Tag: Dangote Refinery

  • BREAKING: Dangote refinery slashes fuel price ( See new price)

    BREAKING: Dangote refinery slashes fuel price ( See new price)

    The Dangote Petroleum Refinery on Sunday announced a reduction in the price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), commonly known as petrol for oil marketers.

    The company’s Chief Branding and Communications Officer, Anthony Chiejina in a statement disclosed that the new price for oil marketers will be  ₦970 per liter.

    According to the Chiejina, the reduction is as a gesture of appreciation to Nigerians for their steadfast support in bringing the refinery’s vision to life.

    This new price marks a ₦20 decrease from the refinery’s earlier ex-depot price of ₦990 per litre, introduced earlier this month.

    “The adjustment is also our way of expressing gratitude to the government for their support, as it aligns with efforts to encourage domestic enterprise for the collective good of the nation,” the statement read.

    Chiejina further reassured stakeholders of its commitment to maintaining the highest standards in its petroleum products, emphasizing their environmental sustainability.

    It further pledged to increase production to meet and exceed domestic fuel demand, alleviating concerns over supply shortages, and providing oil marketers with significant cost savings on each litre of petrol sourced from the Lekki-based refinery.

  • NNPC signs 10-year deal to supply gas to Dangote Refinery

    NNPC signs 10-year deal to supply gas to Dangote Refinery

    The NNPC Gas Marketing Limited (NGML), a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Ltd. (NNPC Ltd.), has executed a Gas Sale and Purchase Agreement (GSPA) with Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals FZE.

    Under the agreement, the NNPC Gas Marketing Limited will supply 100 Cubic Feet Per Day (MMSCF/D) gas to Dangote Refinery for an initial period of 10 years to boost local production and revamp industrial growth.

    The agreement was signed by the Managing Director, NGML, Mr Justin Ezeala and the President/CEO, Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote on Tuesday at the Corporate Head Office of Dangote in Falomo, Lagos State.

    Mr Olufemi Soneye, Chief Corporate Communications Officer, NNPC Ltd. in a statement said the agreement outlined the supply of natural gas for power generation and feedstock at the Dangote Refinery, in Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos State.

    Soneye said the milestone was in line with President Bola Tinubu’s policy of utilising Nigeria’s abundant gas resources towards revamping the nation’s industrial growth and kickstarting its economic prosperity.

    “This development, which sees a huge investment of this nature penned with zero Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) outlay, has been described by many as unprecedented in the history of NGML or any gas Local Distribution Company (LDC) in the country.

    “Under the terms of the agreement, NGML will supply 100 million standard MMSCF/D; 50MMSCF/D being firm supply and the rest 50MMSCF/D interruptible natural gas supply to the refinery for an initial period of 10 years, with options for renewal and growth.

    “This collaboration is a significant step toward ensuring the operational success of the Dangote Refinery and enhancing Nigeria’s domestic gas utilisation.

    “NNPC Ltd, through NGML, its gas marketing subsidiary, continues to lead efforts in promoting the use of domestic gas to support industries and businesses nationwide,” he said.

    He said the agreement represented a milestone for both NNPC Ltd. and Dangote Refinery, aligning with their shared commitment to boosting local production and providing vital products for the benefit of all Nigerians.

    According to him, it is a further proof of NGML’s unwavering commitment to business excellence and fulfilling NNPC Ltd’s core mandate of ensuring energy security through the execution of strategic gas projects across the country.

  • Dangote Refinery : God’s divine intervention made it possible– Pastor Adeboye

    Dangote Refinery : God’s divine intervention made it possible– Pastor Adeboye

    Pastor Enoch Adeboye, the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), has revealed that it was divine inspiration that led Nigerian businessman Aliko Dangote to establish the Dangote Refinery in Nigeria.

    Adeboye revealed this during the November 2024 Abuja Special Holy Ghost Service, Adeboye praised Dangote’s initiative, emphasizing that it was a response to Nigeria’s ongoing struggles with inefficient state-owned refineries.

    Adeboye pointed out that despite Nigeria’s status as a major oil producer, the country had been unable to properly refine its crude oil, leading to a heavy dependence on fuel imports.

    He expressed his frustration over the continual failure of the government-run refineries, which have consumed billions in funds without delivering results.

    In contrast, Dangote, despite not being from Adeboye’s community or even a Christian, took the bold step to build a refinery with the aim of alleviating the suffering of Nigerians.

    However, Adeboye also raised concerns about a conspiracy involving oil marketers and international oil companies (IOCs), which he claimed are working to undermine Dangote’s refinery.

    According to Adeboye, these parties are trying to prevent the Dangote Refinery from operating at full capacity, opting instead to keep Nigeria reliant on fuel imports.

    He urged Nigerians to seek divine intervention to overcome these challenges, calling out the unscrupulous actions of some oil marketers who aim to continue profiting from fuel imports.

    In a related development, the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) recently reached an agreement to buy fuel directly from Dangote Refinery.

    However, despite this agreement, Nigerians are still facing high petrol prices, with some retail outlets selling fuel at ₦1060 and ₦1200 per liter.

  • Dangote Refinery: Production cost of petrol now N600-PETROAN claims

    Dangote Refinery: Production cost of petrol now N600-PETROAN claims

    The Petroleum Products Retail Outlets Owners Association of Nigeria (PETROAN) has claimed that the Dangote Refinery is wrong for insisting their products will be sold at market price.

    Speaking when he appeared on a live broadcast of Nigeria Info FM 99.3 monitored by an online platform on Tuesday, Dr Joseph Obele, the National PRO, PETROAN said the cost of production of petrol was now below N600 per litre.

    He said this was because of the fact that the Nigerian government had started selling crude oil to Dangote in Naira.

    Dr Joseph said: “Scholars of oil sectors have done an analysis and the analysis has shown that the crude for Naira given to Dangote by the Federal Government, cost of production will not go above N600, less than N600.

    Although the crude oil he imported from the international community, the cost of production will not be above N700.

    “But it is wrong for him to say his template for him to fix his refinery selling price is based on and tied to how much the international community is selling.

    And people are saying the dynamics and the effects and the economic systems at the international market and Nigeria are not the same.

    “Dangote should not have fixed his price on the international market. He should have fixed his price on cost of production plus the margin.

    “International market (price) in a country where you enjoy so many concessions. While he was building his refinery, the concession he was given for foreign exchange was far less than the official rate to the extent that international experts criticised the concessions given to him.

    “So in Nigeria, where inflation is high, where the minimum wage is poor, Dangote is fixing our buying rate for PMS which is a commodity that every other commodity revolves around. It is wrong for him to say ‘I templated my price based on the international market.”

    Recall that the NNPCL earlier said it had ended its age-long importation of refined petroleum products and is currently purchasing fuel from the Dangote Petroleum Refinery and other local refineries.

    NNPC’s Group Chief Executive Officer, Mele Kyari, had disclosed this new development on Monday at the ongoing conference of the Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists in Lagos State.

    Kyari disclosed that the NNPC would no longer import fuel, as it now buys it from local refineries.

    “Today, NNPC does not import any product, we are taking only from domestic refineries,” he was quoted.

    He continued: “The point is very far from it and I’m going to speak to it straight. We are very proud part-owners of Dangote refinery, no doubt about it. We saw an opportunity that there is a clear market for at least 300,000 barrels of our production; we know that as time moves on, people will start struggling to find markets for their production.

    “It will happen, It’s already happening. Oil is found, as you know, in many unexpected locations across the world and people have choices. Therefore we saw an opportunity to log supply to the domestic refinery, not just Dangote but any other refinery that operates in the country, so it was a very informed business decision.

  • BREAKING: IPMAN finally concludes agreement to lift petrol from Dangote Refinery

    BREAKING: IPMAN finally concludes agreement to lift petrol from Dangote Refinery

    The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) has finally concluded agreement with Dangote Group to lift petrol from the Dangote Refinery.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports National President of IPMAN, Abubakar Garima made the disclosure in Abuja on Monday after a meeting of the association’s National Working Committee.

    Garima assured that this will guarantee a consistent and cost-effective availability of PMS products across the country. He said that this follows a meeting with Aliko Dangote and his management team in Lagos State.

    “We’re pleased to announce that Dangote Refinery has agreed to supply IPMAN with PMS, AGO, and DPK directly for distribution to our depots and retail outlets,” Garima said.

    Regarding pricing, Garima expressed confidence that negotiations with Dangote would yield lower rates.

    At the meeting the Dangote Refinery, pledged to commence supply of products to over 30,000 IPMAN members and 150,000 retail outlets nationwide.

  • Dangote Refinery’s solo fight against ‘dirty fuel’ dump on Nigeria – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Dangote Refinery’s solo fight against ‘dirty fuel’ dump on Nigeria – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    If Africa’s richest man and Chairman of Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, had thought his efforts and dogged determination to brace the odds and establish the multibillion dollar 650,000bpd-capacity Dangote Petroleum Refinery would bring him praises, and alleviate Nigeria’s decades-long dependence on corrupt and costly fuel importation, that expectation has turned into a nightmare – if not outright mirage.

    The coming on stream of the refinery, launched by former President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday, May 22, 2023 – and subsequent roll-out of its products – has met with obstacles deliberately erected by government officials, institutions and major players in the oil sector that are supposed to encourage, support, and enhance the production, accessibility and affordability of the products to the consumers.

    From failure or refusal of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) and International Oil Companies (IOCs) to supply crude to the refinery, to the initial allegation by the Nigeria Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) that the refinery products are inferior and laced with high sulfur.

    And from NMDPRA’s continued issuance of licences to marketers to import reported refined but “dirty fuel” when the Dangote Refinery has enough high-quality fuel in stock, and to NNPCL’s assuming the sole off-taker and retention of power to fix prices for the fuel, it’s been a journey from one problem to another wilfully created by interested parties to impede the refinery’s progress.

    Nonetheless, Mr Dangote and the refinery seem equal to the “oil cabals” at every turn of their shenanigans, the latest being the alleged plans by an indigenous oil company to import off-spec fuel and blend them with products from the Dangote Refinery, and possibly pass them off as sourced from the refinery, or to scramble with the Dangote products for market share.

    Revealing the plot in a statement on November 3, 2024, without mentioning names, the Dangote Refinery said: “An international trading company has recently hired a depot facility next to the Dangote Refinery, with the objective of using it to blend substandard products that will be dumped into the market to compete with Dangote Refinery’s higher quality products.”

    The company – unveiling itself as Pinnacle Oil & Gas Limited – located about 500 metres away, had approached the refinery to extend its pipeline to the company’s tank farms “for the purpose of blending our high-quality products with their imported products and selling them to Nigerians.”

    Following a report about the antic of the company, Pinnacle Oil, without prompting, let itself out of the bag, clarifying that, as the only depot located close to the refinery, it sought to address the concerns raised by the refinery and reinforce its dedication to maintaining high-quality standards in all its products.

    The company said: “Pinnacle Oil & Gas has the only depot facility next to the Dangote Refinery. Without equivocation, we state that Pinnacle Oil & Gas would never engage or attempt to import or distribute any off-spec or substandard product into the Nigerian market. Our company has a reputation for integrity and regulatory compliance, which is extremely important to us.”

    Skirting the issue of blending of off-spec products, the Pinnacle Oil, ostensibly attempting to cast the Dangote Refinery as monopolistic in the oil sector, said that, “deregulated commodity markets work best with an open system of multiple sellers and multiple buyers bidding to establish the market price.”

    “For Nigeria to have supply options that include local refineries or imports is the mechanism that will establish the lowest sustainable prices,” the company said, adding that, “a free market is also regulated to ensure that all products meet the country’s specifications and that all players behave responsibly.”

    But in response to the comment by Mr Robert Dickerman, CEO of Pinnacle Oil & Gas Limited, in defence of his company’s business dealings, the Dangote Refinery, dismissing the notiion of being a monopoly, noted that deregulation isn’t a licence to blend off-spec products, to “jeopardise national interests,” The ConclaveNg reported on November 5.

    “The Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals Company has long been an advocate for deregulation and industrialisation in Nigeria, but our support is rooted in a commitment to the sustainable growth of the country’s economy and the protection of its people from any exploitation,” the refinery said, adding that, unlike Dickerman’s view, “deregulation should not be a licence for the importation and distribution of off-spec products or the subversion of national interests.”

    The refinery noted that, as an American, Dickerman should be aware of how the United States protects its industries, including opposition to the sale of U.S. Steel to Japan’s Nippon Steel; restriction on the use of Chinese-made cranes in American ports; imposition of a 100% tariff on electric vehicles and 50% duty on medical equipment from China; efforts to boost American production of computer chips and medical supplies; and anti-dumping laws that impose tariffs on Chinese goods considered to be unfairly priced.

    The refinery explained that these measures – driven by national security concerns and the need for economic self-sufficiency – are an example of protectionism that prioritises national economic interests over short-term profit, and further demonstrating America’s commitment to safeguarding domestic industries.

    “It is therefore perplexing that Dickerman, with all his experience in the U.S. market, would advocate for the importation and blending of petroleum products to Nigeria under the claim of deregulation and a free market,” the refinery said.

    “The fact is that he (Dickerman) had deceitfully approached us and pleaded that we extend the pipeline from our refinery to Pinnacle’s tank farms for the purpose of blending our high-quality products with their imported products and selling them to Nigerians.

    “We categorically rejected his request to extend our pipeline to their tank farms for such devious purposes because it would be a betrayal of the Nigerian people’s trust. The health and safety of Nigerians cannot – and should not – be compromised for profit.”

    The Dangote Refinery iterated its commitment to ensuring that Nigeria becomes self-reliant in petroleum production, saying, “we welcome competition that drives innovation and quality,” adding, however, that, “we will never allow the continued importation and blending of petroleum products, nor the deliberate destruction of our national economy.”

    Believing that a strong, self-sufficient energy sector is vital to Nigeria’s economic growth, the Dangote Refinery said it “will continue to advocate for policies and practices that protect our industries and the well-being of all Nigerians,” and eagerly anticipates the coming on stream of the Kaduna, Warri, and Port Harcourt refineries before the end of this year, as promised by the Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO) of NNPCL, Mele Kyari. “This milestone will not only end all baseless rumours of monopoly (by Dangote Refinery) but also position Nigeria as a refining hub for petroleum products in Africa,” it added.

    It’s not the first time that Pinnacle Oil & Gas would be accused of underhand tactic in the importation and/or dealing in unwholesome oils in the Nigerian market. But as reported by The Nation on August 21, the company denied accepting any product that didn’t meet the standard of the NMDPRA and Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) into its tanks.

    In a rejoinder to Mr Dangote’s accusation of NMDPRA’s non-stop issuing of licences to traders to import high-sulphur content diesel and jet A fuel from Malta – which Dangote specifically described as “dirty” – into the country, Mr Dickerman said, “Pinnacle has never accepted any product into our tanks that does not meet all specifications of Nigerian regulations, and we never will.”

    Pinnacle added: “Our regulators oversee quality control of all imported product and has the product inspected by independent, qualified inspectors before issuing a discharge certificate. We can not and will not ever be involved in the distribution of product that does not meet all specifications of Nigerian regulatory agencies.”

    Perhaps, by approaching the Dangote Refinery for extension of its pipeline to the company’s tank farms that deal mainly in imported fuel, Pinnacle Oil may’ve presented its tradusers a villainous fait accompli to scapegoat it as an alleged importer of off-spec or substandard products into the Nigerian market.

    Remarkably, though, Aliko Dangote – and the Dangote Petroleum Refinery – appears the lone voice crying in the wilderness against the unhealthy practices in the oil sector, necessitating the question: Where’s the government in the ding-dong, back-and-forth that’s grave implications for the health of the nation, its citizens and the environment?

    What’s the Tinubu administration – both the executive and legislature – done to ascertain the veracity of these imported substandard products, and the instant revelation to blend same and push them into the market? Is the government handicapped in the circumstances, or it’s abetting and enabling the unpatriotic acts in the industry?

    The situation calls for urgent intervention and investigation, as suggested by the Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA), which, via its coordinator, Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko, on November 5, noted that Dangote had raised similar concerns about “dirty fuel” dump in Nigeria.

    According to HURIWA, substandard fuel, which can cause significant air pollution, increased vehicular emissions, and engine degradation, releases harmful pollutants such as sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide, contributing to air pollution and potential respiratory diseases,” adding that allowing such products into the market is “tantamount to an assault on public health.”

    Recalling that prior allegations from Dangote regarding “dirty fuel” imports were presented to the House of Representatives, “with little to no follow-up action taken, and accountability remains unaddressed,” HURIWA urged the National Assembly to “prioritize this matter and convene a public hearing to thoroughly examine the allegations.”

    Besides, HURIWA asked the government to demonstrate its commitment to public safety by initiating a swift, transparent, and unbiased investigation into the quality of fuel entering Nigeria, asserting that, “protecting public health is the highest public good.”

    Saying the government must take immediate legal steps to halt the distribution of potentially-harmful products, act decisively, and send a clear message that public safety and product quality are non-negotiable, HURIWA noted that, “this latest controversy presents an opportunity for the government to reaffirm its commitment to public welfare, environmental integrity, and stringent regulatory enforcement.”

    HURIWA argued that Nigeria’s credibility on the global stage is at stake if it fails to maintain stringent standards domestically, stressing, “Nigeria cannot demand accountability from the international community on climate issues while neglecting pollution control at home.”

    Demanding that the regulatory bodies enforce strict standards and conduct due diligence in fuel quality monitoring, HURIWA called for upgrades to NMDPRA’s testing facilities, to ensure all imported products meet the necessary quality standards before reaching consumers, while any individuals or entities found responsible for compromising fuel quality should be sanctioned to deter future incidents.

    The HURIWA recommendations should earn the support of well-meaning Nigerians, while all concerned authorities, including the government and regulatory bodies, should consider them, and do the needful for the sake of the health of the citizens, the protection of the environment, and the maintenance of the good image and reputation of the country in the global community. This isn’t the time for government to dilly-dally, and play the ostrich. It’s time to show leadership, and act quickly, decisively and responsibly!

    Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.

  • Dangote’s application spells doom for Nigeria if granted – Oil marketers tell court

    Dangote’s application spells doom for Nigeria if granted – Oil marketers tell court

    Three oil marketers have prayed a Federal High Court in  Abuja to dismiss a suit filed by Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals.

    The oil marketers, in a joint counter affidavit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/1324/2024 filed in response to Dangote Refinery’s originating summons, told Justice Inyang Ekwo that granting that application would spell doom for the country’s oil sector.

    According to them, the plan to monopolise the oil sector is a recipe for disaster in the country.

    The three marketers; AYM Shafa Limited, A. A. Rano Limited and Matrix Petroleum Services Limited, in their response, said the plaintiff did not produce adequate petroleum products for the daily consumption of Nigerians.

    Besides, they argued that there was nothing placed before the court to prove the contrary.

    Dangote Refinery had sued Nigeria Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation Limited (NNPCL) as 1st and 2nd defendants.

    Also listed as 3rd to 7th defendants respectively in the originating summons dated Sept. 6 are AYM Shafa Limited, A. A. Rano Limited, T. Time Petroleum Limited, 2015 Petroleum Limited, and Matrix Petroleum Services Limited.

    The company had prayed the court to declare that NMDPRA was in violation of Sections 317(8) and (9) of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) by issuing licenses for the importation of petroleum products.

    It stated that such licenses should only be issued in circumstances where there is a petroleum product shortfall.

    It also urged the court to declare that NMDPRA is in violation of its statutory responsibilities under the PIA for not encouraging local refineries such as the company.

    But the marketers, in their response filed on Nov. 5, told the court that they are well qualified and entitled to be issued import licence by NMDPRA to import petroleum products in Nigeria within the meaning of Section 317(9) of the PIA.

    They argued that vesting Dangote Refinery with the power of monopoly in Nigeria’s petroleum industry as it sought vide the instant suit, would kill competitive pricing of petroleum products in the country.

    They said that such act would further deteriorate the country’s critically ailing economy “and unleash untold hardship on Nigerians, all of which constitute a recipe for disaster in the polity. “

    They said if Nigeria puts all her energy eggs in one basket by stopping importation of petroleum products and allowing the plaintiff to be the sole producer and supplier of petroleum products in Nigeria, with liberty to determine the prices at which it supplies the products, the prices of petroleum products will continue to rise and energy security will elude Nigeria.

    “That in the event of any breakdown in or obstruction to the production chain of the plaintiff which stops it from producing, Nigeria will be thrown into energy crises because it does not have the reserves that would last it for at least 30 days that it would need to order, pay for, freight and import refined products into tanks in Nigeria.

    “That amidst the glaring absence of any credible and demonstrable proof that the plaintiff refines and supplies adequate petroleum products for the daily use/consumption of Nigerians, is a recipe for disaster in Nigeria’s energy sector.”

    They further told the court that granting the reliefs sought by the plaintiff was a design to leave Nigeria and Nigerians at the mercy of the plaintiff with respect to availability and cost of purchasing petroleum products in the country.

    They equally argued in their reply that they are fully qualified for the issuance of the import licences issued to them by the 1st defendant, as they duly met all the legal requirements for the issuance of such import licences, before same were issued to them.

    “The import licences lawfully and validly issued to the defendants did not in any way whatsoever, cripple the plaintiff’s business or its refinery.

    “The import licences issued to the defendants by the 1st defendant are in line with the provisions of Petroleum Industry Act, 2021, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act, 2018 and other relevant laws,” they told the court.

    Justice Ekwo had fixed Jan. 20, 2025 for report of settlement or service.

  • Petrol retailers fault Dangote’s claim on substandard PMS

    Petrol retailers fault Dangote’s claim on substandard PMS

    The Petroleum Products Retail Outlets Owners Association of NIgeria (PETROAN) says the price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) it plans to import will be cheaper than the current rate sold in the country.

    Dr Joseph Obele, National Public Relations Officer, PETROAN, in a statement on Monday in Abuja. Obele said competition should be encouraged in the sector to avoid exploitation and profiteering.

    He disputed the allegation by Dangote Refinery that PETROAN would import substandard products at cheaper rate, stressing that the claims were not surprising.

    The publication was coming after PETROAN and the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) announced plans to sell far lesser than the current selling rate of PMS in Nigeria.

    He said PETROAN had never compared the price of Dangote PMS with any other on the fact that Dangote’s PMS price was not known until  it was release by the Refinery on Monday.

    He said it had concluded plans with its foreign Refinery counterparts and financial partners to import the best quality of PMS and sell far lesser than the present selling rate of PMS in Nigeria.

    “We planned to enter the market before December 2024, pending the approval of our import permit license by the regulatory agency and access to foreign exchange from the Central Bank of Nigeria at the the official rate.

    “Before now, Dangote Refinery had refused to make public her selling rate of PMS until IPMAN and PETROAN announced readiness to sell lesser.

    “The rate of N990 as announced by Dangote Refinery was inconsiderate based on the fact that Dangote enjoyed massive concession for accessing foreign exchange during the construction of the refinery.

    “The core determinant for setting price is consideration for cost of production then add a fair margin,” he said.

    He described the allegations that PETROAN would import inferior products and that an international company was trying to establish a PMS blending plant in Lagos as strategies to push others out of the market. This, he said, was in view of achieving monopoly for exploitation.

    “PETROAN’s drive was solution-centric and patriotic following the pricing instability and turbulences in the downstream sector.

    “The reformative and transformational agenda of President Tinubu is seen as inimical to advocates and beneficiaries of monopolistic market.

    “The President’s intervention was meant to liberalise the downstream sector by building an all inclusive market. Intensive or aggressive competition in any market brings the best value for money exchange for a commodity.

    “Consumers get the best value for pricing when competition is at its peak, hence competition should be encouraged. Contrary to competition, such a market will be exploitative and strictly for profiteering,” he said.

  • Fuel price hikes: NNPCL’s antic to sabotage Dangote, Nigerians – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Fuel price hikes: NNPCL’s antic to sabotage Dangote, Nigerians – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Nigerians have lost count of the number of times that the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has increased the price of petrol (premium motor spirit, PMS) since on May 29, 2023, when President Bola Tinubu, during his inauguration, took the nation by surprise and declared that, “fuel subsidy is gone.”

    Coupled with subsequent floating of the Naira, to find its “true value” within the vagaries of market forces, and other crunchy policies that his administration has introduced, such as the hike in electricity tariffs – all subject to removal of subsidies – Nigerians’ social and economic lives have changed for the worse from the day of the Tinubu sceismic inaugural speech at the Eagle Square in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital city.

    Prices of goods and services have not only skyrocketed, but manufacturers have embarked on shrinkflation (reduction in size or quantity) and skimpflation (reduction in quality) of their products, even as prices keep increasing amid a hyperinflation and low or none purchasing power that’s caused unprecedented hunger and anger across the country.

    Exacerbating Nigerians’ dire straits is the propensity of the NNPCL for incessant increases of the price of petrol, which the so-called state-owned enterprise raised from N184 to N577 per litre moments after Tinubu announced the removal of the fuel subsidy in May 2023, and to N617 and then N897, sparking nationwide outrage, and protest.

    The case has always been that each new fuel price increase comes at an inauspicious time when Nigerians are settling down, and coming to terms with the previous hike, with the latest on October 29 jerking up the prevailing price from N998 to N1,025 per litre in Lagos, and from N1,030 to N1,060 per litre in Abuja.

    Between September and October 2024, the pump price has increased from N897 to N998, and to N1,025 per litre at the NNPCL mega filling stations in Lagos. It now sells in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, at N1,040 per litre, between N1,020 and N1,030 in Lagos, N1,060 in Abuja, and up to N1,350 in far-flung northern States. And it continues to climb, with industry watchers predicting that it could hit N1,500 per litre by Christmas 2024.

    Meanwhile, the NNPCL, which often surreptitiously introduces new fuel prices, has undisguisedly dabble in the affairs of the privately-funded and owned Dangote Petroleum Refinery, which Nigerians have long expected would bring succour and free them from the stranglehold of the NNPCL that’s never served their interest even under the alleged corruption-ladden fuel subsidy regime dominated by frequent hikes in pump price, and induced scarcity of the product, especially during festive seasons.

    From deliberate dithering to supply crude to the multibillion dollar 650,000bpd capacity Dangote Refinery, to fighting to be its sole PMS off-taker, and to continue to import fuel on the pretext that the refinery isn’t meeting its daily requirements, the NNPCL has retained its power to fix prices in a deregulated oil sector that’s supposedly open to willing sellers and willing buyers.

    Lately, the monopolistic tendency of the NNPCL has constrained it to withhold a princely N40bn that members of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) have reportedly paid through the company (NNPCL), to enable them lift fuel from the Dangote Refinery.

    Reacting to the claim by the refinery’s owner and Chairman of the Dangote Group, Mr Aliko Dangote – that marketers were avoiding his refinery in favour of imported petrol –  IPMAN’s President, Abubakar Garima, revealed on Channels Television’s ‘Sunrise Daily’ on October 30 that the IPMAN members were eager to purchase fuel from the refinery if allowed to do so directly.

    “We have over ₦40bn in outstanding debt with the NNPCL. I was surprised when Dangote said he has over 500m litres of PMS. We are ready to buy the product from Dangote if he is ready to sell it to us directly,” Garima said, adding that his members weren’t importing petrol, contrary to Dangote’s suggestion, and urged the refinery to register independent marketers directly, and bypass the NNPCL, to allow for easier loading.

    “If he (Dangote) can sell the product directly to us, we can buy because we pay upfront before loading. Currently, we have ₦40bn with the NNPCL, yet we can’t access the product. Recently, some marketers were sent to load at the Dangote Refinery but were unable to load even after waiting four days with their trucks,” Garima said.

    Noting that IPMAN represents over 20,000 marketers, Garima suggested that, “if the Dangote Refinery allows independent marketers to lift petrol directly, similar to the NNPCL arrangement, Nigerians will likely a reduction in pump prices.” VANGUARD reported on the story.

    On October 30, Aliko Dangote, along with the Minister of Finance, Wale Edun and NNPCL’s Group Chief Executive Officer, Mele Kyari, met with President Tinubu in Abuja, and announced that he had over 500m litres of petrol in storage at his refinery, but that marketers weren’t using his facility – perhaps to remind the president that all his efforts to ensure that the refinery came on stream, and  enough crude supplied to it daily in Naira equivalent, was falling through by no fault of the refinery.

    Debunking IPMAN’s claim, Dangote Refinery’s Group Chief Branding and Communications Officer, Anthony Chiejina, stated on October 30: “The Dangote Petroleum Refinery wishes to clarify that it has not received any payments from the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) to purchase refined petroleum products.

    “Although discussions are ongoing with IPMAN, it is misleading to suggest that they (IPMAN members) are experiencing difficulties loading refined products from our Petroleum Refinery, as we currently have no direct business dealings with them. Consequently, we cannot be held responsible for any payments made to other entities.

    “The payment in mention has been made through the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), and not us. In the same vein, NNPCL has neither approved, nor authorised us to release our Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) to IPMAN.”

    Emphasising that the refinery can meet Nigeria’s demand for all petroleum products, including petrol, diesel, and aviation fuel, Chiejina said: “At present, we can load 2,900 trucks per day and we have also been evacuating petroleum products by sea. We advise IPMAN to register with us and make direct payment as we have more than enough petroleum products to satisfy the needs of their members.”

    He appealed to “all stakeholders to refrain from making unfounded statements in the media, as that could undermine the economic re-engineering efforts of His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Conducting business through public speculation is counterproductive and unpatriotic.”

    “In the interest of our country, we encourage all stakeholders to collaborate and heed the advice of President Tinubu, while promoting a unified approach, rather than engaging in media conflicts and needless propaganda,” Chiejina said.

    The foregoing illustrates the fact that, if the IPMAN didn’t cry out over its members’ inability to lift fuel they’d paid for from the Dangote Refinery, and the later didn’t rebut the IPMAN claim of its members paying the huge sum into its coffers, the NNPCL would’ve withheld – if it’s still not withholding – the N40bn, ostensibly to trade and earn illegal bountiful commission on the money, and retain both its sole off-taking of fuel from the Dangote Refinery, and the power to dictate its price in the Nigerian market.

    The NNPCL’s antic is a “financial sleight of hand of the worst sort,” and a brazen act of corruption that embodied the subsidy regime that Tinubu’s  vowed to eliminate. But what Nigerians have seen over the past 18 months is that the more things change under the Tinubu administration, the more they remain the same!

    Which begs the question: Does Tinubu really want to tame the octopodal corruption in governance, and particularly in the oil sector managed and manipulated by the NNPCL, or he’s part of the system, and has ascended the presidency to protect it? As the Minister of Petroleum Resources, why is it difficult for Tinubu to combine that pedestal with the almighy powers of the presidency to conquer the “cabals” in the oil industry that the NNPCL seems to be holding their forte?

    The clock is ticking, and the time is running for the Tinubu presidency! The moment has come for him to declare that “enough is enough,” and use his political platform’s “broom” to sweep the NNPCL clean as the starting point of his government’s much-hyped reforms in the oil sector.

    Whether Tinubu’s involved or not in the shenanigans going on under his nose, and on his watch, he should realise that the deliberate stoking of the anger of Nigerians with incessant increases in the price of petrol won’t bode well the next time Nigerians themselves declare that “enough is enough.”

    Indeed, as the Chairman, Centre for Accountability and Open Leadership, Debo Adeniran, noted, as reported by PUNCH on October 30, the decision of the government could “stoke the embers of discord and unleash the people’s anger against the government.”

    Adeniran added: “What the government is doing is to stoke the embers of discord. Of course, the administration is losing support daily, and it will get to a stage whereby nobody will be able to stop the people’s anger. And when the people’s anger is unleashed on the government, we can’t predict what will end it.”

    Patriotic, concerned and rifgt-thinking Nigerians hope and pray that the fuel situation, and its attendant ramifications won’t get to that stage. But as the saying goes, “A stitch in time saves nine.” President Tinubu should act now!

     

    Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.

  • BREAKING: Finally, Dangote Refinery reveals cost of its petrol

    BREAKING: Finally, Dangote Refinery reveals cost of its petrol

    Dangote Refinery has finally disclosed it sells its Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), popularly known as petrol/fuel, at N990 per litre into trucks.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Dangote Refinery also disclosed it sells its petrol at N960 per litre into ships, adding that the price is cheaper than what the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited sells to retailers.

    Dangote Refinery made the disclosure on Sunday while reacting to recent disclosures made by IPMAN, PETROAN and other petrol retail associations.

    According to a statement by Anthony Chiejina, Group Chief Branding and Communications Officer of NNPC Limited, the prices are benchmarked against international prices.

    The statement reads: “We had lately refrained from engaging in media fights, but we are constrained to respond to the recent misinformation being circulated by IPMAN, PETROAN, and other associations.

    “Both organisations claim that they can import PMS at lower prices than what is being sold by the Dangote Refinery.

    “We benchmark our prices against international prices, and we believe our prices are competitive relative to the price of imports.

    “If anyone claims they can land PMS at a price cheaper than what we are selling, then they are importing substandard products and conniving with international traders to dump low quality products into the country, without concern for the health of Nigerians or the longevity of their vehicles.

    “Unfortunately, the regulator (NMDPRA) does not even have laboratory facilities which can be used to detect substandard products when imported into the country.

    “Post deregulation, NNPC set the pace by selling PMS to domestic marketers at N971 per litre for sale into ships and at N990 for sale into trucks.

    “This set the benchmark for our pricing, and we have even gone lower to sell at N960 per litre for sale into ships while maintaining N990 per litre for sale into trucks.

    “In good faith, and in the interest of the country, we commenced sales at these prices without clarity on the exchange rate that we will use to pay for the crude purchased.

    “At the same time, an international trading company has recently hired a depot facility next to the Dangote Refinery, with the objective of using it to blend substandard products that will be dumped into the market to compete with Dangote Refinery’s higher quality production.

    “This is detrimental to the growth of domestic refining in Nigeria. We should point out that it is not unusual for countries to protect their domestic industries in order to provide jobs and grow the economy.

    “For example, the US and Europe have had to impose high tariffs on EVs and microchips in order to protect their domestic industries.

    “While we continue with our determination to provide affordable, good quality, domestically refined petroleum product in Nigeria, we call on the public to disregard the deliberate disinformation being circulated by agents of people who prefer for us to continue to export jobs and import poverty”.