Full deregulation’ll soon happen – Oil marketers
Just as they predicted two weeks ago
that the Federal Government would raise the pump price of Premium Motor
Spirit, which eventually happened, oil marketers have stated that the
country may be heading for a total deregulation of its downstream oil
sector.
About two weeks ago,the Federal Government might increase petrol
price based on the statements and calculations of oil marketers at the
time.
A few days after the report, the Federal
Government announced an increase in the pump price of petrol from
between N86 and N86.5 per litre to between N135 and N145 per litre,
ushering in a price regime that was described by marketers as a partial
deregulation of the downstream oil sector.
Explaining that the current petrol price
regime was a sign that the sector might be fully deregulated in the
near future, the Executive Secretary, Major Oil Marketers Association of
Nigeria, Mr. Obafemi Olawore, said, “What we have now is a step towards
deregulation. Deregulation is actually the end point; we are in the
process and we will get there.”
Olawore, who spoke as a guest during a
television programme monitored by our correspondent in Abuja, stated
that the gains of a fully deregulated oil sector could not be
over-emphasised.
On the difference between what currently
obtains in the industry and what will happen when it becomes totally
deregulated, he said, “When we get to deregulation, you will have the
refining process included. As it is now, we are looking at only the
petrol import side. Deregulation will have to start from the point of
refining.”
The MOMAN secretary stated that
Nigeria’s oil industry was deregulated in the past, noting that during
the period, dealers were made to buy crude, take it to the refineries
and pay refining fees.
He explained, “Once that happens, you
take your refined products and then you look at your own cost, not the
other person’s cost, and you fix a price. That was why you could get a
price in Lagos that was different from the one in Ibadan, and that of
Ibadan was different from Port Harcourt.”
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