Fuel subsidy removal: N647m accrues as daily savings

Dr Ibe Kachikwu, GMD, NNPC

…PPPRA yet to restore kerosene pricing template

Nigeria is saving N647.2 million daily from the suspension of subsidy payment on Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), also known as petrol as at Wednesday.

Particularly, at the current price of N86.50 per litre in petrol stations across the country, the country is making an extra N16.18 per litre.

The Federal Government has said that this extra savings would be kept in an escrow account to serve as a cushion in case of eventuality, such as if the price of crude oil rebounds, leading to an increase in the selling price of PMS.

Filling the tank at black market

The savings is partly due to the continuous decline in the price of crude oil in the international market, which dragged the open market price of petrol to N70.32 per litre. The amount the country is saving is based on 40 million litres average daily consumption of PMS by Nigerians as declared by the Federal Government.

Since the announcement and commencement of the price modulation regime by the Federal Government, the open market price of PMS had fluctuated between N4 and N12 per litre before rising to its current level.

Data obtained from the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) in its pricing template for PMS for February 9, 2016, revealed that at a retail price of N86.50 per litre as approved by the Federal Government, the country is saving N16.18 per litre of the product.

The PPPRA put the landing cost of the product at N56.02 per litre, composed of Cost plus Freight — N51.19 per litre; Lightering Expenses — N2.02; NPA Financing — N0.15, Jetty Throughput Charge — N0.60 and Storage Charge — N2.00 per litre.

In addition, total margins stood at N14.30 per litre, composed of Retailers, Transporters and Dealers margins of N5, N3.05 and N1.95 per litre respectively, while Bridging Fund, Marine Transport Average and Admin Charge stood at N4, N0.15, and N0.15 per litre respectively.

PPPRA put the total cost of the product, which is the expected open market price at N70.32 per litre and the Ex-depot price, which is the price at which petrol station owners buy from depot, at N76.50 per litre.

Meanwhile, PPPRA is yet to resume the publication of the pricing template for kerosene, almost a month after reports that the Federal Government had discontinued subsidy on kerosene, as it hiked the price of the product to N83 per litre.

On January 24, 2016, PPPRA published the revised pricing template for kerosene, where it hiked the price of the product to N83 per litre.

Two days later, the agency yanked off the kerosene pricing template from its website and has since failed to restore the template.

In the template last seen on the PPPRA’s website, it was revealed that at N83 per litre, the Federal Government is making a gain of N10.72 for every litre, as it puts the Expected Open Market Price, which is the Landing Cost plus Total Margins at N72.28 per litre.

The expected open market price is the prevailing open market rate for the product in Nigeria, after taking certain costs into consideration.

Giving a breakdown of the price of kerosene, the PPPRA template put the Landing Cost of the product at N57.98 per litre, while the total margin due for middlemen was put at N14.30.

Further breakdown of the total margins showed that retailers’ margin (per litre) was put at N5; Transporters, N3.05; Dealers, N1.95; Bridging fund, N5.85; Marine Transport Average, N0.15 and Admin Charges, N0.15.

PPPRA further put the official ex-depot price, which is the price depot owners would sell to marketers at N68.70 per litre, official ex-depot price for collection, N73 per litre while ex-coastal price is N68.02 per litre.
-Vanguard

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