FG may further cut petrol price – PPPRA
The continued fall in crude oil price may lead to a further cut in the pump price of petrol by the Federal Government any time soon, the outgoing Executive Secretary of the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency, Mr. Farouk Ahmed, has said.
The PPPRA is the agency of the Federal
Government that regulates and fixes prices for petroleum products in the
country.
The agency had late December 2015 stated
that the pricing template for petroleum products would be reviewed occasionally
to reflect fluctuations in the price of crude oil in the international market.
While handing over to the most senior
officer of the PPPRA, Mr. Moses Mbaba, in Abuja on Thursday, Ahmed noted that
as of February 3, 2016, about one month after the review of the pricing
template of petrol, the country had saved N2.6bn as over-recovery on the
product.
“As of February 3, 2016, the estimate in
that account, because we are verifying based on what was imported, is just a
small amount of about N2.6bn. But this is just the beginning, because some of
them were just arriving in December; that is why the subsidy over-recovery is
low.
“The fact is that whatever money that
will be put into that account, one day, which is our hope that the price of
crude oil will go up, there will be more revenue inflow to the Federation
Account. The oil sector will benefit. That excess, before you go to the
government for any intervention, you go to that account and pull some money and
compensate.”
He, however, noted that the
over-recovery might disappear if the price of crude oil rises by next month.
Ahmed stated that the process of the
review of the pricing template would likely commence by March 15, 2016, and the
committee to undertake the review would consist of all the stakeholders in the
petroleum industry, including major and independent oil marketers as well as
depot owners.
The outgoing PPPRA boss stated, “The
recent price modulation mechanism and review of the agency’s pricing template,
which took effect from January 1, 2016, has ushered in the much-needed
efficiency and cost-saving as far as subsidy payment exposure is concerned.
“This has partly led us to a regime of
over-recovery, enabling the government to collect money back from the marketers
into the designated over-recovery account at the CBN.”
Punch
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