Officials of the Nigeria National
Petroleum Corporation, and heads of some subsidiaries under it did not appear
before the Senate Committee on Petroleum ( Downstream) to defend their 2015
budget on Tuesday.
Chairman of the Committee, Senator
Magnus Abe, lamented that by their action, they had deprived Nigerians an
opportunity to know the reasons behind the current fuel scarcity in the country
and possible way out.
But the Executive Secretary of
Petroleum Product Pricing and Regulatory Authority, Senator Farouk Ahmed,
told the senators that the fuel scarcity across the nation was caused by the
two rounds of devaluation carried out by the Central Bank of Nigeria between
November last year and February, 2015.
Ahmed told the committee that the
devaluation caused huge confusion in the oil sector as the petroleum agency did
not know the exchange rate to be used for the payment on fuel importation.
He said the marketers could not
deliver the cargoes of fuel expected from them because they were not sure of
the exact delivery cost as a result of the devaluation, adding that the old
template used for paying the marketers was no longer useful.
Ahmed said PPPRA had to seek the
advice of the CBN before it could eventually draw up a new template.
He, however, stressed that the
crisis had eventually been resolved as the Budget Office on Monday approved
payment for the outstanding bills that the marketers were owed.
He also said the truce was brokered
after a meeting of the Ministry of Finance, PPPRA and other relevant agencies.
Ahmed said, “The recent events have
to do with delay in the arrival of cargoes. Non-arrival of cargoes made it
difficult for petroleum motor spirit to be delivered. What actually complicated
it was the devaluation of naira – two times.
“The first one that took place on
November 28 devalued Naira from N155 to N168 to $1. The second one that took
place on February 18 brought the exchange rate to N199 to $1. “These two
developments brought a lot of confusion into the oil sector.
“Marketers were not sure of the
actual delivery cost. We had to draw a new template as advised by the
CBN. The delay we have now is caused by the November devaluation. But the
reality is that the policy is clear now.
“The Minister of Finance, PPPRA and
other agencies are working closely to ensure that outstanding bills are paid.
And that one had been done now.
“Yesterday, (Monday) we got an
approval from the Budget Office for payment of all outstanding bills. We have
adjusted the template now. We have to put the exchange rate at the interbank
rate. Now, we have a direction.”
NNPC shuns senate, fuel scarcity persists
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Tuesday, March 03, 2015
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Reviewed by Unknown
on
Tuesday, March 03, 2015
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