The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) has said the petroleum industry is flawed with over-regulation and therefore lacks clarity in its operations which hampers investments, job creation and growth in the sector.
LCCI also flayed the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) for fighting the symptoms of the sector, rather than addressing its fundamental diseases.
Mr. Muda Yusuf, Director General of LCCI, lamented in a statement that the “current model of managing the downstream petroleum sector is not sustainable. It is at variance with the present administration’s vision to diversify the economy and create jobs. It perpetuates the phenomenon of rent economy and detrimental to economic competition. It is important to stress that the citizens are the ultimate beneficiaries of a competitive market environment.”
Yusuf argued that the weak compliance with the regulated price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) in parts of the country was largely a symptom of much deeper problems and distortions in the petroleum products supply chain.
He noted: “We have concerns over lack of clarity on the deregulation and liberalization of the sector, as the lacuna policy has put many investments in the sector at risk; while many other investment decisions have been put on hold.
“The concentration of petroleum products supply in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) remains a major cause for concern. The arrangement is an inherent entrenchment of the dominance of the NNPC to the detriment of private investors in the sector.”
On the way forward for the industry, Yusuf called on the Federal Government to liberalise the downstream petroleum sector for unfettered private sector participation and investment.
According to him, “There should be a level playing field for all operators, including the NNPC. This would put an end to the perennial problem of fuel scarcity in the country and the hardships suffered by citizens to fuel scarcity.
“It will also attract more investment, generate more jobs and reduce the pressure on the country’s foreign reserves. It should not be an operator and still have regulatory powers, but have a model that would allow for a level playing field for all operators including the NNPC should be adopted.”
He added that the roles of the DPR and the Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) need to be better defined.
-Vanguard