Nigeria will reduce gasoline costs and scrap a fuel subsidy under a
pricing mechanism to come into effect from January, Petroleum Minister of
State Emmanuel Kachikwu said.
Prices will fall to 85 naira ($0.44) per liter from 87 naira, Kachikwu,
who is also the group managing director of state-owned Nigerian National
Petroleum Corp., told reporters while on a visit to a refinery in the
country’s southern oil hub of Port Harcourt on Friday, according to a
statement sent by the petroleum ministry.
Nigeria, Africa’s biggest oil producer, relies on fuel imports to meet
domestic needs since its refineries produce a fraction of their 445,000
barrels-per-day capacity after decades of poor maintenance, corruption and
mismanagement. The refinery in Port Harcourt will begin production next
week after repairs are completed, according to Kachikwu.
To keep the country supplied, the NNPC, as the state oil company is known,
has relied on imports by other fuel retailers, who get refunded the
difference between their costs and the fixed pump prices. It also has
agreements with several offshore refiners to swap refined products for
crude.
While tumbling oil prices have slashed Nigeria’s revenue and roiled its
currency and stock market, it’s also provided an opportunity for the
government to end the subsidies that cost as much as $7 billion a year.
The finance ministry said last year that $60 per barrel was the break-even
point at which there is no more need to subsidize fuel costs.
Widespread fraud and corruption and declining oil revenue have made it
imperative for the government to cancel the subsidies, Kachikwu said. An
attempt by the previous government to end them in 2011 led to a week of
strikes and protests across the country, forcing their partial
reinstatement.
President Muhammadu Buhari, who took office in May, had continued the
subsidies which -at over 1 trillion naira – accounted for almost a quarter
of the 2015 budget.
Reuters