Monday, October 6, 2025 - Despite
receiving petrol at N820 per litre with no logistics costs, partners of the
Dangote Refinery have yet to reduce pump prices at their filling stations.
According to Punch, Heyden, AP, MRS and other major partners
continued to sell petrol at N865 per litre.
Apart from a few MRS outlets in Lagos that adjusted their
prices to N841 per litre, most stations maintained the previous rates. The MRS
station at Alapere experienced long queues as motorists rushed to buy petrol at
N841, while others along the same axis sold for N865 per litre.
However, at the MRS station in Olowotedo, along the
Mowe–Ibafo axis of Ogun State, petrol sold for as high as N875 per litre.
Heyden offered N863, while Ardova and others retained prices between N865 and
N870 per litre.
Recall that marketers, including Conoil, Eterna, Golden
Super, Nepal Energies, Kifayat Global Energy, and Riquest and Gas, had
partnered with the Dangote Refinery under its logistics-free fuel distribution
scheme.
The refinery had earlier announced that from Monday,
September 15, petrol prices were expected to drop following the rollout of more
than 1,000 compressed natural gas-powered trucks to enable direct fuel
distribution across the country. According to Dangote, the initiative was
designed to cut logistics costs and reduce the ex-depot price to N820 per
litre, translating into lower pump prices nationwide.
Under the new pricing framework, motorists in Lagos and
other South-Western states were expected to pay N841 per litre, while those in
Abuja, Rivers, Delta, Edo and Kwara states were projected to buy at N851 per
litre.
The adjustment was meant to take immediate effect in
selected states, with a nationwide rollout to follow as more CNG trucks were
deployed. However, nearly three weeks later, the anticipated relief has not
materialised, as most filling stations continue to sell at old rates.
Our correspondent observed several Dangote CNG trucks along
the Lagos–Ibadan Expressway, confirming the commencement of the direct,
logistics-free fuel distribution scheme.
Some marketers claimed that they had not reduced prices
because they still held old stock purchased at higher costs, saying adjustments
would be made once the new supplies reached their tanks.
However, a source at the Dangote Refinery told The PUNCH
that many of the marketers had already received new supplies and had no
justification for maintaining prices above N841 or N851 per litre, depending on
their location.
“It’s unfair to keep selling at old rates. They are
receiving the product at N820 per litre with free logistics, yet they’re still
selling higher, that’s not right,” the source, who requested anonymity, said.
The source further explained that the refinery could not
enforce pump prices.
“We can’t compel them as before. It’s purely on
recommendation, since marketers insist the law does not permit us to fix pump
prices, and NMDPRA seems to agree,” the official noted.
“Those who submitted their station lists are already getting
supplies. We would have covered more ground if not for the PENGASSAN issue, but
by this new week, we expect wider coverage. Still, marketers should understand
that Nigerians are watching and expecting new prices; that’s why you see queues
at the MRS station in Alapere,” the source added.
Meanwhile, not all stakeholders have welcomed Dangote’s
frequent price adjustments. The Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers
Association of Nigeria recently criticised the refinery’s pricing strategy,
saying the timing of its cuts often disrupts market stability.
DAPPMAN Executive Secretary, Olufemi Adewole, argued that
portraying the price reductions as patriotic gestures ignored their broader
implications.
“Claims that repeated fuel price reductions by the Dangote
Refinery are patriotic overlook their timing and market impact. These cuts are
often introduced when other importers have active cargoes at sea or in tanks,
creating price shocks that distort competition and impose financial strain on
market participants — including the refinery’s own domestic customers,” Adewole
said.
For over a year since commencing petrol production, the
Dangote Refinery has effectively taken over as the market’s price trendsetter,
displacing the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited from its traditional
role.
NNPC spokesperson Andy Odeh confirmed that the company had
not adjusted its rates.
“Our current pump price in Lagos remains N865. We have not
made any changes,” he said.
Independent marketers had previously pledged to review pump
prices once they began receiving supplies from Dangote, but as of Sunday, no
adjustments had been made.

0 Comments