Thursday, November 13, 2025 - The federal government through the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) has suspended the implementation of the 15 percent ad-valorem import duty on imported Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) and diesel.
The Authority disclosed this in a statement signed by George
Ene-lta, Director, Public Affairs Department.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu had in October this year
approved a 15 percent import policy on PMS and diesel. This development stirred
widespread concern across the oil and gas sector, with operators warning it
could raise petrol prices, worsen inflation, and increase import costs, even as
the government insists the policy aims to boost local refining and generate
revenue.
The duty, introduced as part of the Federal Government’s new
tariff framework for petroleum products, was meant to support emerging local
refineries such as the Dangote Petroleum Refinery and modular plants. The
directive was met with mixed reactions, as stakeholders expressed concerns that
the new tax could worsen inflation and push up pump prices at a time when
Nigeria’s domestic refineries are yet to attain full operational capacity.
However, in the statement released today, the NMDPRA said
that the implementation of the 15 percent ad-valorem import duty on imported
Premium Motor Spirit and Diesel is no longer in view.
He assured that there is adequate supply of petroleum
products in the country, within the acceptable national sufficiency threshold
during this peak demand period.
“There is
robust domestic supply of petroleum products (AGO, PMS, LPG etc) sourced from
both local refineries and importation to ensure timely replenishment of stocks
at storage depots and retail stations during this period.
The
Authority wishes to use this opportunity to advise against any hoarding, panic
buying or non-market reflective escalation of prices of petroleum products.
It should
also be noted that the implementation of the 15 percent ad-valorem import duty
on imported Premium Motor Spirit and Diesel is no longer in view.
“The
Authority will continue to closely monitor the supply situation and take
appropriate regulatory measures to prevent disruption of supply and
distribution of petroleum products across the country, especially during this
peak demand period,” he said.

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