the commercial banks. They had issues concerning their payments,
which has been addressed, but the minister and banks have started to open their
LCs.
“But with regards to the
foreign exchange differentials and the interest rates, which they were
agitating for, the minister has already approved payments for the foreign
exchange differentials and interest rate charges and the DMO has been told to
come up with the final figure. Last week Thursday, we issued a batch of about
17 marketers to the Finance minister for payment and we are still verifying the
rest.”
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