• NNPC warns depot owners against cheating
The Independent Petroleum Marketers of Association of Nigeria (IPMAN)
yesterday blamed fresh nationwide fuel scarcity on unavailability of
petrol for the marketers to load from the petrol depots.
Its Vice President, Alhaji Abubakar Dankigari, who spoke to The
Nation on telephone yesterday, added that members of the association
have 8,000 tickets pending that it has not been able to load.
He said over the past few weeks, private depots owners have been
selling petrol at a price higher than the official N77 per litre to
marketers, lamenting that the depots have all goen dry.
Meanwhile, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr Ibe
Kachikwu, has warned depot owners against selling petrol above the
approved ex-depot price of N77 per litre.
In a statement, its Group General Manager, Group Public Afdairs
Division, Mr. Ohi Alegbe yesterday said the warning came against the
backdrop of repeated complaints by marketers of sharp practices at the
depots.
The statement quoted the minister as warning that depot owners found
to be involved in selling products above the approved ex-depot prices
would be severely sanctioned.
Dankigari blamed fuel scarcity on the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC) that is responsible for the importation of 78 per
cent of the product to the country.
He said: “The issue is that even where we are loading, there is no
product. We already have more than 8,000 tickets but we have not been
able to load.
“Even the private depots that used to sell the products at a higher
rate no longer have the product to sell. So, that is the reason why you
have been seeing those queues. The NNPC is only agency of government
responsible for bringing the products into the country.”
IPMAN had in the penultimate week raised the alarm over the imminence
of another fresh round of fuel scarcity as private depot owners were
selling petrol for N97 per litre to marketers. Last week, the
association further cried out that the depot owners had increased the
price to N102 instead of N77 per litre.
This, according to Dakingari, posed a great barrier to the marketers
who avoided purchasing a product for N102 per litre and selling
In a statement, its Group General Manager, Group Public Afdairs
Division, Mr. Ohi Alegbe yesterday said the warning came against the
backdrop of repeated complaints by marketers of sharp practices at the
depots.
The statement quoted the minister as warning that depot owners found
to be involved in selling products above the approved ex-depot prices
would be severely sanctioned.
Dankigari blamed fuel scarcity on the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC) that is responsible for the importation of 78 per
cent of the product to the country.
He said: “The issue is that even where we are loading, there is no
product. We already have more than 8,000 tickets but we have not been
able to load.
“Even the private depots that used to sell the products at a higher
rate no longer have the product to sell. So, that is the reason why you
have been seeing those queues. The NNPC is only agency of government
responsible for bringing the products into the country.”
IPMAN had in the penultimate week raised the alarm over the imminence
of another fresh round of fuel scarcity as private depot owners were
selling petrol for N97 per litre to marketers. Last week, the
association further cried out that the depot owners had increased the
price to N102 instead of N77 per litre.
This, according to Dakingari, posed a great barrier to the marketers
who avoided purchasing a product for N102 per litre and selling
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