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Marketers say petrol import above FX N305/$1 not viable

BusinessDay
4 Min Read
Petrol queues may soon return to the country following claims by oil marketers that they can no longer import premium motor spirit (petrol) because the falling rate of the naira against the US dollar ($1 to N420) makes it unviable to do so.
This would then leave the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) with the sole responsibility of importing petrol. Meanwhile, experts say the NNPC does not have the capacity to fulfil that function by itself.
There is  however a window of hope, as Ibe Kachiukwu, minister of state for Petroleum, is said to have pledged to the marketers that he would make a case for the CBN to sell dollars to them at the rate of N305 because of the sensitivity of their function. The interbank dollar exchange rate for last week was N308.
Before this  development, the oil marketers were  struggling  to  source  for   foreign exchange from the autonomous and black markets, to bring in  petrol  under an arreangement in which the NNPC was allocating foreign exchange to them.
Attempts by the NNPC in the past  to be  the  sole  importer of petrol had resulted  in     acute   scarcity , with  long queues at  filling stations.
Olufemi Adewole, execuitive secretary of the  Depots and Petroleum Products Marketers Association of Nigeria (DAPPMA) told BusinessDay that any marketer who buys petrol from the international market at a price above N305 to $1 might not get buyers because those terms would mean selling at a loss.
While  Olufemi Olawore,  executive   secretary of the  Major Oil  marketers Association Of Nigeria (MOMAN) confirmed to BusinesDay the minister’s resolve to ensure that marketers get a fair deal  from the CBN to ensure that they import fuel.
Some of the operators who spoke to BusinessDay said with the black market exchange rate at N420 to a $1, it is  impossible for them to import the product  and sell at N145 per litre.
He said the only condition under which they can bring in the product is if they are able to get foreign exchange at  N305 to $1 which the CBN is said  to be  considering, following the intervention of Kachiukwu.
Some of the operators said International Oil Companies (IOCs) had refused  to sell  dollars to them at the interbank rate and so they cannot  continue to import.
BusinessDay had earlier reported that there was  apprehension in the downstream subsector of the petroleum industry with the new arrangement in which the NNPC  assumed full control of allocating foreign exchange to oil marketers for importation of Premium Motor Spirit [PMS).
According to industry sources, the NNPC assumed the role of allocating forex to the marketers on paper and  requested  IOCs to fund them.
Most times however, the  rate used by the IOCs is  higher than the interbank  rate and  this  leads  to  delays  in  accessing  the  forex  for  importation  of petrol.
There was the fear then, that the new arrangement would cause the oil marketers  undue delays in bringing the product to the market ,thereby creating a gap which could result in fuel scarcity in the nearest future.
Olusola Bello
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