NNPCL, DANGOTE PLAYING POLITICS, TINUBU’S ALLY

An All Progressives Congress, APC, political party chieftain and a die-hard supporter of President Bola Tinubu, Joe Igbokwe, has accused The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) and Dangote Refinery of playing politics with Nigerians over recent dramas surrounding fuel supply.

Igbokwe lamented that the more he tried to comprehend the intrigues surrounding the controversies, the more confused he became.

He disclosed this in a post on his Facebook page on Tuesday, September 17.

“What is going on? Why this hide and seek? Is NNPCL trying to regulate Dangote Refinery which is not a government Investment? What of government-owned four refineries in PH (Port Harcourt), Warri, and Kaduna that they have looted and grounded for years now?” the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain queried.

According to him,  the NNPC and NNPCL are fighting for survival having “mismanaged, looted, destroyed and plundered NNPC and NNPCL for years, they are now trying to control and regulate a private company that may have borrowed billions of hard currency to build.

“Let us stop this unnecessary debate about Dangote Refinery and NNPCL,” he cautioned.

He urged Tinubu to make a policy statement on the matter and put to rest all the arguments over the Dangote Refinery.

It will be recalled that President Tinubu had suspended subsidy on petrol on the day he took over power on May 29, 2023, causing the pump price of a litre of the product to jump by over 200 per cent, and consequently inflicting hardship on Nigerians, as prices of other commodities recorded simultaneous leap while wages of most workers stagnate.

While the NNPCL subsidised the product and sold it at its outlets across the country at N617, a few Nigerians could not endure the long queues at those stations and would rather buy from independent marketers, many of who sold the product at an average of N800 per litre.

To many citizens, the emergence of Dangote Refinery would offer hope and make the product’s price shrink, since the cost of importation would no longer be included in its price fixing. But that permutation failed to play out eventually.

Dangote Refinery and the NNPCL have been at loggerheads in recent weeks over issues in the petroleum sector.

The controversy started in July when the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) said it had not licensed the Dangote Refinery, even as marketers hoped to start getting petrol products from the refinery the following month amid fuel scarcity in the country.

The chief executive officer (CEO) of the NMDPRA, Farouk Ahmed, told journalists on Thursday, July 18, that the refinery was still at the pre-commissioning stage.

According to him, the refinery could engender energy insecurity and market monopoly in the country.

Ahmed also told journalists that the refinery produced inferior products compared with its imported counterparts.

Dangote Industries Limited (DIL) swiftly responded and dismissed Farouk’s allegations.

The company argued that its products were better than those imported by the NNPCL – the sole oil importer into the country.

It took the intervention of Tinubu, who directed the NNPCL to sell crude to Dangote Refinery and other upcoming refineries in the nation’s currency – the naira – to douse the tension created by the debacle.

The Special Adviser to the President on Information and Publicity, Bayo Onanuga, made Tinubu’s position known in a post via his official X handle on Monday, July 29.

Onanuga said the move, which is to ensure the stability of the pump price of refined fuel and the dollar-naira exchange rate, was adopted by the Federal Executive Council (FEC).

According to him, Dangote Refinery requires 15 cargoes of crude for $13.5 billion yearly, and the NNPC had committed to supply four.

With Dangote’s refinery set to debut, Nigerians hoped the price of petrol would reduce. Rather than going down, the NNPCL hiked the price a few hours before the fuel would hit fuel stations across the nation.

The NNPCL claimed it purchased the product at N897 per litre from the refinery on Sunday, September 15.

This amount is much higher than an average of N800 which the product is sold across the country.

With the new price, petrol will sell in Lagos State for N950 and N1,019 in Borno State.

Amid the stalemate and fear of worsening hardship the hike would foist on Nigerians, the  Dangote Refinery refuted the NNPCL’s claim.

The company’s chief branding and communications officer, Anthony Chiejina, made the company’s position known in a statement on Thursday, September, 15.

He said the company could not fix the petrol price and had yet to finalise pricing arrangements with the NNPCL.

The PMS market is strictly regulated, which is known to all oil marketers and stakeholders in the sector, Chiejina stated.

He urged the public to disregard the NNPCL’s claim and reassured Nigerians of the refinery’s commitment to transparency and fairness in its operations.