Oil marketers in Nigeria have warned that the price of Premium of Motor Spirit, popularly called petrol could hit N800/litre once subsidy on PMS is removed.
The Secretary, Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, Abuja-Suleja, Mohammed Shuaibu, stated that “if the government fails to take the appropriate measures, and they say they want to remove fuel subsidy, the situation will be worse than this, the masses will suffer. How can you remove subsidy and you don’t have this product (petrol)”
He added, “If the government removes subsidy, where is the product? If you are removing subsidy, maybe by that time, the way diesel is sold at between N800 – N900/litre, we could be buying petrol at N800/litre, if not more than that.
“This is because the product will be scarce, even from the government cycle. So the government should tell Nigerians the truth about this fuel supply crisis. It is not a problem caused by marketers.”
The latest data from the state-owned firm, Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC), Nigeria spent 4.39 trillion Naira ($9.7 billion) on a petrol subsidy last year.
The figure is a far rise in petrol subsidy payments reportedly gulped over N1.15 trillion in 2021 alone,
Nigeria’s Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, recently suggested that the government should gradually withdraw subsidy on PMS, stressing that the budgetary allocation for subsidy would end in June.
Petrol stations across the country have been greeted with long queues which usually prolong into streets and major roads across the country, thus causing gridlock as it affects the flow of traffic.
Petrol stations currently sell the product for as high ₦300, almost double the official subsidised regulated price of ₦175.