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Subsidy removal: Nigeria’s petrol daily consumption figure decreases by 35%
The Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) says the country’s daily gasoline consumption figure stands at 46.38 million litres per day due to subsidy removal by the Federal Government.
Mr. Ahmed Farouk, Chief Executive, NMDPRA, disclosed this during a stakeholder meeting with oil and gas downstream operators on Monday in Lagos.
He said that the figure represented a 35 percent reduction when compared with the 65 million litres per day prior to subsidy removal.
According to him, an average truck out on daily basis for petrol consumption, after announcing subsidy removal on May 29, reduced to 46.38 millions litres per day.
“The current daily con asumption has drastically reduced as against 65 million litres, which had been the daily consumption before subsidy removal.
“In January, it was 62 million litres per day; February, 62 million litres per day; March, 71.4 million litres per day; April, 67.7 million litres per day; May, 66.6 million litres per day; June, 49.5 million litres per day; and July, 46.3 million litres per day,” he said.
The NMDPRA boss said that the essence of the meeting was to review the downstream sector after the subsidy removal and also to thank marketers who had accepted the offer to import gasoline.
On petrol importation, Farouk said that over 56 companies applied for import licences to bring in petrol, while only 10 made commitments to import.
He said that currently three marketers, namely Emadeb Energy, A.Y. Shafa, and Prudent Energy, have imported petrol into the country.
He added that others, like 11 Plc, are also indicating interest in importing gasoline in August and September, respectively.
“The era of subsidy paymentss is gone; we encourage all marketers who are interested in importing petrol to apply for a a licence.
“The meeting is to encourage marketers to import so that there will be availability of petrol in every nook and cranny of the nation.
“The marketers have the choice to fix their price, because it is a free market where there will be competition.
“It is no longer Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation Limited (NNPCL) dominating the market, there will be other players to compete with NNPCL.
“We do not want any dominant player in the market, that was why we liberalised the market for everybody to play, ” Farouk emphasised.
Farouk said that the authority was working with the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) to prevent marketers from taking unduly advantage of consumers.
He said that the NMDPRA would ensure consumer protection at every station, adding that the quality of imported products would be focused upon to avoid substandard gasoline.
“We will ensure safety, consumer protection, and standardisation in ensuring quality control within marketers.
Supreme News reports that the meeting had in attendance managing directors of all downstream sector operators, a delegation of the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN), and the Depots Owners Association of Nigeria (DAPPMAN), among others.