Petrol: Scarcity Hits Osun, Oyo, Ondo, Lagos, Other States
The lingering crisis in the availability of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), has hit major towns in Nigeria.
The shortage which has persisted for a while has now spread to Osun State.
Motorists and others were seen waiting for hours in queues at the few filling stations dispensing the product.
Other states that experienced acute scarcity are Oyo, Ondo, Lagos, Edo, Anambra, Enugu, Abia, Benue, Plateau, Kaduna, Katsina, Niger and Jigawa.
READ:ย Passengers Stranded As Commercial Transporters Struggle To Get Fuel In Osogbo
The scarcity first was first reported in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) last week.
Most Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) franchise stations, had their gates closed to motorists due to a lack of stock.
However, some marketers that opened for business in the nationโs commercial capital had queues.
Scores of jerry canโcarrying residents were also seen struggling for access.
Unlike independent marketers who cashed in on the situation to slightly hike their pump prices, the majors did not.
But, as vehicle owners and other petrol users lamented the situation, the NNPC Ltd and Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) blamed the scarcity on the logistics challenge.
They, however, gave an assurance that normalcy would return this week as product lifting started by marketers.
NNPCL Chief Communications Officer, Olufemi Soneye, said the company had no issues with stock availability.
He explained that each time a supply disruption happens(like the one caused by logistics hiccups), it normally takes a maximum of five days for normalcy to return.
โIt (logistics challenge) has been resolved. The thing is once thereโs a day or two in disruption it takes about three to five days for normalcy to return. We have products and there is no cause for worry,โ Soneye said.
IPMAN National President, Abubakar Maigandi, explained to The Nation that the logistics problem involved the discharge of petrol from a mother vessel to the depots.
โYou know that the product is imported and it takes a while to discharge from the mother vessel to the Daughter vessel and to the depot.
โThat is where the problem emanated from and that has been rectified,โ Maigandi said.
He added: โThe queues will not last. It should be cleared by this week. We met with the NNPCL and they explained the logistics issues they had.
โBut they have started supplies to their various depots and we are already receiving the products from some depots.
โWe expect that in the course of the week, the situation will further improve and there will be more supplies at the stations if things continue the way it is at the moment.โ
Although some of his association members upped pump prices, the IPMAN president, said: โNNPCL did not mention any price increase to us. If there will be a price increase, they would have communicated to us, but we asked them and they confirmed there is no plan for such.โ
Executive Secretary of the Major Energies Marketers Association of Nigeria (MEMAN), Clement Isong, also said his members received petrol products throughout the weekend.
Also confirming that the logistic problem had been resolved, Isong said there should be no need for panic if the queues at filling stations lengthened today.
He said: โIn a couple of days, the backlog will be cleared. What you are seeing is panic buying. Tomorrow (today), the lines may get longer at the filling stations as motorists try to fill up their tanks. But I advise that there is no need to worry because NNPCL has enough stock.
โNormally, when you have situations like this (supply disruption) there will be backlogs to clear but we have been trucking and people need to calm down because there are supplies.
โโI can tell you that Mobil and TotalEnergies worked throughout yesterday (Saturday); ConOil and MRS are all trucking right now.
โSo, the situation is not as bad as it appears. It will clear out in the course of the week.โ
When contacted the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) for independent petroleum market data, a Senior Officer at its Corporate Service Unit, Seiyefa Osanebi, replied: โI canโt provide that right now.โ
Osun
Governor Ademola Adeleke of Osun State has warn marketers against hoarding the product.
Chairman of the Petroleum Monitoring Taskforce, Kazeem Akinleye, announced the warning.
Akinleye said: โMost filling stations are hoarding petrol products, thereby worsening the fuel supply situation in the state.
โThe surveillance activities were conducted in major towns and the state capital in the last three days and it revealed deliberate hoarding of fuel to create artificial scarcity.โ
Lagos
Across the metropolis yesterday, petrol queues at filling stations like Mobil located along the Lagos-Ibadan expressway, North West at Maryland and Gbagada, NIPCO along Ijede Road, Ikorodu, and TotalEnergies at the NNPC bus stop in Ejigbo, stretched to about 500 metres from the pumps.
Some motorists and other residents, who lamented the situation, said they had to resort to buying from black market operators.
One Musa Lawal said he waited for over two hours at the Mobil filling station along the Lagos โ Ibadan Expressway before deciding to look for an alternative.
Another motorist, who gave his name simply as Lekan Balogun, returned without getting petrol to buy after waiting at NNPCL filling station in Ladipo, Mushin for over an hour.
Oyo, Ondo, Kaduna, Niger, others
The situation was the same in Oyo, Ondo, Edo, Anambra, Enugu, Abia, Benue, Plateau, Kaduna, Katsina, Niger, and Jigawa states where petrol sold at above N760 at the stations that opened for business.
In Akure, Ondo State, it sold for N685 and N730 per litre while in Ibadan, Oyo State, it was N730/N750.
Chairman of IPMAN, Ore depot, Shina Amoo, accused the NNPCL of not selling petrol to IPMAN members.
โThe cause of the scarcity is what I have said earlier. The product is not available. We also do not have money to struggle with major marketers.โ