The Federal Government may have concluded plans to stop subsidising the
consumption of petroleum products in the country, especially petrol and
kerosene following increasingly dwindling revenue.
The Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, gave
the clearest hint yet of the planned removal of subsidies on both products by
the Federal Government on Tuesday at the ongoing Nigerian Oil and Gas
Conference in Abuja.
She said that the subsidies being paid to the marketers by the Federal
Government on imported Premium Motor Spirit and kerosene were no longer
sustainable, prompting analysts to say the days of the petrol and kerosene
subsidy regime might soon be over.
Alison-Madueke stated that the reform already being implemented in the
power sector should be taken to the downstream oil subsector, stressing that
the negative impact of continued regulation of the sector outweighed the
positive impact.
She said, “The continued regulation of the downstream sector has its
positive and negative impacts on the economy. But the negative effect is more
than the positive. The subsidy policy cannot be sustained any longer.
“This is because the subsidy payment is not benefiting the poor it is
targeting; rather, it is benefiting the rich. The industry needs to move to
next level by increasing revenue and curbing oil theft and pipeline vandalism.
“Without belabouring the point, we are all aware that the government has
to deregulate the downstream sector. Continuing regulation, we all are aware,
has negative effects. It is basically unsustainable, it discourages investment,
and principally, it benefits the rich, not the masses in the society that we
intend to reach in the first place.
“This means that deregulation is the only way in which capital
investment can be encouraged. It can give employment opportunities. At the same
time, we are all aware that in a democratic polity, there has to be a balance
between different policies and directives of government and the needs and
desires of the people of Nigeria at all times.”
If the subsidies on both products are removed, the consumers will be
paying a minimum of N144.66 for a litre of petrol against the official
regulated price of N97.
The N144.66 is the landing cost of the product and the distribution
margins as contained in the pricing template prepared by the Petroleum Products
Pricing Regulatory Agency for the month of March.
For kerosene, consumers will have to pay N154.36 per litre, which
comprises the landing cost of N138.87 and distribution margins of N15.49,
instead of the official pump price of N50.
This is the first time in recent times that a top official will provide
an insight into government’s thinking on the subject of subsidy removal though
there have been official denials that nothing like that is in the offing.
Only last Thursday, the Forum of Commissioners of Finance of the 36
states of the federation passed a resolution for the removal of fuel subsidy.
The Chairman of the forum, Mr. Timothy Odaah, told journalists shortly
after this month’s Federation Account Allocation Committee’s meeting that the
resolution was passed following irregularities observed in the fuel subsidy
regime.
The Federal Government has a budget of N971.1bn for petrol subsidy
payment this year, same as in 2013.
The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr. Aminu Tambuwal, had
claimed last month that available records indicated that the Federal Government
spent over N1tn on kerosene subsidy between 2010 and 2013.
Alison-Madueke’s comment came as the government’s revenue base has been
shrinking with massive crude oil theft and vandalism of products’ pipeline
reducing the country’s export earnings.
The Excess Crude Account, in which extra income made from the sale of
crude oil in the international market and above the budget benchmark is saved,
has been depleted from $8.65bn at the end of 2012 to $2.11bn at the beginning
of this month although the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala,
claimed on Sunday that it had risen to $3.45bn.
The nation’s external reserves have continued to drop from last year’s
peak of $48.85bn recorded in May to $38.65bn on March 14, 2014, according to
the latest data on the website of the Central Bank of Nigeria.
Although the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation had given an
assurance that it had enough stock of imported petroleum products in strategic
reserves that would last for months, Alison-Madueke wondered why the current
scarcity of petrol had continued unabated.
She blamed the situation on sabotage, diversion, hoarding, panic buying
and rumours of imminent pump price increase.
Alison-Madueke also outlined the challenges confronting the
government in the oil sector to include perennial oil theft, pipeline vandalism
and non-passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill.
She said, “The PIB is still with the National Assembly and we hope that
it will be passed very soon. However, we have been confronted with the menace
of pipeline vandalism for decades and it has become much more prevalent in the
last few years.
“In 2013 alone, all the major crude oil pipelines were severely damaged
and vandalised at different points in time. The Bonny-Escravos line from the
refinery was not spared either. Needless to say pipeline vandalism and sabotage
created significant losses for the country.
“These include direct and indirect costs for the provision of security,
crude oil and petroleum products losses, environmental degradation and
associated remediation cost.”
In spite of the challenges, the minister said “stable 2.3 million
barrels per day production of crude oil were achieved in 2013.”
She explained that the industry had the capacity to boost oil production
to three million barrels per day and gas production from 6.3 trillion standard
cubic feet per day to 8.1 trillion standard cubic feet per day.
The Managing Director, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mr.
Andrew Yakubu, said the country’s oil and gas industry was put under siege by
pipeline vandalism in 2013.
“It is imperative that we secure gas pipelines in the country
because whenever they are vandalised, between 200,000bpd and 300,000bpd are
shut in; that was what we experienced in 2013,” he added.
That minister is a thief ,revolution will start ,let dem try it ,
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