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How NNPC contributes to rise in kerosene price in Nigeria

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How NNPC contribute to rise in kerosene price in Nigeria

The hope of having the price of kerosene come down sooner has been dashed with the insistence by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) that it has foreclosed any plan of importing the product into the country in the nearest future.

This is contained in the NNPC report for the third quarter of 2016 on financial and operational activities, made available to Ripples Nigeria on Sunday.

According to the report, importation of kerosene has been left for the private sector in line with the directive by government to gradually eliminate subsidy on the product, which was gulping about $1bn annually.

“The NNPC has not directly imported kerosene into Nigeria since June 2016, but has been supporting marketers with the necessary logistics to have the product in parts of the country at affordable prices,” the report stated.

It stated that the last time the corporation imported kerosene into Nigeria under the direct-sale direct-purchase/offshore processing agreement (DSDPA) was in May 2016.

According to the report, “In the months of June, July and August of this year, the NNPC did not get a single litre of DPK under the DSDP/OPA. This is in line with the February announcement by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, replacing the crude swap arrangement with (DSDPA) framework, which took off in April 2016.”

Read also: Nigeria’s recovery plan in jeopardy as OPEC dispute forces oil prices down

This means Nigeria was able to save about $336.4million between April and July 2016.

But despite the claim, NNPC disclosed that for June, July and August, it supplied 1.18 billion, 798.33 million and 901.35 million litres of Premium Motor Spirit (fuel), via its various depots but none for kerosene.

Analysts gave the development as the main reason for the sudden scarcity of Kerosene, both for domestic use and industrial purposes, especially in the aviation sector.

The price of a litre of the product has been varying from one part of the country to the other, a situation that has seen a litre selling for N250 in Lagos and Abuja and N300 in other states.

By Emma Eke….

 

 

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0 Comments

  1. JOHNSON PETER

    November 14, 2016 at 9:35 am

    They should subsidise kerosene alone. The price is too high . most people have taken resort to using of charcoal pots and firewood to cook food at homes.
    Kerosene should not be expensive at all .

    • Amarachi Okoye

      November 16, 2016 at 6:42 am

      My brother this suffing is too much government should do something

  2. yanju omotodun

    November 14, 2016 at 9:56 am

    Let them allow more import of kerosene into the country, this will further reduce the price and make it available to buy at anytime. People for queue and sleeping in nnpc mega stations to get kerosene at cheaper prices.

  3. Amaka Okoro

    November 16, 2016 at 6:54 am

    The price of kerosene is affecting many of us at home we don’t use stove again but firewood or chalcoal pots our government should do something to bring the price down

  4. Nonso Ezeugo

    November 16, 2016 at 7:01 am

    What country we are into our so called government are the cause of this kerosene high price that is affecting us because they are comfortable in there home and left the people who put them in power to suffer. Bad government bad rubbish

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