Fuel scarcity imminent as marketer’s insist on payment of N500bn subsidy debt
(Pulse News Agency Local By NAN)
Some Independent Petroleum Marketers in Lagos
have said that fuel scarcity would resurface in the country if Federal
Government failed to pay their outstanding subsidy of N 500 billion.
The
marketers who preferred anonymity told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
on Tuesday that government had not paid any marketer’s subsidy claim
since August 2014 to date.
"We met with the
Vice- President and the Group Managing Director of NNPC on this matter
and they promised to be pay us between October and November but we have
yet to receive any payment from government.
"We
will be happy if the government can pay the outstanding because we are
worried over the lingering fuel scarcity that will resurface in the
country.
"Most of those who are selling
petrol currently are few major marketers who received allocation
directly on credit from Pipelines Products Marketing Company (PPMC).
"None of the independent marketers, depot owners and some majors are selling the products,’’ they claimed.
The marketers claimed that about 1, 700 oil workers were laid-off due to inability to meet up with their salaries.
They
said that the non-payment of the subsidy claims and inability to get
products allocations from government also contributed to the mass
retrenchment.
A NAN correspondent who monitored
the situation reports that fuel queues reappeared in some parts of Lagos
as some stations had closed for business.
NAN
observed that the situation was already taking a negative toll in the
petroleum business supply chain because from Egbeda to Lagos- Abeokuta
Expressway, fuel stations are not dispensing.
Motorists were seen queuing in anticipation that they would resume sales.
The
situation was chaotic at the Conoil Station at National Bus Stop, close
to the local Airport; long queues of vehicles compounded the traffic
situation, extending to Ikeja under the bridge.
At
Epe, none of the petrol stations there opened for sales, while those
engaging in black market operations returned to the road to make brisk
business out of the situation.
One of the station
managers, who pleaded not to be named, told NAN that the situation might
take a turn for the worse in few days.
He said
that for now, only the NNPC was importing because major marketers had
been forced to down tools as a result of the huge subsidy debt.
"At my depot, we only got about 10,000 metric tons last week and that is just about 400 trucks.
"That
cannot last for this week, the same with other depots that got last
week. Unless government fulfils its obligations to marketers, the
situation will not get better,’’ he said.
The
Executive Secretary of Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria
(MOMAN), Mr Obafemi Olawore, had in June raised alarm over the inability
of Federal Government to offset over N300 billion subsidy claims.
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