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Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive - Business (4) - Nairaland

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Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by ceejayluv(m): 6:50am On Jun 09
PulaPower:
It’s not lacking gas..

This is the problem.. Financial Vanguard findings showed that some producers are focused on exporting the product rather than meeting domestic demand.

Some producers prefer to export gas, rather than sell here in Nigeria, because of more profit..
Na to ban or limit exportation of LPG then.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by PulaPower: 7:03am On Jun 09
ceejayluv:
Na to ban or limit exportation of LPG then.
Naso..

Make we limit ham jare..
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Bobodee09: 7:10am On Jun 09
CJStarz:
In Nigeria, anything that goes up never comes down
Rice is now 46k per bag..........never comes downhuh
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by TheMensch(m): 7:11am On Jun 09
COEMMA:
Doesn't the force of gravity work in Nigeria?
Does it? What commodity price has come down before after it went up that you have witnessed in this country?
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by TheMensch(m): 7:11am On Jun 09
Bobodee09:
Rice is now 46k per bag..........never comes downhuh
Say this again after election.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by udemzyudex(m): 7:14am On Jun 09
You have a useless government, simple.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by xxxx999jon: 7:14am On Jun 09
Gotocourt:
Israel vs Iran war. Qatar and Saudi LPG is amongst top suppliers and it has been attacked while shipping lanes is blocked. Export is more profitable for Bonny and Dangote than local demands 🤷🏿.
thank you, was about to say the report is just big BS, the main reason for the sharp increase is the usa/isreal vs Iran war, Gas prices in Europe and most Asian countries as also risen sharply.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Bobodee09: 7:16am On Jun 09
TheMensch:
Say this again after election.
😆................the ban on foreign rice have being lifted since 2024 that why is now cheaper is cos of any elections.


Some of you just always want things to be bad.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Omalicious1: 7:17am On Jun 09
Bobloco:
•As domestic demand outstrips supply

•Producers stick to export market

•Dealers give catalogue of constraints

•Outlook remains uncertain —Industry Experts



Despite holding Africa’s largest proven gas reserves and recording rising gas production, household and industrial consumers are now faced with significant shortages of Liquefied Petroleum Gas, LPG, also known as cooking gas.

The development is also putting pressures on retail prices of the product.

Financial Vanguard findings showed that some producers are focused on exporting the product rather than meeting domestic demand.

Data obtained from the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, NUPRC, showed that 62 per cent of the total gas output in the first two months of this year was exported, leaving only 38 per cent for domestic market.

Industry analysts said the lopsided supply, which had been in place during the years most Nigerians were not using gas for cooking, can no longer continue, adding that the supply structure was now destabilising domestic market.

Rising demand overshoots domestic supply


Financial Vanguard findings showed that demand has continued to outpace supply, according to the latest industry report, titled ”Nigeria LPG Production & Supply Matrix (2023-2026)”.

According to the report, estimated national consumption of cooking gas increased by 20 per cent to 1.8 million metric tonnes in 2026 from 1.5 million metric tonnes in 2023, while estimated national supply rose to between 1.55 million metric tonnes and 1.65 million metric tonnes in 2026.

This shortage is coming against the backdrop of increased production arising from the entry of Dangote Refinery into the supply end.

The report stated further: “The Nigerian LPG market has undergone a major structural transformation between 2023 and 2026. Historically dominated by imports and Nigeria LNG Limited, the market is increasingly being supplied by domestic gas-processing plants and refineries, particularly Dangote Petroleum Refinery, inland gas processors and NNPCL-linked facilities.”

The figures indicate that demand growth is outpacing supply expansion, despite rising domestic production and increased investment by major operators.

As a result of this supply-demand gap, retail prices in many parts of the country are now between N1,700 and N2,000 per kilogramme, up by over 80 per cent from average N1,100 in the first quarter of this year.

The dealers are saying the increases would continue in the months ahead as key problems cannot be resolved in short term.

Catalogue of constraints

The report warned that “cylinder penetration remains low. Distribution infrastructure remains inadequate. Marine terminal bottlenecks persist. Trucking costs significantly affect final retail prices. Exchange-rate volatility still influences imported LPG pricing.”

Experts give further insight

Despite the efforts of domestic suppliers, a review of reports by the NUPRC and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, NMDPRA, showed that supply remains hindered by poor gas infrastructure, export priority over domestic supply, weak domestic gas pricing frameworks, insecurity and pipeline vandalism, inadequate investment, rising demand, foreign exchange volatility, limited storage capacity, regulatory inconsistencies and continued gas flaring.

An industry leader who pleaded anonymity, said: “Nigeria lacks adequate gas gathering, processing, storage and transmission infrastructure needed to move gas efficiently from production fields to consumers.

“This means that large volumes of gas produced in remote oil fields cannot be evacuated due to insufficient pipelines, processing plants and distribution networks.

“Many producers prefer exporting gas through LNG projects because export markets offer more attractive pricing and stable foreign exchange earnings than the domestic market. As a result, domestic consumers often struggle to access sufficient supply.

“Persistent crude oil theft, vandalism and insecurity in the Niger Delta continue to disrupt gas production and transportation. Attacks on pipelines and related facilities often force operators to shut down production, thereby reducing supply to domestic users.

“The gas sector requires billions of dollars in long-term investment, but uncertainty in policy implementation, regulatory bottlenecks and foreign exchange challenges have slowed capital inflows. Many critical gas projects have suffered delays or remain undeveloped.

“Domestic demand for LPG and natural gas has risen significantly due to population growth, urbanisation and government campaigns encouraging households to shift from firewood and kerosene to cleaner fuels. However, supply expansion has not kept pace with increasing demand.

“The depreciation of the naira has sharply increased the cost of imported LPG and gas-related equipment. Since Nigeria still imports a portion of its LPG requirements, exchange-rate instability directly affects pricing and availability.

“Nigeria’s LPG storage capacity remains inadequate compared to growing consumption levels. Insufficient coastal and inland storage facilities create supply disruptions whenever there are logistics delays, import challenges or production interruptions.

“Frequent policy changes, multiple regulatory agencies and implementation delays continue to create uncertainty in the sector. Operators say inconsistent fiscal terms and unclear regulatory frameworks discourage long-term planning and investment.”

He further stated that despite repeated commitments to end gas flaring, Nigeria still flares significant volumes of associated gas that could have been processed for domestic consumption.

Untold hardship for households, businesses

In their joint response, Barrister Edu Inyang, National President, Nigerian Association of Liquefied Petroleum Gas Marketers (NALPGMA), and Bassey Essien, Executive Secretary of the association, said: “This sad situation has brought untold hardship to millions of Nigerian households, small businesses, food vendors and low-income families who rely on LPG for daily cooking and livelihood.

“It is worrisome that the current situation is eroding the substantial progress made by the government in promoting clean energy usage in the country.

“Our members across the country face challenges sourcing LPG due to persistent supply shortages, high depot prices, logistics bottlenecks and rising operational costs.

“We observe that where the product is available, it is sold at rates far beyond the reach of average Nigerians.

“The current crisis is undermining years of progress achieved through federal government policies, public-private investments and awareness campaigns aimed at deepening LPG penetration and promoting clean cooking energy as a safer alternative to kerosene, charcoal and firewood in Nigeria.

“Many families are reverting to firewood and charcoal, despite the serious implications for public health, environmental degradation and deforestation.

“If urgent and coordinated action is not taken immediately, the current crisis could worsen food inflation, trigger job losses, reduce investor confidence and undermine Nigeria’s clean energy and climate commitments.”

They also called on “the Federal Government, the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, NMDPRA, NNPC Ltd, domestic producers, terminal operators, international suppliers and all critical stakeholders in the LPG value chain to take urgent and coordinated steps to stabilise the market before the situation deteriorates further.”

Outlook remains uncertain

In an interview with Financial Vanguard, the National President of the Oil and Gas Service Providers Association of Nigeria, OGSPAN, Mazi Colman Obasi, said: “The outlook is not bright in the short and medium term for several reasons.

”First, the problems, especially poor infrastructure and limited investment, cannot be addressed easily. Second, they require huge capital and much longer timeframes to resolve.

“Other issues such as insecurity and pipeline vandalism, foreign exchange volatility, limited storage capacity, regulatory inconsistencies and continued gas flaring also require resilience, commitment and long-term policy consistency.”

Another industry expert warned that unless Nigeria aggressively addressed infrastructure deficits, improved domestic supply incentives and strengthened investment conditions, the country might continue to experience gas shortages, despite its enormous reserves and production potential.

He said: “The combined contribution of NLNG, Dangote, Kwale Hydrocarbon, NPDC Ologbo, Pan Ocean, Seplat, PNG Gas, Greenville and other processors has significantly boosted Nigeria’s cooking gas output.

“Nigeria now has the technical capacity to become largely self-sufficient in LPG supply, but additional gas-processing projects must be brought on stream, domestic gas infrastructure must be expanded, more storage terminals must be commissioned and the nation’s LPG adoption policies must be sustained.”

Analysts warned that unless Nigeria rapidly expanded gas-processing infrastructure, storage capacity and domestic supply incentives, the country might remain trapped in cooking gas poverty, despite its enormous gas wealth.

Data obtained from the National Bureau of Statistics indicated that the price of cooking gas rose by 335 per cent to N1,741 per kilogramme in 2026 from N400 per kilogramme in 2016, driven by limited supply and other market forces.

A breakdown showed that the price of the product increased to N500 per kilogramme in 2017 from N400 per kilogramme in 2016.

The data also showed that the price further rose to N600, N680, N800, N950, N900, N1,000, N1,450, N1,630 and N1,741 per kilogramme in 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025 and 2026, respectively


https://www.vanguardngr.com/2026/06/why-cooking-gas-will-remain-scarce-expensive-2/
But they don't experience difficulties in exporting, its only when they want to supply internally, they start experiencing bottlenecks and poor infrastructure...A restaurant owner that allows her children go to bed hungry. Smh
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by seanery: 7:45am On Jun 09
TINUBUU NO GO PAI WELL.
HIN OLD AGE GO BRING DISGRACE TO HIM AND HIS FAMILY
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by BrickandLace(f): 7:46am On Jun 09
CodeTemplar:
A nation building pipeline to europe is lacking gas.
Nigeria is not a nation.
As you rightly pointed out.
We are just living in a corporation.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Godfullsam(m): 7:48am On Jun 09
Zico5:
Tinubu as well look away. If the masses can die, so be it. God is waiting, we are getting ready. Before you nail me, I'm a yoruba man from osun state. Say no to bad government.
Who cares about your tribe and the state you came from?

...and by the way, no body is going to nail you because you have already nailed yourself with hatred and tribalism.

The article is self explanatory and expository but you failed to read and just into conclusion by heaping blame on tinubu.

I am equally not a fan of balablu. Ayam an unrepentant supporter of Sowore grin. But I will not blame balablu for the high cost of gas ⛽.

You don't have to blame the old man for everything.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by BrickandLace(f): 7:49am On Jun 09
Omalicious1:
But they don't experience difficulties in exporting, its only when they want to supply internally, they start experiencing bottlenecks and poor infrastructure...A restaurant owner that allows her children go to bed hungry. Smh
It's a shame. So called Nigerian billionaires in every sector are sociopaths.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by themanderon: 7:49am On Jun 09
KillahPriest:
"...Industry analysts said the lopsided supply, which had been in place during the years most Nigerians were not using gas for cooking, can no longer continue..."

BULLSHXXT

This looks more like it

"...Data obtained from the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, NUPRC, showed that 62 per cent of the total gas output in the first two months of this year was exported, leaving only 38 per cent for domestic market..."

Economic sabotage if I may say, the local market must as a matter of policy be serviced first of all before international market so, what's going on ? We export out then still import at considerable cost to make up shortfalls. Weird country cool
You see this country? You can never understand it. Our government has virtually sold us away to some unseen forces making a kill from us by making things extremely hard for the average Nigerian.
We are virtually helpless in all aspects because they know the perpetually suffering and smiling Nigerian will adapt to unfortunate situations.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by WriterX(m): 8:02am On Jun 09
Problem is simple, Gas is been sold out side the shores of Nigeria and there is not enough left for Those within the country at the moment. I am guessing Iran and Israel war is to be blamed.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Glithronix: 8:25am On Jun 09
Prices of foods in eateries and mama puts to increase in coming days.

Eedris Abdulkareem has always been right about this country.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by 3kay945(m): 8:44am On Jun 09
Apcshit:
I hate long write ups
Thunder fire OP
grin cheesy
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by MrSly(m): 8:47am On Jun 09
TheMensch:
Una don come to explain and defend rubbish. Why is demand for gas more than supply? Crude don finish abi they don bomb the refineries? Una just wan increase the price to gain more profit. Make una leave all these plenty talk.
Thanknyii for that clarity of mind. They thought everyone is dumb and blind.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Omalicious1: 8:48am On Jun 09
BrickandLace:
It's a shame. So called Nigerian billionaires in every sector are sociopaths.
What a sad reality
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Ishilove: 8:50am On Jun 09
kaywhy09:
Summarily, no more cheap gas right?
Right
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by samuelson06(m): 8:51am On Jun 09
PulaPower:
It’s not lacking gas..

This is the problem.. Financial Vanguard findings showed that some producers are focused on exporting the product rather than meeting domestic demand.

Some producers prefer to export gas, rather than sell here in Nigeria, because of more profit..
Who permits them? What right do they have to refine the country's natural resources and export them instead of selling them to the country's citizens? Why should they be so greedy? Why is Nigeria government so greedy and wicked?
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by 3kay945(m): 8:52am On Jun 09
Kingrshd3:
People that are educated with master's degree will still absie the president as if he was the one that didn't lease it to the masses from aso rock
You with O'Level or PhD should think deeply before defending certain matters.

The masses will surely challenge and abuse the government when basic needs such as Petrol, Kerosene and Gas are too expensive for them, bearing in mind the national minimum wage o.

So, think about it and ask yourself if you really have sense.

Yes! Offence intended.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Honestey: 9:17am On Jun 09
Any reason why it will come down and cheap again or NLC should call for 300k minimum wage already?
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Lamanii22(f): 10:24am On Jun 09
TheMensch:
Una don come to explain and defend rubbish. Why is demand for gas more than supply? Crude don finish abi they don bomb the refineries? Una just wan increase the price to gain more profit. Make una leave all these plenty talk.
Abi o, now they want us to start using firewood
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Lamanii22(f): 10:27am On Jun 09
Bluev:
No be that gas Dem de talk o.. Go shool u no gree you say na scam
😂😂😂😂😂 This is hilarious
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Lamanii22(f): 10:32am On Jun 09
valuedammy:
I tire o.

How will someone produce something on our land then decide to export to other Country for other peoples benefit and Government is there watching.

You need to know the kind of anger hovering around my inner system when reading stuffs like this.

This Tinubu Government is just sent by God to punish us cos I don't know why God cannot help the Citizen do justice on this Man, his wicked rule is becoming so unbearable for most Nigeria .
I don't t think God is involved in political affairs ooo, we need to help ourselves on this one
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by CodeTemplar: 11:12am On Jun 09
NOETHNICITY:
You didn’t read it. We aren’t lacking gas, rather our local producers are greedy as they would rather export than sell within the local market
I read it well. Let thwm use the extra volume meant for the unready pipeline to shore up supply.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Alusiizizi(m): 11:32am On Jun 09
kaywhy09:
Summarily, no more cheap gas right?
Do you remember the time that it was discovered, through Dangote, that some cabals were demanding about #380 out of every litre of petrol sold in Nigeria? In fact, it turns out that Nigerians are paying more than the market price for petrol per litre. I'm suspecting that the same thing is happening to gas, that would be the only sensible explanation for why producers are more interested in the export market, so that they don't see their profits undercut by those criminals.
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by Apcshit: 1:40pm On Jun 09
3kay945:
grin cheesy
Lol
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by donborg(m): 1:46pm On Jun 09
Bobloco:
•As domestic demand outstrips supply

•Producers stick to export market

•Dealers give catalogue of constraints

•Outlook remains uncertain —Industry Experts



Despite holding Africa’s largest proven gas reserves and recording rising gas production, household and industrial consumers are now faced with significant shortages of Liquefied Petroleum Gas, LPG, also known as cooking gas.

The development is also putting pressures on retail prices of the product.

Financial Vanguard findings showed that some producers are focused on exporting the product rather than meeting domestic demand.

Data obtained from the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, NUPRC, showed that 62 per cent of the total gas output in the first two months of this year was exported, leaving only 38 per cent for domestic market.

Industry analysts said the lopsided supply, which had been in place during the years most Nigerians were not using gas for cooking, can no longer continue, adding that the supply structure was now destabilising domestic market.

Rising demand overshoots domestic supply


Financial Vanguard findings showed that demand has continued to outpace supply, according to the latest industry report, titled ”Nigeria LPG Production & Supply Matrix (2023-2026)”.

According to the report, estimated national consumption of cooking gas increased by 20 per cent to 1.8 million metric tonnes in 2026 from 1.5 million metric tonnes in 2023, while estimated national supply rose to between 1.55 million metric tonnes and 1.65 million metric tonnes in 2026.

This shortage is coming against the backdrop of increased production arising from the entry of Dangote Refinery into the supply end.

The report stated further: “The Nigerian LPG market has undergone a major structural transformation between 2023 and 2026. Historically dominated by imports and Nigeria LNG Limited, the market is increasingly being supplied by domestic gas-processing plants and refineries, particularly Dangote Petroleum Refinery, inland gas processors and NNPCL-linked facilities.”

The figures indicate that demand growth is outpacing supply expansion, despite rising domestic production and increased investment by major operators.

As a result of this supply-demand gap, retail prices in many parts of the country are now between N1,700 and N2,000 per kilogramme, up by over 80 per cent from average N1,100 in the first quarter of this year.

The dealers are saying the increases would continue in the months ahead as key problems cannot be resolved in short term.

Catalogue of constraints

The report warned that “cylinder penetration remains low. Distribution infrastructure remains inadequate. Marine terminal bottlenecks persist. Trucking costs significantly affect final retail prices. Exchange-rate volatility still influences imported LPG pricing.”

Experts give further insight

Despite the efforts of domestic suppliers, a review of reports by the NUPRC and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, NMDPRA, showed that supply remains hindered by poor gas infrastructure, export priority over domestic supply, weak domestic gas pricing frameworks, insecurity and pipeline vandalism, inadequate investment, rising demand, foreign exchange volatility, limited storage capacity, regulatory inconsistencies and continued gas flaring.

An industry leader who pleaded anonymity, said: “Nigeria lacks adequate gas gathering, processing, storage and transmission infrastructure needed to move gas efficiently from production fields to consumers.

“This means that large volumes of gas produced in remote oil fields cannot be evacuated due to insufficient pipelines, processing plants and distribution networks.

“Many producers prefer exporting gas through LNG projects because export markets offer more attractive pricing and stable foreign exchange earnings than the domestic market. As a result, domestic consumers often struggle to access sufficient supply.

“Persistent crude oil theft, vandalism and insecurity in the Niger Delta continue to disrupt gas production and transportation. Attacks on pipelines and related facilities often force operators to shut down production, thereby reducing supply to domestic users.

“The gas sector requires billions of dollars in long-term investment, but uncertainty in policy implementation, regulatory bottlenecks and foreign exchange challenges have slowed capital inflows. Many critical gas projects have suffered delays or remain undeveloped.

“Domestic demand for LPG and natural gas has risen significantly due to population growth, urbanisation and government campaigns encouraging households to shift from firewood and kerosene to cleaner fuels. However, supply expansion has not kept pace with increasing demand.

“The depreciation of the naira has sharply increased the cost of imported LPG and gas-related equipment. Since Nigeria still imports a portion of its LPG requirements, exchange-rate instability directly affects pricing and availability.

“Nigeria’s LPG storage capacity remains inadequate compared to growing consumption levels. Insufficient coastal and inland storage facilities create supply disruptions whenever there are logistics delays, import challenges or production interruptions.

“Frequent policy changes, multiple regulatory agencies and implementation delays continue to create uncertainty in the sector. Operators say inconsistent fiscal terms and unclear regulatory frameworks discourage long-term planning and investment.”

He further stated that despite repeated commitments to end gas flaring, Nigeria still flares significant volumes of associated gas that could have been processed for domestic consumption.

Untold hardship for households, businesses

In their joint response, Barrister Edu Inyang, National President, Nigerian Association of Liquefied Petroleum Gas Marketers (NALPGMA), and Bassey Essien, Executive Secretary of the association, said: “This sad situation has brought untold hardship to millions of Nigerian households, small businesses, food vendors and low-income families who rely on LPG for daily cooking and livelihood.

“It is worrisome that the current situation is eroding the substantial progress made by the government in promoting clean energy usage in the country.

“Our members across the country face challenges sourcing LPG due to persistent supply shortages, high depot prices, logistics bottlenecks and rising operational costs.

“We observe that where the product is available, it is sold at rates far beyond the reach of average Nigerians.

“The current crisis is undermining years of progress achieved through federal government policies, public-private investments and awareness campaigns aimed at deepening LPG penetration and promoting clean cooking energy as a safer alternative to kerosene, charcoal and firewood in Nigeria.

“Many families are reverting to firewood and charcoal, despite the serious implications for public health, environmental degradation and deforestation.

“If urgent and coordinated action is not taken immediately, the current crisis could worsen food inflation, trigger job losses, reduce investor confidence and undermine Nigeria’s clean energy and climate commitments.”

They also called on “the Federal Government, the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, NMDPRA, NNPC Ltd, domestic producers, terminal operators, international suppliers and all critical stakeholders in the LPG value chain to take urgent and coordinated steps to stabilise the market before the situation deteriorates further.”

Outlook remains uncertain

In an interview with Financial Vanguard, the National President of the Oil and Gas Service Providers Association of Nigeria, OGSPAN, Mazi Colman Obasi, said: “The outlook is not bright in the short and medium term for several reasons.

”First, the problems, especially poor infrastructure and limited investment, cannot be addressed easily. Second, they require huge capital and much longer timeframes to resolve.

“Other issues such as insecurity and pipeline vandalism, foreign exchange volatility, limited storage capacity, regulatory inconsistencies and continued gas flaring also require resilience, commitment and long-term policy consistency.”

Another industry expert warned that unless Nigeria aggressively addressed infrastructure deficits, improved domestic supply incentives and strengthened investment conditions, the country might continue to experience gas shortages, despite its enormous reserves and production potential.

He said: “The combined contribution of NLNG, Dangote, Kwale Hydrocarbon, NPDC Ologbo, Pan Ocean, Seplat, PNG Gas, Greenville and other processors has significantly boosted Nigeria’s cooking gas output.

“Nigeria now has the technical capacity to become largely self-sufficient in LPG supply, but additional gas-processing projects must be brought on stream, domestic gas infrastructure must be expanded, more storage terminals must be commissioned and the nation’s LPG adoption policies must be sustained.”

Analysts warned that unless Nigeria rapidly expanded gas-processing infrastructure, storage capacity and domestic supply incentives, the country might remain trapped in cooking gas poverty, despite its enormous gas wealth.

Data obtained from the National Bureau of Statistics indicated that the price of cooking gas rose by 335 per cent to N1,741 per kilogramme in 2026 from N400 per kilogramme in 2016, driven by limited supply and other market forces.

A breakdown showed that the price of the product increased to N500 per kilogramme in 2017 from N400 per kilogramme in 2016.

The data also showed that the price further rose to N600, N680, N800, N950, N900, N1,000, N1,450, N1,630 and N1,741 per kilogramme in 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025 and 2026, respectively


https://www.vanguardngr.com/2026/06/why-cooking-gas-will-remain-scarce-expensive-2/
Muslims and stupid lies.

God punish Muslims
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by blueAgent(m): 2:12pm On Jun 09
InvertedHammer:
/
I challenge anyone to name one thing that Tinubu stabilized in the last 3 years. It seems that God sent him as a plague on Nigerians with the intent to steal, kill and destroy.

The primary purpose of government in Nigeria is to frustrate citizens.

/
Aleast he stabilised insecurity and poverty grin grin grin
Re: Why Cooking Gas Will Remain Scarce, Expensive by blueAgent(m): 2:20pm On Jun 09
Okechinwadike:
Who told you is expensive? 450# per kg in ogbomosho market or use your APC membership card to any MRS filling station is 600# per kg
grin grin grin

On your mandate we stand people don dey Kneel grin grin
They go gey sense by force.
1 2 3 4 5 Reply

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