November 21, 2024

Fuel queues return to Nigeria as marketers blame NNPCL for halting petrol supply

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Lack of supply of Premium Motor Spirit (Petrol) by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has been blamed for the sudden product scarcity in the Nigerian capital city Abuja, Nasarawa, and other states.

This was disclosed by the president of the Petroleum Products Retail Outlets Owners Association (PETROAN), Billy Gillis-Harry in an interview with DAILY POST.

The revelation followed an emergence of fuel queues in the nation’s capital and neighbouring Nasarawa state.

He emphasised that the cause of the fuel shortages and long queues is simply that PETROAN members and marketers currently do not have adequate supplies of the product to meet demand.

“Yesterday (Friday), I went to over fifteen filling stations in Abuja, including NNPCL retail outlets, but there is no product. If they say they increase prices, it is their own thing. You sell according to how much you buy the product.

“We don’t have the product, that is the reason for the scarcity. We cannot fix a price because we don’t import the product; it is NNPCL that is the sole importer.

When asked if the planned commencement of fuel supply by Dangote refinery in mid-July 2024 could be blamed for the scarcity, he said, “Dangote refinery has not brought in any fuel, even Automotive Gas Oil (diesel), we are struggling to have it. What we are saying is that Dangote is facing the herculean challenge of meeting the deadline. We are proud of having a refinery of 650,000 barrels per day in Nigeria.

“Meanwhile, NNPCL cannot say because the Dangote refinery fuel supply is coming on board, they will stop its import. Nigerians depend on PMS daily. Dangote has not produced a liter of PMS.

“The issue is that there is a supply challenge with NNPCL. NNPCL has just a few filling stations. PETROAN and other stakeholders have several across the country. It is critical to ensure that all major stakeholders are aware of the things happening in the sector to avoid situations like this.

“We should ask NNPCL to up their game to halt the supply challenge,” he said.

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