Car with smoky exhaust fumes. Image credit: gas2.org |
Nigeria's state-run oil
company will keep buying cheaper, lower-quality gasoline for now because the
government has yet to circulate new rules forcing a switch by July to cleaner
fuels with less sulphur content, trading sources said on Tuesday.
Reuters
report continues:
Nigeria,
an oil producer that relies on imports of refined fuels, had said it would
raise standards for gasoline and other fuels imports from July 1, a move backed
by the U.N. Environment Programme which has pushed for using cleaner fuel in
the region.
Large
contracts swapping Nigerian crude for refined products signed in recent days
between state-run Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) and major traders
offered premiums of as much as US$25 a tonne for cleaner fuels with less
sulphur, traders said.
With
the government yet to issue rules that specify new fuel standards, traders said
NNPC was likely to pick the cheaper fuel grades with more sulphur after the
July deadline has passed.
The
lack of government guidance casts doubt on plans to import cleaner fuel for the
rest of the year as NNPC was under no obligation to buy the more expensive
gasoline, the trading sources said.
"They
will have to issue circulars and new specification sheets," one importer
said, adding none had yet been sent out.
NNPC
could not immediately be reached for comment.
While
disappointing health and environment campaigners, it marks a reprieve for
refineries, particularly in Europe, which still export to the region fuel that
contains levels of sulphur that has been banned in the European Union and
United States.
Sulphur
is a major air pollutant particularly in cities.
Traders
said contracts signed last week by NNPC with 10 groups of trade houses and
local companies included options for three different grades of fuel, one with a
sulphur content at Nigeria's current maximum allowed level of 1,000 parts per
million (ppm), one at 500 ppm and one at 150 ppm, the limit that had been
promised by the Environment Ministry.
GOVERNMENT
CHOICE
Those
close to the discussions told Reuters NNPC had taken 1,000 ppm as a baseline,
and would have to pay an extra US$1.50-US$2 a tonne for 500 ppm and up to US$25
a tonne more for 150 ppm.
The
1,000 ppm grade pricing was based around a small premium or small discount to
Platts pricing assessments of 1,000 ppm barges cif Lagos, with pricing varying
between contracts.
"It
will be government that determines" which grade NNPC purchases, one trader
said.
When
the government announced plans for new fuel standards, industry experts had
questioned whether cash-strapped NNPC could afford better quality fuels.
Nigeria, like other oil producers, has been hit by a fall in crude prices since
2014.
Nigeria's
Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON), the body responsible for setting
requirements for imported goods, said in May that new quality rules would come
into force on July 1.
But
local importers and international traders said another government body - the
Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) - had not issued a list of revised
specifications, so importers could stick with existing standards for now.
They
said that, given July 1 was little more than a month away, there was not enough
lead time for traders to ship the fuel by the deadline.
The DPR did not respond to
a request for comment.
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