Fuel Price to Reflect Market Dynamics, NNPC Says
Fuel pump

Fuel Price to Reflect Market Dynamics, NNPC Says

Nigeria’s privatized state oil firm NNPC Limited has adjusted petrol prices across its fuel stations, it said on Wednesday, adding that prices would fluctuate to reflect market dynamics.

NNPC proposes hiking petrol prices to N557 per litre from N189, according to a new circular that followed President Bola Tinubu market sensitive inaugural speech on Monday.

The increase will signal an end to a fuel subsidy regime that the NNPC says costs it $867 million a month and which new Tinubu said on Monday would be scrapped.

Facing economic hardships, many Nigerians consider cheap petrol a right and the last time a government tried to remove the subsidy in 2012, it caused nationwide protests. Tinubu, then an opposition leader, opposed the removal of the subsidy.

The NNPC circular came after panic buying caused prices to jump as Nigerians rushed to fill their tanks ahead of the expected end of the subsidy that had been keeping prices low.

On Tuesday, the NNPC’s chief executive said the corporation was owed $6.1 billion in fuel subsidy payments by the federal government and that Nigeria could no longer afford to pay for the subsidies.

Fuel outlets owned by NNPC were already selling petrol for N448 a litre in some parts of Lagos, up from 185, while in Abuja it was being sold for N537.

An increase in petrol prices would increase transport costs for workers and many small businesses that rely on generators, in a country where grid electricity supply is meagre.

Rating agency Moody said Tinubu’s pledge to remove the subsidy and unify Nigeria’s multiple exchange rates was “credit positive”. But it warned of risks in the initial period, including higher inflation, weaker economic activity and more social discontent.

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