NNPC

Nigerians To Pay More For Gas Under Buhari Government As Importers Lament Forex Scarcity

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The National Operations Controller, the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, IPMAN, Mike Osatuyi, in a chat with PUNCH on Sunday, said independent marketers sourced dollars for importation from the black market, hence, gas price would continue to increase until naira strengthened at the exchange market.

Nigerians may soon have to pay more for gas as prices are expected to rise, going by the suppliers’ complaint that the high exchange rate of dollar to naira is taking a huge toll on the importation of the product.

The National Operations Controller, the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, IPMAN, Mike Osatuyi, in a chat with PUNCH on Sunday, said independent marketers sourced dollars for importation from the black market, hence, gas price would continue to increase until naira strengthened at the exchange market.

“Our members, who still sell gas, bought 20, 000 metric tonnes at around N11 million last month, but now, the price has jumped to N12.3 million per 20, 000 metric tones,” he said.

He noted that gas consumers stood the risk of further price hike as long as dollar continued to strengthen against the naira – one of the signs of an ailing economy under the Muhammadu Buhari administration.

Apart from low gas supplies at the international market majorly due to the Russian/Ukraine war, it was also learnt that gas production from the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas Ltd, NLNG has plummeted.

According to sources close to the matter, the drop in output was majorly due to the high-leveled theft as well as oil and gas pipeline vandalism which had left NLNG operating at 60 per cent capacity.

The source also cited “feed gas constraint and high maintenance activities” as part of the causes.

Output and export from NLNG’s six-train Bonny plant had dropped to 16.8 million tonnes in 2021, from 20.7 million tonnes in 2020 and 2019.
NLNG was said to have lost almost $7bn revenue so far in 2022 due to gas supply constraints, according to the company’s General Manager, Production, Adeleye Falade, who spoke at the 45th Nigeria International Conference and Exhibition 2022.

Natural gas markets worldwide have been tightening since 2021 and global gas consumption is expected to decline by 0.8 per cent this year as result of a record 10 per cent contraction in Europe and flat demand in the Asia Pacific region, the IEA said in its quarterly gas market report.

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