As the debate over the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation’s (NNPC)
continued importation and marketing of kerosene at a subsidised price
shifts to the National Assembly today, it has emerged that the
corporation incurred total subsidy claims of over $3.5 billion or
N543.8billion on kerosene in 19 months, from January 2012 to July 2013.
A detailed report presented today by NNPC to the Senate Committee on
Finance, which is probing the allegations of unremitted oil revenue to
the Federation Account, also showed that during the same period, NNPC
imported over 3.9 billion litres of kerosene from the international
market at a cost of over $5.2 billion (N811.4billion), while 1.16
billion litres was produced locally by the refineries.
The report, which was signed by the Executive Secretary of the
Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA), Mr. Reginald
Stanley; Director of Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Mr. George
Osahon; and the Managing Director of Pipelines and Products Marketing
Company (PPMC), a subsidiary of the NNPC, Mr. Haruna Momoh, also showed
that 12.59 billion litres of petrol was imported by the NNPC during the
19-month period.
The cost of the imported PMS, according to the
report, was $14.9 billion or N2.3 trillion, while 2.58 billion litres
was produced locally by the refineries.
The detailed breakdown
showed that N811,474,555,254.91, representing the dollar equivalent of
$5,239,714,310.42 was spent by the NNPC for the importation of kerosene
during the period under review.
Based
on its claim that the kerosene was sold at subsidised price of N50 per
litre instead of the average market price of N160.30 per litre, the NNPC
said it realised N267, 584,156,729.12, an equivalent of
$1,727,798,519.59.
During the period, 3,907,745,598.06 litres
of kerosene was imported, while 1,167,667,424.00 litres was produced
locally by the refineries, bringing it to a total of 5,075,413,022.06
litres, at a total value of N811,474,555,254.91.
With
respect to petrol importation and domestic processing, the report
showed that the NNPC spent N2,316,532,004,870.29, the equivalent of
$14,957,913,119.84 on the importation of the product within the 19
months.
While it realised N1,502,729,331,847.91 or
$9,703,166,086.70 from the sale of the products at the subsidised price
of N97 per litre as against the open market price of N152.28 per litre,
the corporation said the subsidy claims on the products amounted to
N813,802,673,022.38 or $5,254,747,033.14.
A total of
12,594,409,357.77 litres of PMS was imported within the 19-month period,
while 2,582,666,766.00 litres were produced locally, bringing the total
volume supplied by the NNPC to 15,177,076,127.77litres at a total cost
of N2,316,532,004,870.29.
It
was however not clear how the NNPC arrived at N50 per litre as the
price of its kerosene as the corporation is expected to sell its
imported kerosene at the ex-depot price of N40.90 to retailers, who are
exected to sell at the official price of N50 per litre at filling
stations.
The price of N97 per litre used as the selling price
of its imported PMS was also not clear, because NNPC as well as the
private marketers, are expected to sell at ex-depot price of N87.60 per
litre to retailers, who sell at the pump price of N97 per litre at
filling stations.
NNPC mega filling stations are also expected to sell kerosene at N50 per litre and PMS at N97 per litre.
The
alleged failure by NNPC to implement a presidential directive removing
the subsidy on kerosene has created confusion among the various
stakeholders in the downstream sector, fuelling suspicion over the
continued retention of kerosene in the Petroleum Support Fund (PSF).
During his recent presentation at the senate hearing on the
non-remittance of oil revenue to the Federation Account, the Governor of
the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, had alleged
that NNPC had failed to provide evidence of the presidential
authorisation to buy kerosene at N150 per litre and to sell same at
N40.90 per litre, whereas the product sells at between N170 to N220 per
litre in the open market.
He said through the retention of subsidy on kerosene, the Federation Account was made to lose $100 million every month.
To support his claim, Sanusi said he had submitted to the Senate
Committee on Finance documentary evidence of the presidential directive
eliminating the subsidy on kerosene since 2009.
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