Many depot owners may soon shut down their facilities due to the inability to meet the new financial requirement of about N10bn by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited as the cost of lifting fuel from its ships according to The PUNCH.
The paper reported
that
depot owners were struggling to raise between N5b-N10bn to make new orders from
the NNPCL.
“NNPCL has enough stock in-country and we still buy from them
pending when arrangements would be made for us to start ordering our products
ourselves. Now, we have to raise about N10bn, some N5bn depending on the volume
of the order to be able to access new products,” the sources said.
He added that the amount was in addition to the payment already
made before the increase in the price of petrol.
The National Controller, Operations of the Independent Petroleum
Marketers Association of Nigeria, Mike Osatuyi, said that the affected stations
did not have products due to the increase in the prices of products at the
depots.
According to him, filling station owners are currently required
to have between N22.5m and N23m to buy a truck of petrol, adding that one truck
was sold for N8m before May 29.
A former
Chairman of the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria, Tunji Oyebanji, noted
that 33, 000 metric tonnes of petrol at depots had shut up to as high as N21m.
It was gathered
that
many depot owners currently do not have stock as they had exhausted their
stocks before President Bola Tinubu announced the removal of the petrol subsidy
on May 29.
“Many depot owners would not be able to access funds because
banks are skeptical of granting loans to the downstream sector,” a source
added.
The pump price of petrol, which was between N179 and N200 per
litre before subsidy removal, has skyrocketed to over N500 per litre after the
President’s pronouncement.
Oyebanji
further said that many smaller firms in the downstream sector would be forced
to shut down operations and may be bought over by bigger ones due to their
inability to meet up with the huge financial obligations to secure new products
from the NNPCL.
Sources at the NNPCL said that the company had been having
challenges accessing forex from the Central Bank of Nigeria, since the removal
of petrol subsidy.
“Since full deregulation started, CBN has stopped giving us
forex. We also have to source for dollars just like every other player in the
downstream sector. So, depending on the dollar rates and other market indices,
we import and have to also factor other costs before we sell to marketers,” the
sources noted.
Fuel subsidies
had gulped N12tn between 2005 and 2022.
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