The
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, yesterday blamed the
persistent fuel crisis on the continuous vandalisation of the System 2B
pipeline at Arepo, sharp practices by oil marketers and the delay in the
payment of outstanding subsidy claims to the marketers.
The NNPC in a statement in
Abuja, after honouring the invitation of the Senate Committee on Petroleum
Downstream, also stated that the Senate had given it a two-week ultimatum to
end the fuel scarcity.
In a presentation to the Senate Committee,
Managing Director of the Pipelines and Product Marketing Company, PPMC, a
subsidiary of the NNPC, Mrs. Esther Nnamdi-Ogbue, stated that Nigeria has
lost a total of 531 million litres of petrol valued at over N50 billion to
pipeline vandals between January and September, 2015, at the problematic System
2B Pipeline network which stretches from the Atlas Cove in Lagos to Ilorin.
Nnamdi-Ogbue
explained that the losses, which chiefly accrued from the incessant hacking of
the pipeline at the notorious Arepo to Mosimi axis of the pipeline artery, have
made the task of providing seamless flow of petroleum products to retail
outlets more burdensome.
According
to her, despite the challenge posed by the unavailability of the vital System
2B Pipeline network, the PPMC has continued to ensure that the country remains
wet with petrol through massive truck-out from depots in Lagos, Oghara and
recently Calabar.
She,
however, noted that the spirited efforts made so far by the corporation to
entrench zero fuel queues across the country are being hampered by the
activities of some unscrupulous marketers involved in hoarding, sharp practices
and diversion of petroleum products for sale in black markets across the
country.
She said: “We view this as a distortion to
the economy and we have invited the DSS and the EFCC to take action.”
Outstanding subsidy payments
Also
speaking, Group Executive Director, Commercial and Investment on the NNPC, Mr.
Babatunde Adeniran, told the Senate Committee that the fuel situation was
exacerbated by the inability of oil marketers to meet their import allocation
quota due to outstanding subsidy payments, thus creating a gap which PPMC has
been working round the clock to bridge despite the extraneous challenges like
hoarding and incessant pipeline hacking.
While
Jamila Shu’ara, Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and
leader of the delegation, emphasised the need to build strategic reserve stock
of petroleum products akin to the national grain reserves across the country.
Senator
Uche Ekwunife, Committee Chairman, who gave the Ministry of Petroleum
Resources two weeks to ensure sanity in the supply and distribution of
petroleum products across the country, however, acknowledged the efforts made
so far by the NNPC to ensure unimpeded fuel supply across the country.
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