POPULAR
  • How Design A wEBSITE
  • BBN
  • Basket Ball
  • Box Office
  • CONTACT US
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • News
  • World News
  • Breaking
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Health & Fitness
Reading: Nigeria not ready to stop fuel importation, analysts warn
Share
BrainBoxNews - Breaking News - Nigeria News - Entertainment NewsBrainBoxNews - Breaking News - Nigeria News - Entertainment News
Aa
  • News
  • World News
  • Sport
  • Trending
  • Adventure
Search
  • Home
    • Home 4
  • Categories
    • News
    • World News
    • Sport
    • Trending
  • Bookmarks
    • My Bookmarks
    • Customize Interests
  • More Foxiz
    • Blog Index
    • Sitemap
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
BrainBoxNews - Breaking News - Nigeria News - Entertainment News > Blog > Latest News > Nigeria not ready to stop fuel importation, analysts warn
Latest News

Nigeria not ready to stop fuel importation, analysts warn

Brainbox
Last updated: 2024/08/04 at 3:37 AM
Brainbox
Share
5 Min Read
FUEL QUEUE
SHARE



Some experts in the oil and gas sector have said Nigeria was not ripe to stop the importation of refined petroleum products, asking the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority not to bow to pressure.

The experts stated this in the wake of allegations by the NMDPRA Chief Executive, Farouk Ahmed, that the Dangote refinery wanted him to stop issuing licences for the importation of fuel.

Ahmed held that he did not grant the request to avoid monopoly and ensure energy security in the country.

The comment from the regulator appeared to have irked Nigerians, many of whom called for his removal.

Speaking with our correspondent, an energy consultant, Henry Adigun, condemned the NMDPRA for making comments about the Dangote refinery in public.

He held that most of the things said by Ahmed were true, but they sought not to be made public.

According to Adigun, Nigeria should only stop fuel importation when at least three to four refineries are working in the country.

“We cannot stop the importation of fuel now until we have about three to four functioning refineries. We cannot have our energy security in the hands of one person, that’s what the NMDPRA chief executive was trying to say, but it shouldn’t have been a discussion for the press,” Adigun stated.

He added that the government should also consider other investors in the midstream, who may be affected by the sudden stoppage of importation.

The expert noted that depot owners were protected by the Petroleum Industry Act to import fuel, saying that right cannot be taken away from them by a fiat.

According to Adigun, those importing fuel at the moment naturally patronise the Dangote refinery when the price is better than going outside the country to import fuel.

Contrary to speculations, Adigun maintained that it was not feasible that the Dangote refinery would crash the pump price.

He argued that the cost of crude, whether supplied locally or in naira, would be priced according to the international benchmark.

He disclosed that the landing cost of petrol is now around N1,100, which has a lot to do with the cost of production.

However, Adigun said that could only happen if the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited and Dangote have an agreement to sell at a fixed price without recourse to the international benchmark and the fluctuating foreign exchange rate.

Another energy industry expert, Dr Taiwo Ogunleye, said petroleum has remained an important part of the world’s energy mix and the global economy and a cornerstone of the modern energy system, helping to drive the global economy.

He posited that Section 317(8) of the PIA provides that the NMDPRA should apply the backward integration policy to encourage investment in local refining in the downstream petroleum sector.

Similarly, Section 317(9) of the PIA empowers the regulator to assign import licences to companies with active local refining licences or proven track records of international crude oil and petroleum products trading for product shortfalls.

Those powers, he said, should not be hijacked from the regulator under any guise.

The expert noted that import volume allocation should be based on criteria set by the NMDPRA based on refining output in the preceding quarter, share of active wholesale customers, competitive pricing, and prudent supply, storage, and distribution track records, according to Section 317(10) of the PIA.

“The imported petroleum products must conform to Afri-5 Specification (50 ppm sulfur) as per the ECOWAS declaration on adoption of the Afri-Fuels Roadmap or as prescribed by regulation,” he stated.

However, according to the Publicity Secretary of the Crude Oil Refiners Association of Nigeria, Eche Idoko, the government must put a stop to importation as early as possible.

Idoko said local refiners could supply the fuel needed for local consumption if the government fulfils its promise to supply crude to local refineries in the local currency.



Source link

You Might Also Like

False Men Of God Will Suffer Before Dying – Pastor Giwa Warns

Fire Razes Furniture Workshop, Church In Ibadan

JAMB dragged to court as students claim low utme scores don’t reflect performance

Armed Herdsmen Launch Fresh Attack in Benue, Kill Nine Farmers Despite Security Deployments

TAGGED: analysts, fuel, importation, Nigeria, ready, stop, warn
Brainbox August 4, 2024
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

New Releases

Trending Stories

Adewale Giwa
Latest News

False Men Of God Will Suffer Before Dying – Pastor Giwa Warns

May 12, 2025
Game

World of Warcraft Burning Crusade Classic Leaks Ahead of BlizzCon

May 14, 2022
News

She-Hulk: Attorney at Law review – female empowerment has never been so much fun

May 16, 2022
World News

Eight years after leading Buhari to Obasanjo, Tinubu meets ex-president for own ambition

May 16, 2022
Sport

Nationwide blackout, N3b lost to TCN strike as grid crashes

May 16, 2022
Entertainment

British billionaire Sir Jim Ratcliffe move to buy Man United

May 16, 2022

Follow US on Social Media

Facebook Youtube Steam Twitch Unity

© Brainbox News Network. All Rights Reserved.

More from Brainbox

  • Job @brainboxnews.com
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?