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Police Patrol Gas Stations As Nigeria Gripped By Fuel Crisis. Bloomberg Newyork - Politics - Nairaland

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Police Patrol Gas Stations As Nigeria Gripped By Fuel Crisis. Bloomberg Newyork by Nobody: 8:36pm On Apr 22, 2016
Police Patrol Gas Stations as Nigeria Gripped by Fuel Crisis
David Malingha Doya
malingha
Mustapha Muhammad
musty20052004
April 22, 2016 — 12:00 AM BST Updated on April 22, 2016 — 5:11 PM BST
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Motorists queue to buy fuel in Lagos
Motorists queue to buy fuel from a gas station on a major road in Lagos. Photographer: George Osodi/Bloomberg
Fuel costing double official price, pushing up inflation rate
Shortages could further slow economy hit by low oil prices
Nigeria deployed police and soldiers to gasoline stations to maintain order as fuel shortages grip Africa’s biggest oil producer.
The most severe fuel scarcity in a year in Africa’s most populous nation has left motorists paying more than double the government’s official price for gasoline and put increasing pressure on a stagnating economy that’s been hit by tumbling oil prices. The national statistics office blames the shortages, which have been on and off since May and have peaked in the last month, for contributing to an 8 percent drop in labor productivity in the fourth quarter.
“The fuel industry is holding the whole economy to ransom,” Nema Ramkhelawan-Bhana, an analyst at Rand Merchant Bank in Johannesburg, said by phone. “Nigeria is already suffering from low oil prices, and now fuel shortages are exacerbating the problem.”

The latest fuel crisis has been worsened by central bank foreign-exchange controls that have left retailers paying higher costs to import supplies at a time when President Muhammadu Buhari’s government has removed subsidies and imposed a price cap at 87 naira a liter ($1.67 a gallon). As a result, gasoline is scarce, and the average cost on the market was 135 naira a liter in March, the highest since the country’s National Bureau of Statistics began compiling such data in June 2014.
“You can’t take away subsidies and cap,’’ Thomas Olawore, Executive Secretary of the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria, said on a phone interview from Abuja. “It’s a contradiction.”
Dollar Debt
Half of the 60-member Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association owe international gasoline suppliers $1.2 billion due to insufficient foreign-exchange sales by the central bank, the group’s executive secretary, Olufemi Adewole, said by phone Wednesday.
“Unless we have adequate FX and our refineries are functioning, there will be product scarcity,’’ he said.

The naira has been pegged at $197-199 since March 2015, causing the rationing of forex. Buhari reiterated on Friday his stance against calls to devalue the currency arguing it won’t benefit ordinary Nigerians. “I’m still asking to be convinced today on the benefits of devaluation,” he was quoted in a statement e-mailed from his office.
The shortages are undermining Buhari’s bid to kick-start the oil-dependent economy with a record 6.1 trillion-naira budget. Growth is expected to slow to 2.3 percent this year from a 16-year low of 2.8 percent in 2015, according to the International Monetary Fund.
“The fuel shortage has reached levels where people are either having to temporarily close down their offices or to reduce their working hours,” Manji Cheto, an analyst at Teneo Intelligence in London, said in e-mailed responses to questions. “The effect of this on economic activities is obviously negative; the manufacturing sector, which has already taken a major hit in the last quarter, remains quite vulnerable.”
Drivers in Kano, the main city in the north, have been spending entire days in lines stretching a mile, and in Abuja, the capital, police have been deployed to reduce chaos around filling stations.
Law and Order
“The security people you see at filling stations are there to keep law and order,” Nigerian National Petroleum Corp. spokesman Garba Deen Muhammad said by phone on Tuesday.
In northeastern Adamawa state, gasoline sold for as much as 300 naira a liter earlier in the month, pushing up an inflation rate that reached an almost four-year high of 12.8 percent in March.

While Nigeria is pumping more than 1.8 million barrels of oil per day, the West African nation doesn’t have adequate refining capacity and imports at least 70 percent of demand. On April 19, Buhari’s administration invited tenders to rehabilitate and operate its four refineries, and build new ones as part of a long-term plan to reduce fuel imports.
NNPC spokesman Muhammad said fuel supplies were boosted this week. “We should return to normal in a few weeks,” he said.
In the meantime, the state minister for petroleum resources, Ibe Kachikwu, said he asked international energy companies including Total SA, Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc. to provide foreign currency to retailers to enable them to import more.
“They are in effect asking companies to subsidize them,” John Ashbourne, an economist at London-based Capital Economics Ltd., said by phone. “I don’t see how that will work.”
Re: Police Patrol Gas Stations As Nigeria Gripped By Fuel Crisis. Bloomberg Newyork by Nobody: 8:39pm On Apr 22, 2016
In the meantime, the state minister for petroleum resources, Ibe Kachikwu, said he asked international energy companies including Total SA, Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc. to provide foreign currency to retailers to enable them to import more.
“They are in effect asking companies to subsidize them,” John Ashbourne, an economist at London-based Capital Economics Ltd., said by phone. “I don’t see how that will work.”


I am intrigued by the last paragraph in that article
Re: Police Patrol Gas Stations As Nigeria Gripped By Fuel Crisis. Bloomberg Newyork by DickDastardly(m): 8:40pm On Apr 22, 2016
Buhari sef angry
Re: Police Patrol Gas Stations As Nigeria Gripped By Fuel Crisis. Bloomberg Newyork by Nobody: 8:45pm On Apr 22, 2016
S6un:
In the meantime, the state minister for petroleum resources, Ibe Kachikwu, said he asked international energy companies including Total SA, Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc. to provide foreign currency to retailers to enable them to import more.
“They are in effect asking companies to subsidize them,” John Ashbourne, an economist at London-based Capital Economics Ltd., said by phone. “I don’t see how that will work.”


I am intrigued by the last paragraph in that article

This to me is the hallmark of a failed state, essentially the government wants foreign companies to do their job for them. Fascinating, unbelievable. wow
Re: Police Patrol Gas Stations As Nigeria Gripped By Fuel Crisis. Bloomberg Newyork by Bigcake: 8:52pm On Apr 22, 2016
Do we still have Nigeria Labour Congress in this country? what about Trade Union Congress? Am calling for " occupy Naija" protest all over the country.. The past regime has nothing to do with this mess we are facing. i cant take this anymore. Nonsense policy. I dont give a flying fvck about who comes after me.






Thunder will fire those useless corpers in the streets of Abuja who were paid to protest against corruption, when the main thing killing Nigerians and increasing their suffering is fuel. i weep for those useless politically blinded hungry vagabonds called corpers.
Re: Police Patrol Gas Stations As Nigeria Gripped By Fuel Crisis. Bloomberg Newyork by Khd95(m): 8:56pm On Apr 22, 2016
Sai babagrin
Re: Police Patrol Gas Stations As Nigeria Gripped By Fuel Crisis. Bloomberg Newyork by Nobody: 9:30pm On Apr 22, 2016

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