The Federal Government on Saturday
recommenced the payment of subsidy on petrol as it subsidised the
commodity by N5.84 for every litre of premium motor spirit consumed in
Nigeria.
Subsidy on petrol was stopped in January after the review of the pricing template of the product by the government.
It also announced that the current
official pump prices of petrol would remain at N86 per litre when
purchased at filling stations run by the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation and N86.5 per litre when sold at outlets operated by other
oil marketers.
Figures from the latest pricing
templates of the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency released
on Saturday, showed that the Federal Government was paying N5.84 as
subsidy on every litre of petrol sold at non-NNPC filling stations.
The PPPRA is the agency of the Federal
Government that regulates the prices of white products — petrol and
kerosene, across the country.
According to the agency, the Expected
Open Market Price of petrol for non-NNPC stations as at April 2, 2016,
was N92.34 per litre, against an official pump price of N86.5 per litre,
leaving an under-recovery or subsidy of N5.84 per litre.
Similarly, the template for NNPC-run
stations showed that the government was paying N5.80 per litre as
subsidy, as the EOMP for outlets in this category was N91.80 per litre
as against an official rate of N86 per litre.
The EOMP is the actual cost of petrol
without subsidy and comprises of the landing cost of the product as well
as its subtotal margins like transporters charge, admin fee, dealers
cost, bridging fund, etc.
On the retained pump price of petrol,
the Acting Executive Secretary, PPPRA, Mrs. Sotonye Iyoyo, said, “The
agency is retaining the retail prices of N86.00 for the NNPC, and N86.50
for the other marketing companies. The pump price of household kerosene
also remains unchanged from what it was in the last quarter.
“Therefore, marketers are advised to
ensure that there is no price distortion in their respective retail
outlets. PPPRA, however, shall continue to monitor the global oil market
performances, and come up, at appropriate time, with reasonable changes
consistent with the newly-adopted price modulation principles.”
On news making the rounds that the
agency was planning to increase the petrol price, Iyoyo urged members of
the public to ignore such rumour, as prevailing market indicators do
not support such.
She also called on motorists to desist
from panic-buying, stressing that “PPPRA was working hard with other
sister-organisations to ensure that the current supply and distribution
challenges were resolved within the coming days.”
Meanwhile, the agency stated that it had
released the second quarter allocations for the supply of petrol, based
on the approval of the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr.
Ibe Kachikwu.
It said, “In the latest release, the
apex national oil company, the NNPC, has 41.74 per cent of the total
allocation, while the rest of the oil marketing companies got a total
allocation of 58.27 per cent.”
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