The scarcity of refined petroleum products, especially petrol, may
continue across the country for the unforeseeable future because
marketers have stopped importing the product due to the reluctance of
the banks to provide them with credit.
It was also learnt that as of May 29, 2015, the amount being owed all the oil marketers by the Federal Government was N291.7bn.
Our
correspondent gathered that the refusal of the banks to provide credit
to the marketers had adversely affected the business of some of them, as
many were already contemplating leaving the venture.
Sources in
the sector, who spoke with our correspondent in Abuja on Sunday, said
that the refusal of
the banks to provide additional loans to the
marketers could be due to the Federal Government’s delay in paying the
huge subsidy debt being owed the fuel importers.
Although they
admitted that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation was currently
the sole importer of petrol, the quantity of fuel being consumed in the
country was so high that the NNPC might not be able to handle it solely.
“Banks
are refusing to give some marketers loans to import petrol and they are
hoping that the present administration will intervene, particularly by
paying the huge subsidy debt, because the NNPC alone may not be able to
shoulder all the fuel need of Nigeria,” an official at the Federal
Ministry of Petroleum Resources, who spoke to our correspondent on the
condition of anonymity, said.
Confirming this, the Executive
Secretary, Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association, Mr.
Olufemi Adewole, told our correspondent that members of the group were
not importing petrol again, because the banks had yet to open credit
lines to them.
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