• Friday, April 26, 2024
businessday logo

BusinessDay

Without FG’s pricing template, filling stations jack petrol prices to N148 across major cities

Filling stations across major cities in Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt are selling petrol at N148 per litre on Thursday even as the the government agency responsible for fixing prices is yet to announce the pricing template for August.

The Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) has not been able to adjust the price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), or petrol, because it is still working on the new template, according to a source close to the agency.

The Petroleum Price Marketing Corporation (PPMC) had issued a memo on Wednesday to oil marketers instructing them that the landing cost of petrol at ex-coastal transfer point is N113.70 per litre, while ex-depot price will be N138.62 per litre.

Relying on this guidance, filling stations began adjusting their pump price. On the spot assessment by our correspondent in Abuja at Eterna and Mobil filling station located along Kubwa expressway a satellite town at the federal capital Territory showed the retail outlets have starter selling at N148 naira respectively.

READ ALSO: NNPC wants to become an integrated energy company, what does it really mean?

At NIPCO filling stations along Lugbe expressway in the outskirts of Abuja city centre, the filling station has commenced sales at N148 naira per litre of fuel.

Findings show further price variation aT NIPCO in Bwari Area council sells N149 per litre, while Oando filling station in Bwari Area Council sells N148 per litre.

Similarly, several petrol retail outlets in Lagos are selling petrol around N148 per litre retail outlets visited in Port Harcourt in Rivers state indicate that some are even selling as high as N150 per litre

Responding to this development, Adetunji Oyebanji, president of Major Oil marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN) told BusinessDay that the marketers would be adjusting to ex-depot price, according to their various locations and market outlook.

“First, if it is the marketers that determine the price, the reaction is not going to be the same in terms of price adjustments, unlike when there is an announcement on a fixed price by PPPRA. When the marketers determine the price, the prices vary according to their respective market conditions.

“Everybody’s situation differs, in respect to what they have in their tanks, respective market outlook and dominance within a particular district among others. This is exactly what is happening.

He said that some marketers have not adjusted their prices as some could still be waiting for PPPRA to give them a price band and what price that must not be exceeded.

“Anybody who is still selling at N143, the ex-depot price now has gone up from N133 to N138.So those people selling at that knows they’re losing N5 from every litre sold.

“You will see more of marketers determining the price if there is no fixed price from PPPRA since the indicators are already there from the ex-depot price by PPMC.

“Reactions won’t be the same in terms of pricing. If the government did not issue the final price since the marketers would determine the price depending on market strategy of marketers.

“You could see price variations as long as the government did not issue the final price, and there may not be a sharp rise in price since the marketers are the once determining the actual price for now since the ex-depot price is already out from the PPMC.

He noted that PPMC has issued the ex-depot price adding that the price guide is already there for the marketers to follow.

In July, the agency fixed the ex-depot price range at between N109.78 and N111.78 per litre. The PPPRA announced a retail petrol price band of N140.80 and N143.80 per litre price, an increase of about N31 per litre.

Ex-depot price is the amount depot owners and marketers are allowed to pay to lift products from NNPC depots for distribution to retail outlets across the country.