Nigeria may be heading for another round
of fuel scarcity as a result of the failure of the Petroleum Products
Pricing Regulatory Agency to release the import allocation for the first
quarter of the year to oil marketing and trading companies.
It was also learnt that nationwide fuel
supply was being threatened by the inability of the Federal Government
to pay the oil marketers over N220bn outstanding fuel subsidy claims and
accumulated interest/foreign exchange for 2013.
Specifically, Major Oil Marketers
Association of Nigeria, comprising Oando, Total, Forte Oil, MRS, Mobil
and Conoil, said they had yet to receive over N100bn main subsidy claims
and N20bn accumulated interest/foreign exchange for fuel imported in
the third and fourth quarters of last year.
It was also learnt that the Federal
Government still owed the independent marketers under the aegis of the
Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association of Nigeria and others
over N100bn subsidy claims for 2013.
The delay by the PPPRA to release the
first quarter 2014 import allocation, according to the marketers, is
already putting pressure on the available fuel in stock and product
depots owned by the major marketers are expected to dry up in five days’
time.
Similarly, MOMAN has faulted claims by
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation that it has enough products
to keep the country wet for a reasonable period of time.
The Executive Secretary, MOMAN, Mr.
Obafemi Olawore, told one of our correspondents on Monday that the
Federal Government, through the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, had not
release the import allocation for the first quarter of the year.
Olawore, who addressed a press
conference in Lagos on Monday, said the government owed the major
marketers about N120bn, and also confirmed that no independent marketer
had received subsidy claims for last year, which independent findings
revealed was over N100bn.
He also decried the delay in the import
allocation for the first quarter of the year, adding that fuel scarcity
was already imminent as a result of the development.
Olawore explained that MOMAN members
currently had 45,000 metric tonnes of petrol, or about 60 million
litres, which could only last for five days starting from yesterday
(Monday).
“Up till this moment that I speak with
you, they have yet to give us allocation, except if they are planning to
do so in the evening (of Monday),” he said.
Asked of what the outcome would be in
terms of petroleum supply across the country if the situation should
persist beyond Monday, Olawore said, “There may be some tightness in
supply.
“This means that the quantity that is
available to the market will be reducing little by little. I am not
going to say that if they don’t give us allocation, queues will
reappear; no, what I am saying is that what we have will diminish little
by little until it finishes”
The MOMAN executive secretary stated
that the body had appealed to the PPPRA and the requisite bodies in the
ministry to avert whatever might plunge the country into another round
of fuel scarcity.
He said, “Once this happens, there will
be problem. But we are appealing to them to do what is right so that
there won’t be any problem.”
Olawore stressed that two major
marketers had already run out of fuel stock at their respective depots;
adding that the remaining four members only had stocks that would last
for five days if not replenished immediately.
“It therefore means that there will be
fuel scarcity in the country from Friday this week if the major
marketers’ supply is not replenished because we account for 60 per cent
of the national product demand across the country,” he said.
Reacting to the claims by the NNPC that there was product sufficiency, Olawore said such statements were doubtful.
He, however, admitted that he did not
know what the NNPC had on the high sea, but stated that the
corporation’s stock on land would not be able to service the entire
country adequately.
Olawore said, “Point number one; if the
NNPC says they have enough, I don’t have any access to their
information. So, it may be right or wrong. But what I have access to is
the product that is in my tank.
“As far as I am concerned, they are not
even bringing enough to us in Apapa. So, it is not a matter of having
enough; although I don’t have access to what they (NNPC) have on the
high sea, but on the land, they don’t have enough.”
Calls to the mobile telephone lines of
the spokespersons for the NNPC, Dr. Omar Ibrahim, and his PPPRA
counterpart, Mr. Lanre Oladela, were not answered, neither were text
messages sent to the lines replied.
However, while reacting to the
development, an official of the PPPRA told our correspondent that there
was no cause for alarm, and stressed that the marketers were only trying
to “stampede the government.”
The official, who pleaded not to be
named because he was not authorised to speak on the subject said, “This
matter is not what only the PPPRA should handle.
“As I speak with you, senior officials
of the government, including the Finance and Petroleum ministers are
meeting with the heads of the concerned agencies to address the issue.
So, there is no cause for alarm.”
The official also supported claims by the NNPC that products in the corporation’s stock were enough to keep the country wet.
The source said, “If there was no fuel
scarcity during the Yuletide, is it now that there isn’t much rush that
there will be scarcity?”
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