WAITING: Queue for kerosene at a NNPC Mega Filling Station in Yelwa, Bauchi State, yesterday. |
The
Federal Government, weekend, hiked the price of Household Kerosene (HHK)
to ₦83 per litre from ₦50 per litre, thereby, officially ending subsidy on the
product.
Vanguard
report continues:
The
Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency, PPPRA , in its product pricing
template released, weekend, however, stated that the ₦83 per litre price
applies only to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), meaning
that other petrol stations and dealers can sell higher than the stipulated
amount.
Curiously,
the hike in the price of kerosene came at a time when the price of crude oil
had dropped to record low, with the price of petroleum products, such as
kerosene, fuel and diesel, among others, dropping significantly in a number of
countries, like the United States.
This
also brings to question, the recent reduction in the price of Premium Motor
Spirit announced by the Federal Government and which commenced at the beginning
of the year.
Again,
the PPPRA’s template also showed that at ₦83 per litre, the Federal Government
is making a gain of ₦10.72 for every litre, as it puts the Expected Open Market
Price, which is the Landing Cost plus Total Margins at ₦72.28 per litre. The
expected open market price is the prevailing open market rate for the product
in Nigeria, after taking certain costs into consideration.
Giving
a breakdown of the price, the PPPRA template put the Landing Cost of the
product at ₦57.98 per litre, while the total margin due for middlemen was put
at ₦14.30.
Further
breakdown of the Total Margins showed that retailers’ margin was put at ₦5 per
litre; Transporters, ₦3.05 per litre; Dealers, ₦1.95 per litre; Bridging fund, ₦5.85
per litre; Marine Transport Average, ₦0.15 and Admin Charges, ₦0.15.
The
PPPRA further put official ex-depot price, which is the price depot owners
would sell at marketers, at ₦68.70 per litre, official ex-depot price for
collection, ₦73 per litre while ex-coastal price is ₦68.02 per litre.
Late
December, the PPPRA had on behalf of the Federal Government announced that
effective January 1, 2016, Premium Motor Spirit, otherwise known as petrol,
would be sold at N86 per litre by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation
(NNPC) retail stations, while other oil marketers would sell at ₦86.50 per litre.
Executive
Secretary of the PPPRA, Mr. Farouk Ahmed, who made the announcement, said the
reduction in the price of the commodity was due to an implementation of the
revised components of the Petroleum Products Pricing Template for PMS and
household kerosene.
According
to him, the revised template, which would be reviewed on quarterly basis, is
geared towards ensuring an efficient and market-driven price that would reflect
current realities.
He
said: “Since 2007, while crude oil price had been moving up and down, the
template remained the same. This had made it necessary for us to introduce a
mechanism whereby the template would be sensitive to the price of crude oil.
“However, the template is
not static, as there would be a quarterly review and if there is any major
shift, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources would be expected to call
for a review, either upward or downward, depending on the market condition.”
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