Tuesday, April 1, 2025 - The national president of the Petroleum Retailers Outlets Owners Association of Nigeria, Billy Gillis-Harry, has explained why fuel prices may hit above N1,000 per litre
According to him, Nigerians will have to buy petrol at N1,000
per litre in the coming days based on the outcome of the Naira-for-crude deal
discussion between Dangote Refinery and the Nigerian Government through
Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited.
This comes after the recent hike in petrol prices to
between N930 and N960 per litre from N860 and N880 in Dangote Refinery’s
partners, MRS filling stations, and others. Explaining the recent petrol price
increment he said;
You can’t blame anyone. It’s the
deregulation of the downstream sector. It’s the economic and environmental
factors. That’s what we really need.
Why are people blaming Dangote
Refinery or the federal government? Has anybody confirmed that the government
has stopped the Naira-for-crude deal? He told Daily Post.
So, that is why we feel that nobody
should jump into conclusion to say the deal has been stopped. And therefore,
based on that, after all, between that time and today, NNPC was still supplying
crude in Nigeria and Sudan. So, for now, you can’t conclude that it is because
of that deal that we are in this current quagmire of pricing. PETROAN took the
matter frontally with the Honourable Minister of Petroleum.
And we were clearly explained that
there are processes that are going on to review what has been done in the last
180 days, which ended today. And based on what we found out, the way forward
was not in any way to stop. The way forward is not in any way to stop the
Naira-for-crude deal.
So, until that decision is made and
pronounced, we cannot say that that has been stopped. And so, that cannot be
the reason.
And that is why we are careful that
nobody should blackmail the system. And any information that’s coming out
should have empirical evidence of reality. So, if I, as a businessman,
determine that there are speculations for my enterprise and I want to take
certain precautionary decisions, I’m free to do so because it’s my business.
And the Dangote Refinery business is
primarily a private business that is operating in a free trade zone. So, they
have a right to make decisions in the way that they like. Those decisions, in
our opinion, should suit how the pricing of the market will be, being that it
is the biggest refinery in Africa.
And then, like I said, there will be
economic and environmental factors that will determine prices of products,
goods, or services. So, if, for any reason, something has changed and that will
respond to the price dynamics of demand and supply, so will it be. So, for me,
I will blame it on the changes that are experienced in the economic price, I
mean, the economic and environmental factors. That will be the reason for that.
And I don’t think I want to hold anyone accountable specifically for that.
So, if other refineries are also
anticipating selling their products in dollars, then we would have dollarized
the Nigerian economy, which would be a defeat for us because the naira would be
crushed.
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