The Federal Government yesterday moved to enforce the regulated pump
price of petrol at N87 per litre days after a biting scarcity,
occasioned by the disruption of the supply system, forced price to rise
as much as N500 per litre. The Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR),
in a statement, warned filling stations against selling above the
official pump price or risk being shut down.
The DPR’s position came a
day after a deal by fuel marketers and the Federal Government led to
the restoration of lifting the commodity, leading to the easing of the
fuel short age that worsened in the last two weeks. However, a former
Governor of Abia State, Dr. Orji Uzor Kalu, has considered the deal
between the marketers and government as a short-term solution to the
frequent fuel shortage in Nigeria and called on President Goodluck
Jonathan to urgently remove subsidy before he hands over to the
President-elect, Major General Muhammadu Buhari, on Friday.
This came
as the Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association (DAPPMA), an
association of marketers and importers, disowned one of its members,
Capital Oil and Gas Limited, for being “mischievous,” over claims that
the association was on strike, an allegation, he claimed caused fuel
scarcity.
The DPR, in a statement by its Head Public Affairs, Dorothy
Bassey, tasked Nigerians to report any marketer who sells the product
above the regulated price to its officials or law enforcement agents.
“While the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) is making every
effort to ensure that fuel is available and reaches every part of the
nation, it is hereby emphasised that the Federal Government has not
increased the price of fuel. “The price remains at N87. Any station
caught selling above the stipulated price, will have its licence
revoked.
“No station should sell in jerry cans as there is enough
fuel and for safety reasons. Any station caught dispensing into jerry
cans will be sealed. “We ask that the public exercise caution and
cooperate with all guidelines and processes for the safety of all,” it
said.
However, in his reaction to the fuel crisis, Kalu,
while calling on the president to float fuel price, said if Jonathan
should fail to stop the subsidy regime, which has cost Nigerians over
N6.354 trillion in the last five years, Buhari should implement it
immediately he is sworn in on Friday. Kalu, in a statement yesterday,
said: “The Federal Government has spent N6.354 trillion as subsidy on
petroleum products in the last five years, when President Goodluck
Jonathan assumed leadership of Nigeria. Penultimate week, it paid N156
billion to oil marketers, bringing total payment to over N500 billion in
five months, including over N300 billion in two instalments in December
last year and N31 billion in interest differentials recently.
“In 2010,
a total of N673 billion was paid on subsidy, rising significantly to
N1.3 trillion in 2011, before being revised upwards to N2.19 trillion by
the Ministry of Finance, after arrears were paid in 2012 for products
consumption in 2011.
“In 2012, the sum of N888 billion was allocated
to subsidise petroleum product imports in the budget, but in December, a
supplementary budget of N161.6 billion for payment of arrears of fuel
subsidy was submitted by the president and later approved by the
National Assembly. “By the following year, 2013, the government
earmarked N971 billion for petroleum subsidy.
For 2014, the Federal
Government again budgeted N971.1 billion for payments of subsidy,
keeping it at the same level with that of 2013. “Though, despite
insinuations and reports that there was no provision for fuel subsidy in
the 2015 budget, the Senate Committee Chairman on Finance, Ahmed
Makarfi, cleared the air, saying that a total of N100 billion was
provided for as subsidy for Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), while N43
billion was approved for Dual Purpose Kerosene for the 2015 fiscal
period.
“You can imagine what the N6.345 trillion spent on subsidy can
be used for in terms of infrastructural development in this country.”
According to Kalu, it is high time Nigeria stopped wasting public funds
on subsidy, which benefits only the rich. He described the fuel subsidy
regime as nothing but fraud, which is only benefitting a few people.
“The
subsidy is not benefitting the poor because the marketers smile to the
bank after collecting the full benefit on the over 40 million litres of
products (PMS and DPK) consumed by Nigerians per day, leaving a lopsided
distribution network, where not all Nigerians are able to get the
products at the regulated price of N87 per litre. “In fact, a recent
study showed that it is only in Lagos and a few urban centres that the
products are sold at regulated prices.
The larger chunk of the
populace buys the product still at exorbitant prices despite subsidy.”
Kalu, who lamented the agony and suffering Nigerians who voted Jonathan
into power four years ago have had to go through, said the subsidy
regime could not be sustained. Besides, he urged the Jonathan
administration to stop playing politics with the apparatus of government
by using it to intimidate and embarrass innocent citizens. Rather, he
said, such agencies should be used to fight corruption. “All these
intimidation is damaging a lot of serious business people in this
country.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) knows
who those corrupt people are and where to get them. How would a public
officer wake up one day and buy a house in Maitama and hop on private
jet every minute? Nigeria should get serious,” he added. Meanwhile,
DAPPMA in a statement yesterday by its Executive Secretary, Mr. Olufemi
Adewole, criticised Mr. Ifeanyi Uba’s Capital Oil and Gas Industries for
its claim that marketers were on strike. It said the company was being
mischievous as it “had been disqualified from the Petroleum Support Fund
(PSF) scheme by the government regulatory agency and does not import
PMS (petrol).”
“The company is not owed a kobo under the ‘PSF scheme
as they cannot make any claim, hence they do not feel the impact of
non-payment of subsidy reimbursements; instead, the company stores
petroleum products for NNPC/ PPMC under a ‘throughput arrangement’ as do
a few other members of our association,” it added.
It was
also learnt yesterday that the outgoing government has agreed to pay
$800 million debt to fuel marketer to resolve the fuel crisis crippling
the economy. The ABC News, in a report, quoted an Independent Petroleum
Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) source to have said that the
Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, agreed on Monday to pay the marketers the $800 million.
There was no immediate statement from the minister, who accused the
suppliers of holding Nigeria to ransom over the disputed debt,
bemoaning, “so much fraud allegations and scams in this business of oil
marketing.”
http://www.premiumgist.com/any-station-caught-selling-above-the-n87-stipulated-price-will-have-its-licence-revoked-fg-warns/
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