Group drums support for FG’s plan to privatise refineries

Akinsuyi said that the depreciation of the country’s currency has made our products cheaper and more attractive to our neighbours thereby causing scarcity of such products.

Update: 2024-09-11 16:03 GMT

The Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI), has expressed support on plans by the Federal Government to engage private firms to operate Warri and Kaduna refineries when they come on stream.

Mr Niyi Akinsiju, Chairman of IMPI , said this while addressing newsmen in Abuja on Wednesday.

He said that removal of subsidy on petroleum products was what was needed at this time to rescue the country’s economy.

He appealed to Nigerians, especially the leadership of the organised labour to beam attention to governance at the state and local governments levels, where more resources are now being allocated.

He said that the group was in support of the plan by government to engage the private sector in the management of the two refineries presently undergoing rehabilitation.

According to him, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), recently invited companies to bid for operations and maintenance deal for the two refineries.

In a public notice on its official X handle, the national oil company explained that the move will help ensure reliability and energy security for the country.

Akinsuji said that under the prevailing economic circumference, government has no business in the petroleum refining business.

“The refining business is a highly specialised form of venture. I think about two weeks ago, we saw a publication by the NNPCL requesting companies which has capacity to manage the refineries to apply.

“When those refineries are fully rehabilitated and delivered it will be share naivety for government to still insist that products of the refineries should be sold at subsidised price,” he said.

He said that it was the policy of subsidy that killed the domestic refineries in the past.

According to him, the petroleum refinery produces so many bi-products other than petrol which can help turn around the country’s economy for better.

He said the fact that a poll showed over 73 per cent of Nigerians opposing the policy of deregulation, does not diminish it’s potency as the only viable option to ensure our economic recovery.

“In spite of the common knowledge that fuel subsidies were excluded from the second half of the 2023 budget, about 73 per cent of Nigerians interviewed in an opinion poll said they were dissatisfied with the removal.

“Nonetheless, this does not detract from the fact that fuel subsidies have become Nigeria’s equivalent of an economic weapon of mass destruction,” he said.

On the skyrocketing prices of goods and services in the country, especially food stuff, Akinsuji said that the situation cannot be attributed to a single factor alone.

According to him, a combination of factors such as insecurity, currency floating and low production capacity are responsible for the present food crisis.

He said that the allusion that the removal of fuel subsidy had led to the current food crisis may not be entirely correct.

He said that the group’s findings showed that fuel also known as Premium Motor Spirit, constitutes an insignificant proportion to the cost elements affecting prices of goods in the country.

Akinsuyi said that the depreciation of the country’s currency has made our products cheaper and more attractive to our neighbours thereby causing scarcity of such products.

“We should understand that no single factor is responsible for the rising cost of products in the country.

“In the case of rice, it is about insecurity, it is as a matter of fact the after effects of the devaluation of the our national currency which has made our products cheaper.

“This has attracted high patronage from our West African neighbours who come to Nigeria to purchase rice,”he said.

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