Monday, October 20, 2025 - Retailers of cooking gas say the prices of the essential commodity have come down from N2,000 per kilogramme in the past three weeks, selling between N1,300 and N1,500 over the weekend.
The retailers said this is a significant improvement, as the
liquefied petroleum gas is now relatively available for retailers and
consumers.
Chairman of the Liquefied Petroleum Gas Retailers
Association of Nigeria, Ayobami Olarinoye, confirmed the development to our
correspondent.
Olarinoye said though normalcy has yet to be fully restored,
there is a difference in the prices.
“The product is gradually circulating. There is an increase
in supply. The price is dropping but not yet back to the former price. It is
now between N1,300 and N1,600, depending on the location,” Olarinoye stated.
He stated that the LPG market is not stable, expressing
optimism that things would further improve this week if the supply continued.
“The market is not yet stable, but there is considerable
improvement. Hopefully, we shall attain stability in another one week if the
supply is sustained,” he added.
Meanwhile, consumers said the gas shops in different
neighbourhoods have also reduced the prices, compared to the previous weeks.
However, Nigerians stated that they were waiting for the price to return to
N900/kg or below.
The PUNCH recalls that the prices of cooking gas rose
recently from an average of N1,000 per kilogramme to about N2,000/kg in some
locations. This followed the recent strike by the Petroleum and Natural Gas
Senior Staff Association of Nigeria during the rift between it and the Dangote
refinery.
Over two weeks after the strike was suspended, the prices of
cooking gas refused to go down while the scarcity deepened.
The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Gas),
Ekperikpe Ekpo, waded into the matter last week, promising to clamp down on
marketers hoarding or exploiting consumers.
This was even as retailers complained over the differences
between the price offered by the Dangote refinery and the prices the off-takers
sold the commodity to the market.
It could be recalled that Alhaji Aliko Dangote once
threatened to distribute cooking gas himself if the distributors did not
cooperate with him to crash the price.
Last week, Olarinoye said the Dangote refinery sold LPG at
N15.8m per 20,000 metric tonnes to off-takers and major distributors, who
resold the same volume between N18.4m and N18.5m to retailers.
Sources at the Dangote refinery told our correspondent that
“the marketers pick product from us at N715,000/MT, from N790,000/MT.”
According to them, there are 1,000 kg in one metric tonne.
“In a metric tonne, you have 1,000 kg. Marketers pick up LPG
at N715/kg from the refinery. We don’t control the retail price. According to
the Petroleum Industry Act and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum
Regulatory Authority, only the government can fix prices. We can only control
what we sell at the refinery. If they sell at N2,000/kg after buying at
N715/kg, there’s nothing we can do,” the sources said.
Earlier, the Nigerian Association of Liquefied Petroleum Gas
Marketers had alleged that retailers were to blame for the recent surge in
cooking gas prices across the country.
NALPGAM’s National President, Oladapo Olatunbosun, was said
to have attributed the price hike to gas retailers while speaking on Channels
television.
However, LPG retailers disagreed, describing Olatunbosun’s
comments as “unfair and misguided”.

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