- · NNPC discharges 320m litres of petrol
- · Govt may adjust fuel price next month
- · Presidency dissolves task force on power sector reform
“Hopefully
by tomorrow (today) and Thursday, the fuel queues in Abuja should be over.
Hopefully, the same thing will happen in Lagos, and thereafter by the weekend,
we should see Kano, Katsina, Sokoto, Port Harcourt and Warri get off the queue
list.”
With
these words yesterday, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe
Kachikwu, reassured the nation that the lingering fuel scarcity would be a
forgotten hardship by the end of the week.
An
indication that the minister’s promise may come to pass was that a stock of 320
million litres of petrol was being distributed across the country yesterday.
Meanwhile,
the Federal Government has dissolved the presidential task force set up by the
Goodluck Jonathan administration to drive the implementation of the reform in
the nation’s electricity sector. But the reasons for this move were not
disclosed.
Kachikwu
said government may review the price of petrol upward next month (May) if the
prices of crude oil continued to push up. The minister, who spoke in Abuja when
he paid a scheduled working visit to the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory
Agency (PPPRA), clarified that government had not re-introduced subsidy.
He
explained that what had been saved up in the first three months of price
modulation in a dedicated account in the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) would be
used to offset the gap in the price for April.
His
words: “Government is funding the price gap we have in April with what has been
saved in the last few months of over-recovery. But by May, the prices may be
reviewed to march the current trend in the pricing.”
According
to Kachikwu, there is no reason Nigeria should not adopt the right policies as
hard as they are and as difficult as they come to end the long queues for fuel
at the filling stations. The minister also said the queues were expected to end
in Abuja and Lagos before the end of the week.
Alluding
to why Nigeria must deregulate, Kachikwu explained that there were no queues in
some states because the price reflected the actual market price of petrol.
“Really, the states do not have queue as such because people are paying double
the price to get the product. This is not right but it says that we need to
work some statistical logistics to be able to say if we are working the price
of our product for people to participate in the chain.”
To
stop queues from recurring, Kachikwu explained that Nigeria must bring back
strategic reserves that could host between 60 and 90 days sufficiency. “First
is the fact that our strategic reserve has not been in place in this country
for over 20 years. We need to bring back strategic reserve that is between 60
and 90 days sufficiency so that we can restore fully whenever there is shortage
in any part of the country. We also need to find an allocation of resources
because, for the first time, I have been able to convince oil majors to
allocate forex to the downstream players when they bring in products,” he said.
The
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) said that nationwide petroleum
supply and distribution had been ramped up to all states to ensure product
availability in the country.
According
to the corporation, the supply constraints due to foreign exchange challenges
are being resolved through collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)
and major oil marketers.
It
added that major international upstream oil companies had also indicated
willingness to support major oil marketing companies with some of the required
foreign exchange.
NNPC
said there had been recovery of Escravos crude line after six years downtime,
which is expected to guarantee adequate crude supply to the refineries.
The
corporation identified a combination of pre-existing challenges, which resulted
in most oil majors completely pulling out from the importation business and
NNPC assuming over 90 per cent importation obligation without the necessary
logistics put in place.
The
Guardian learnt that the government had been spending much to fund the task
force on power sector reform without getting commensurate result in terms of
fulfilling its mandate.
As
at yesterday, the official website and other links to the Presidential Task
Force on Power (PTFP) were shut, signalling that all may not be well with the
panel.
When
the task force was set up, the Federal Government expected it to achieve a
modest increase in generation capacity of the existing power stations to about
14,000mw by 2013 and 40,000mw by 2020. But several years after, the nation’s
electricity generation continued to hover between 3,000mw and 5,000mw. As at
yesterday, power generation in the country dropped from the 5,074mw it recorded
on February 2, 2016 to 3,371.85mw, representing a shortfall of 1703mw. The
highest generation capacity, which was recorded in February, did not last for
more than 24-hours.
As
at last week Thursday, eight of the nation’s power generating plants were
completely idle, with significant reduction in output from others, including
Egbin, which is located in Lagos.
The
Guardian learnt that the panel which had functioned for almost six years did
not originally have any official terminal date.
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