The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited has issued a fresh circular to oil marketers on how much they will pay to get petroleum products.
This came about two weeks after the Federal Government
announced the removal of fuel subsidy.
NNPCL Retail, in a circular released on Sunday, and obtained
by The PUNCH, directed marketers to consider merging their old orders which
carry the old fuel price in order to buy a truck of 45 million litres of
petrol.
The PUNCH gathered that marketers had before the
deregulation ordered one truck of petrol for about N7.7m.
However, the new circular by the company advised marketers
who had probably ordered three trucks at N7.5m (N171/litre old price), to merge
their orders or ask for a refund.
“Following the full deregulation of PMS, NNPC Retail has
made the following options available to help customers manage the impact of the
additional cash flow requirement: Marketers now have the option of
consolidating pre-paid self-owned tickets for fresh tickets in line with the
revised price. Interested marketers can engage their respective NRL Depot
Representative for guidance on how to initiate this option.
“Also, there is an option for cash refund. Marketers who are
interested in initiating this option should send in official request addressed
to the MD NNPC Retail. The request
should include evidence of payment and order details (RRR number, Sales
quotation number and Meter ticket number). Upon receipt of official request
together with the above supporting documents, your refund request will be made
processed,” the memo from NNPCL Retail read in part.
Oil marketers on Monday confirmed the development.
The Operations Controller, Independent Petroleum Marketers
Association of Nigeria, Mike Osatuyi, confirmed the development. He however
said it might be difficult for some marketers to raise such huge funds required
to place an order for petroleum products.
“Where do you want us to get such money from?” Osatuy asked.
“The price difference
is huge and most can’t afford it. So what we will start seeing is that instead
of ordering for one truck, marketers can now go for maybe a quarter or half
truck just like it’s being done for diesel,” he said.
“Since NNPC said we consume 66 million litres daily, we are
sure that it would drop to as low as 30 million litres soon,” Osatuyi said,
corroborating what a former Chairman of the Major Oil Marketers Association of
Nigeria, and Chief Executive Officer, 11 Plc, Tunji Oyebanji, had said last
week.
According to Oyebanji, ending fuel subsidies will stop
smuggling and bring to bear Nigeria’s true daily petrol consumption.
Oyebanji also said an increase in fuel price by the NNPCL
would see smaller downstream companies folding up, and being acquired by bigger
companies
“Removing petrol subsidies is one of the best decisions
Nigeria would ever make because smuggling would stop. This is the time we will
know the real petrol consumption of Nigeria, likewise, many smaller stations
will fold up and would get acquired by bigger ones” Oyabanji said.