Minister of State for Petroleum Resources and Group Managing
Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Ibe
Kachikwu has blamed the persistent fuel scarcity on the unavailability
of foreign exchange (Forex), lack of capacity, activities of pipeline
vandals as well as the reduction in subsidy payment.
The minister who spoke against the backdrop of the expiration of the
deadline to end fuel scarcity said the factors combined have adversely
affected the importation of refined oil by many of the oil marketers.
Kachikwu made the disclosure in a video posted on his official
Facebook page. He said the scarcity was the most challenging issue since
he assumed duty as the GMD and minister of state for pteroleum.
Kachikwu said further that no matter the transformation agenda of the
government, issues of fuel scarcity have the tendency to bring down the
polity and cause mayhem
Below is excerpt from the address:
“On resumption in August, we had a very major problem on our hands.
Because subsidies, N500 billion, close to N600 billion, hadn’t been paid
over a one year period, and so the majors, everybody who was importing
had begun to very quietly reduce the levels of importation that they had
and although I struggled very hard and got the (national) assembly
approval and the president’s approval to eventually pay a good portion
of that subsidy somewhere in November, by then it was too late. Too late
because although they got the money, they didn’t have access to foreign
exchange so the critical reason, main critical reason why you have this
supply gap today is that although NNPC has its own 445,000 barrels
allocation of crude and is meeting its own, who is meant to meet 50 per
cent of your delivery and is more than meeting but is indeed exceeding
that, the individuals who should provide the balance of the 40 per cent
component are not bringing in any product.
“And so, we’ve had to be very creative over the last four, five
months, until we basically ran out of options and the sort of creativity
that we put in the space was forward buying, forward purchase, forward
crude allocations, and also, just to bring in more product, because we
saw NNPC transit from a 45 per cent provider to suddenly 80 per cent,
and about this month really to 100 per cent provider of petroleum
products in Nigeria.
That was not sustainable, we didn’t have the capacity, we didn’t have
the funding, we didn’t have access to the products, we didn’t have the
foreign exchange. So in very many ways, it’s surprising that we’ve even
been able to survive this long.
So the key element has been, how do we find foreign exchange for
those who eagerly want to participate in the stream, who have been doing
this traditionally, to get into the space, buy their products, come in,
distribute. That’s something we’ve had to work on.
“Of course, the second problem was incessant pipeline disruptions.
Literally, if you look at the statistics of this year, versus last year,
we’ve had almost two times the number of pipeline interventions and
disruptions than we’ve had over the last two, three years, in this year
and that for us is very disturbing.
“Now, we’ve thrown a couple of ideas on this. The first thing that I
have tried to do is, for the first time in this country, I have been
able to convince the upstream companies to provide some FX buffer over
the next one year for those who are bringing in products. And so I’ve
tied Total Upstream to Total Downstream, Mobil Upstream to Mobil
Downstream, Agip ENI to Oando, Shell to Conoil and things like that.
It’s been very innovative, putting $200 million of FX availability out
into the space. It’s taken a lot of goodwill, it’s taken a lot of work
from me.
The second thing we’ve done is, we’ve had to box our way through the
CBN to get a little of allocation, because we provide the bulk of this
foreign exchange, we should have a bit of it to help stabilise the
situation, because fuel queue, don’t make any mistake about it, it
doesn’t matter what we achieve in our transformation agenda, is the
single most difficult item, which if not solved can bring down the
polity and can create a mayhem here, so it is something that we have
focused on.
So I have been able to get a bit of co-operation from CBN on that.
“Now, I’ve also been able to convince Mr. President to give us access
to some, other than the 445,000 barrels from national production. The
difficulty with that of course, like you and I know is that it goes into
the FAC entity, so once you touch any barrel there, you’re going to
have Governors understandably, quarrel with you on this. But these are
some of the innovative solutions we’ve done.
“We’ve thrown our creative options on the pipelines, by pointing a
set of trial, by contracting contractors to get into the pipelines, and
show us that they can deliver if we give them the contract.
What that has done is that for the first time in over eight years,
we’ve been able to capture back system 2B all the way to Ilorin. For the
first time in over six years, we were able to pump crude from Escravos
into Warri and we were able to pump oil from Brass into Port Harcourt.
And we were able to pump from Warri right into Kaduna, with a few
skirmishes here and there. This is the first time in over 10 years we’ve
been able to accomplish this. We accomplished this by not spending
money, but owing obligations.
Now, we are going out to the stage of contracting, where we are going
to advertise this and see how we can put this as permanent features
into the system. So a huge amount of work’s been going on in this
stream.
Our depots, we are at the stage right now of looking at policies
geared towards advertising our depots and our pipelines for purposes of
contracting joint ventures that will put in money, refurbish depots that
have been abandoned for upwards of a decade, so that we can have the
distributional network that we need to be able to solve this.
“It’s not enough just to bring in the cargoes which we are beginning
to do, but if you bring the cargoes and they arrive in Lagos, if you
have to send 3,000 trucks round the whole country, it takes an average
of four to seven days to do that, and the very next day, you’re back to
the same place, so the sheer logistical nightmare is not what NNPC was
set up to do, so we need to be able to get those pipelines back, get the
depots functioning, push a lot of the responsibility to the major oil
companies who are basically leaving us to do all the work and picking up
the profit at the end of the tunnel.
“So, it’s been a very difficult work, very challenging, we’re getting
to the solutions, the first few cargoes are beginning to come in and I
think by the second week of April like I said, we should be hopefully
out of this queue situation. But that is not a long-term solution.”
No comments:
Post a Comment