Petrol pump price will come down – Osinbajo
Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has said the government is working on a
medium-term reduction of the pump price of petroleum products by
collaborating with private refineries and reducing importation.
He said there was no going back on the incumbent administration’s
commitment to unbundle the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation to
make it more efficient.
Osinbajo, who left the country on Wednesday for the United Kingdom to
sign the Nigeria-UK solar energy agreement, told Bloomberg in an
interview that the government would also encourage private refineries to
reduce the importation of petroleum products, adding that the Petroleum
Industry Bill would be broken and sent in pieces to ensure its speedy
passage.
He said the government was aware of the inefficiencies of the
refineries, adding that the government would bring private refineries on
board so that most of the petroleum products would be refined locally.
He said, “We are going to be unbundling the NNPC so that its various
components are effective core centres and are able to do their business
well. We are going to have private refineries at the site of the old
refineries, so they can benefit from the available infrastructure.
“So, we think that in the medium term, we would be able to get
cheaper pump price, pump price of oil would be cheaper because we would
be importing far less refined petroleum. A lot of that will be produced
locally.
“Now, we have well over 30 modular refineries licences, so we think a
lot of modular refineries would come. Many of them, their major concern
is feed stock, are we going to be guaranteed feed stock? We are working
on that. Once we are able to deal with that, we feel we would
substantially be able to reduce pump price and get the whole business of
importation of refined petroleum and the NNPC just getting directly
involved in business; we are going to reduce that. The objective is to
make the NNPC play more regulatory function.
“They are options that are always there. But we think that there are
ways we can raise our own potion of contribution to the Joint Ventures.
It will only be a last resort and we have not come anywhere near that.”
Speaking on the PIB, the VP said, “Separating the PIB and breaking it
up obviously is the way I would think that we’ll proceed…that’s really
what the market has been waiting for.”
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