The current fuel scarcity in the country took a turn for the worse on
Thursday as motorists and other petrol consumers flocked filling
stations in major towns nationwide in what industry stakeholders
described as panic buying fuelled by the statement made by the Minister
of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr.Ibe Kachikwu, the previous day.
Kachikwu,
who is also the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation, had on Wednesday said despite the efforts being
made by the Federal Government, fuel queues would not completely
disappear until May.
The statement was said to have also raised
the prospect of hoarding of petrol by some marketers who
would want to
profiteer from the current situation.
On the Otedola Estate and
Berger ends of the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, the Mobil, Capital Oil and
Oando filling stations had long queues of desperate motorists and other
customers, which spilled onto the road and caused gridlock, while there
was no activity at the Conoil and the other Oando station on the axis as
of the time one of our correspondents checked.
The minister’s
statement also worsened the already bad fuel supply situation in Abuja,
Kaduna and Nasarawa states, as hundreds of motorists armed themselves
with jerry-cans and besieged the few stations dispensing petrol on
Thursday.
Most of them were of the view that since the scarcity
would persist for the next two months, it would be wise to fill up their
vehicle tanks and stockpile petrol in jerry-cans pending when the
situation would improve.
A former President of the Trade Union
Congress of Nigeria, Mr. Peter Esele, said, “I think that statement is
very unfortunate. If you look at it on the surface, probably the
minister just wanted to tell Nigerians the way it is. But again, that is
what is on the ground. There is no need for us to colour the challenges
that we are facing.”
Esele, however, noted that the comment had
created a lot of panic buying in the system, saying, “That is where I
actually have an issue with the minister’s statement. He wanted to be
upfront. But being upfront means that you can also now unsettle and
unbalance the system.
“Right now, what we have is that the system
is unsettled based on the minister’s comment. What I would have
expected is that he informs his principal, who is the President and
Minister of Petroleum, then the principal will now know how to deal with
it and communicate to Nigerians effectively.
“Now, we are going to have those (marketers) who even have products who want to hoard and sell at very expensive prices.”
The
Chairman, Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers, Lagos
Zone, Alhaji Tokunbo Korodo, said, “The statement was a little bit
blunt. Instead of deceiving Nigerians, he (Kachikwu) made it known to
them that there is no magic he can do. It may not be up to that two
months because it is not that he is not doing anything; they are doing
something tangible.
“The panic buying, which the statement has
created, is not good for the system, and it is even portraying this
government in bad light. But at the same time, it is a plus to us as
Nigerians so that we will prepare very well and be efficient in using
fuel.
“The pronouncement is going to create a lot of maximisation
of profit by the marketers. Some of them will be hoarding. Can the
Department of Petroleum Resources go for any enforcement with this
pronouncement? It is not possible because the marketers, if they cannot
get it at the controlled price, they will comfortably be selling above
the pump price. So, it is a very bad signal.”
However, the Deputy
Manager, Public Affairs, DPR, Mr. George Ene-Ita, said the agency would
clamp down on any marketer found to be hoarding products.
“For us, it is a routine thing. Our people go out daily and whatever we see there, we take action as appropriate,” he added.
On
the Kubwa Expressway, the two NNPC mega stations located on opposite
sides of the road had long queues and motorists were determined to buy
petrol even in their jerry-cans, despite the fact that the outlets had
prohibited the sale of fuel in jerry-cans.
“What do you expect
from us after the minister has announced that the scarcity will last
till May?” Ogbonnaya Kalu, who armed himself with two 40-litre
jerry-cans in front of one of the NNPC mega stations, said.
Queues were also heavy in front of other filling stations like AA Rano, MRS, Conoil and Mobil along the expressway.
Similar
situations were observed in the Abuja city centre and in neighbouring
states of Nasarawa and Kaduna, as attendants in some of the filling
stations were openly collecting N500 from each customer who wished to
fill their jerry-cans.
The NNPC on Thursday said it was doing
everything possible to end the noticeable fuel queues in most parts of
the country in the weeks ahead.
It also stressed that Kachikwu was misquoted on the issue of petrol scarcity dragging on till May.
Source: Punch
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