The PPPRA is the government agency that regulates the prices of
petroleum products in the country and its template has always offered
insights into how the pricing of these products are determined by the
regulators.
As of December 28 last year, the official pricing
template for petrol by the PPPRA showed that the Federal Government
subsidised the product by N6.45 per litre. The Expected Open Market
Price at that time was N93.45, which was N6.45 higher than the then
retail price of N87 per litre.
On the revised template, the
Estimated Open Market Price set by the regulator is now N84.78 for NNPC
fuel stations and N85.1 for stations run by other oil marketer
companies.
The EOMP is the summation of the landing cost of
petrol and subtotal margins. Such margins include transporter’s cost,
dealer’s charge, bridging fund, administrative charge, etc. Our
correspondent said that the EOMP, therefore, is the true cost of the
product.
Before the release of the revised template, the EOMP was
usually higher than the retail/pump price of petrol at filling
stations. The difference between the retail price and the EOMP was what
the Federal Government paid as subsidy to oil marketers.
However,
the new EOMP is lower than the retail price of N86.5, which was set by
the Federal Government as the amount at which petrol should be sold
nationwide. The implication is that Nigerians are paying an extra N1.4
for the commodity whenever they buy PMS at non-NNPC run petrol stations
and N1.22 extra for every litre of petrol bought at NNPC-run filling
stations.
On the extra amount paid by consumers for the
commodity, the Group General Manager, Corporate Planning and Strategy,
NNPC, Mr. Bello Rabiu, while explaining the template, told our
correspondent that the negative subsidy would be remitted to the
Petroleum Support Fund in line with the PPPRA guidelines.
He
said, “The savings under such a regime could be domiciled in the PSF as a
buffer to fund future subsidy (if any) that may arise during high oil
price regime or invested by the industry in supply and distribution
efficiency improvement projects such as decongestion of Apapa area,
Single Point Monitoring in Port Harcourt and Warri, complimentary rail
services, inland waterways, etc.”
The PPPRA, after getting
approval from the Federal Government, had announced last Tuesday that
retail filling stations belonging to the NNPC would from Friday, January
1, 2016 sell petrol at N86 per litre, while other oil marketers would
sell the commodity at N86.5 per litre.
The Executive Secretary,
PPPRA, Mr. Farouk Ahmed, while announcing the new price of PMS in Abuja,
had told journalists on Tuesday that the reduction in the price of the
commodity was due to the implementation of the revised components of the
petroleum products pricing template for PMS and House Hold Kerosene.
He
said the template would be reviewed on a quarterly basis as it was
geared towards ensuring an efficient and market-driven price that would
reflect current realities.
Ahmed had said, “Since 2007, while
crude oil price had been moving up and down, the template has remained
the same. This made it necessary for us to introduce a mechanism whereby
the template would be sensitive to the price of crude oil.
“However,
the template is not static, as there would be a quarterly review and if
there is any major shift, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources
would be expected to call for a review, either upwards or downwards. If
there is no major shift, the price would continue from January to March
2016. In addition, there would be a Product Pricing Advisory Committee
that would be set up to advice the PPPRA concerning movements in the
price of crude oil.”
On why the NNPC sold at a lower price than
other oil marketers, Ahmed explained that it was due to the fact that it
was cheaper for the corporation to import products, compared to the
independent and major oil marketers.
Some oil marketers
had told our correspondent that although it was possible to sell PMS at a
“reduced price”, Nigerians might not be ready to absorb future
fluctuations or modulations in the pump price of petrol.
The
Corporate Affairs Manager, NIPCO PLC, an oil marketing firm, Mr. Lawal
Taofeeq, said, “It is possible, but the issue that government needs to
understand is that, should there be fluctuation in price, are Nigerians
ready to absorb it? If the price of crude oil should go up again, will
Nigerians be ready to pay the resultant increased cost for petrol? Thus,
there is need for adequate education in this matter.”
The
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, on December
27 last year, had told journalists in Kaduna that the government was
currently not paying subsidy on petrol.
“Today, there is no
subsidy; we are selling the product at N87; in January, we will look at
what the trend is, we will announce (a new) price if that is less than
N87; we will announce it and if it is more than that, we will have to
announce it,” the minister, who also doubles as the Group Managing
Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, had said.
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