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Monday, June 14 2004

Vol 17 No.090

News

Editorial

Opinion

Labour

Politics

Sports

Features

Arts/Entertaiments

Business

  • Money/Market

  • Energy

  • Alaba Market

  • Energy


  • Fuel scarcity looms

    Fuel scarcity looms

    •Marketers halt fresh imports

    •NLC to monitor sales, supply

    FRANCIS AWOWOLE-BROWNE, SOPURUCHI ONWUKA, Lagos and Correspondent’s reports

    THE prevailing scarcity of petrol may worsen as the six major marketers that control 73 per cent of the market said they have run out of stock.

    The shortage is a fall-out of the three-day nation-wide strike called by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) to protest a recent, but now jettisoned, eight naira increase in petrol price.

    But the NLC warned that it will picket any marketer that hoards fuel to create artificial scarcity on account of price reduction.

    A survey of the market after the

    strike was called off last Friday showed that most of the stations owned by both the major marketers and their independent counterparts were still closed to customers.

    Sources close to the committee of major marketers that had been providing import support to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) told Daily Champion yesterday that the shut stations had presently run out of fuel.

    They could not specify when stocks would arrive, saying that the marketers have stopped importing own stocks and now rely on NNPC to provide them with suppliers at subsidised rates.

    The sources said the marketers decided to discontinue investing huge funds on product importation because the domestic market environment could no longer guarantee returns on their investments with the restoration of strict price regulation.

    "How do you invest in an environment when you are not making profit? It is not a wise investment decision," one of the marketers told Daily Champion on telephone.

    Another reason for the prevailing scarcity, Daily Champion gathered, is the precautionary measures taken by the marketers prior to the strike.

    A source said marketers stopped lifting products a few days before last Wednesday, the first day of the strike, to avoid the risk of having the volatile product arrive during the industrial action.

    He explained that it was dangerous to have tankers of petroleum products in the way or in the retail premises during protest, "especially when you don’t know what will happen and when the strike will be over."

    The fall-out, it is feared, could bring back the era of acute scarcity in the system with severe consequences on the economy.

    An NNPC top shot told Daily Champion yesterday that the corporation does not have the capacity to sustain fuel subsidy and satisfy internal demand at the same time.

    Group Managing Director of NNPC, Mr Funso Kupolokun, had at recent seminar said the corporation was sagging under the weight of huge fuel subsidy bills and called for liberalisation of the market in forms of product sourcing and pricing.

    An NNPC official (names withheld) further explained on telephone yesterday that looming withdrawal of the major marketers from importation of products would tend to ugly consequences in the market because, according to him, NNPC cannot meet market demands alone until the refineries are fully restored.

    He stated that expected return of the refineries may not entirely phase out importation because they are old and have depreciated in capacity over the years.

    The source added that the corporation was looking forward to expedited hearing on the substantive case over fuel price before the Federal High Court so as to take a definite decision on the market situation.

    NLC had led workers on strike beginning last Wednesday to protest rise in petroleum products prices after NNPC increased its supply rate to the marketers by N5 from N33.50 to N38.50.

    Government had gone to court to stop the strike but the court restrained all parties to the dispute to return to status quo ante pending the determination of the substantive case.

    While government was to initiate action to revert prices to old rates, the NLC was also ordered to halt a strike.

    Both NNPC and private operators in the downstream petroleum sector have been pressing for full market liberalistion in line with deregulation of the sector by government last October.

    Meanwhile, amid claims by some marketers that they have run out of stock, Deputy President of the NLC, Mr Joseph Akinlaja, told Daily Champion in Lagos, that the congress would begin to monitor situations as from today to ascertain the veracity or otherwise of the marketers’ claim.

    He said the Petroleum Tanker Drivers (PTD) unit of National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) would be used to verify the claims that the marketers had no fuel to be lifted, from the depots.

    The NLC suspended the nationwide strike after the Federal High Court Abuja had ordered the price slashed to the old rates.

    However, since the strike was called off, some of the filling stations have remained shut while a few others where the products are available, are selling above the official price, though they displayed the price tag of N41.50.

    Mr. Akinlaja said Labour and its allies would not accept any armtwisting from the marketers, saying the seven-day grace given for total compliance with the court order to revert to the old fuel prices, would be used to assess true compliance by the marketers.

    Said he: "Our tanker drivers will be on duty as from tomorrow (today) and they will know if there is fuel or not, but any marketer found loading the products, would have himself to blame for defying an order of the court.

    "Our monitoring team will be out too to see the situation at filling stations; we won’t take it lightly. If there is any disagreement on the cost of other things apart from pump prices, that is between the marketers and government.

    Several filling stations nation-wide were yet to reopen at the weekend after the suspended strike over higher fuel prices on Friday and agreed to settle for N41.50 per litre of petrol.

    The development, if it lingers, may spur an acute fuel scarcity even as price of petrol per litre in the circumstance at the weekend, hit N70 in Gombe.

    In Lagos, Kano, Maiduguri, Port Harcourt, Enugu and a few other major cities, Daily Champion checks showed that many filling stations were still shut.

    Enquiries by our correspondents showed that though many of the fuel retail outfit owners had received directives from the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) to adjust their pump meters to N41.50 from the past fortnight’s rates of between N50 - N53, "they are unwilling because of concerns of huge profit losses inherent in complying with the directive."

    Daily Champion gathered that some of the fuel marketers would prefer to shut their outlets, thereby creating a beneficial artificial scarcity of petroleum products, than sell at N41.50 "given that the overall input at acquiring the current fuel stock is above N41.50k".

    At Total filling station, Lafia, one of the few still open in the Nasarawa State capital, the dealer, Alhaji Ibrahim Shehu, said he would first finish selling his current stock at N52 per litre before reverting to any new price regime.

    The story was the same in Asaba, the Delta State capital, where many marketers failed to open shop or opened at night to sell for as high as N55 per litre.

    In Kaduna, many stations resorted to selling between the hours of 7.00 pm. to 8.00 pm, then close immediately.

    Price range within the period was N52 to N53 per litre.

    Several outlets in Lagos were yet to reopen, but those who did, had adjusted their prices to N41.50 per litre.

    However, fewer vehicles are on the roads, as in Kano, Maiduguri and Port Harcourt because most filling stations were still shut for business.

    In Gombe, while the product sells for nothing less than N70.00 per litre in the filling stations, the black marketers sell petrol at N500.00 and above for a four litre gallon.

    When Daily Champion went round town, it was discovered that most of the filling stations, especially those owned by the major marketers, were shut while sales was booming for the black marketers.

    The situation created a rise in transport fares within the state capital.

    � 2004 @ Champion Newspapers Limited (All Right Reserved).
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