Monday 28 March 2016

Foreign airlines to sack 2,000 Nigerian workers

The National Union of Air Transport Employees ,NUATE,  has revealed that  foreign airlines plan to sack about two thousand (2,000) Nigerian workers  due to what they claimed is their inability to transfer their earnings to their respective home countries to meet operational costs in accordance with international rules because of new Central Bank of Nigeria , CBN, policy on forex and fund transfer.
ACN-PLANE

 In a letter addressed to the Minister of State for Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika and made available to newsmen, Acting General Secretary of NUATE, Comrade Olayinka Abioye said the plan  has destabilize  the affected workers, adding that the Federal Government should wade in and prevent the huge job loss. According to  Abioye , “ The reason being adduced for this danger is that their earnings in the past year is under lock with the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN , as they are unable to transfer these earnings to their respective home countries to meet operational costs in accordance with international rules.” “Following concerns raised recently by leaders of these workers and other stakeholders and in appreciation of the good intent of the government’s fiscal policy, we humbly make this clarion call for your (Minister)  intervention to grant foreign airlines concession to repatriate their proceeds to their home countries,” he said. He added that should the foreign airlines go ahead with the sacking of the workers it would not be in the interest of the aviation sector and Nigeria as a whole. “We hasten to place on the front burner an emerging threat confronting over 2, 000 private sector aviation workers in Nigeria which requires your intervention to forestall imminent loss of jobs of these number of workers,” said Abioye.




Source: Vanguard

Arms scandal: Jonathan can be tried if there is evidence —Buhari’s panel


Former President Goodluck Jonathan

The Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption, Prof. Itse Sagay, has faulted a former Minister of National Planning, Dr. Abubakar Suleiman, regarding the culpability of former President Goodluck Jonathan in the current anti-corruption cases.
Suleiman, who is the spokesperson for the Peoples Democratic Party Ministers’ Forum, had said in a Sunday PUNCH interview that Jonathan could not be held liable because no stolen funds had been traced to the ex-president’s personal bank accounts.
The ex-minister had said, “All these issues of corruption under Jonathan happened between March and April last year. It was purely an election issue. Nobody has traced any money to Jonathan’s account up till now, but money was traced to Abacha’s accounts.”
However, Sagay told one of our correspondents during an interview on Sunday that although he could not say if there was a case against Jonathan or not yet, the ex-President could be held liable if it could be established that Jonathan made illegal approvals for funds to be paid into other people’s accounts.
He said if, for instance, it could be established that Jonathan gave the Central Bank of Nigeria a directive to pay someone money and the person was not deserving of that money, then the ex-President could be indicted.
Sagay, who is a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, added, “Only the EFCC can say if Jonathan is culpable. Guilt in criminal law requires proof and there must be evidence. So, what I would say is that if a case can be established against Jonathan as regards public funds, then he has a case to answer.
“I don’t know if that has been done. I have not seen anybody who says he was given the money by Jonathan himself although one can say that instructions to any institution that public funds should be released to other people for purposes, which those funds were not designated, is in itself a criminal affair.
“So, it is not only when money is found on you that you have a case to answer. If you are a person in authority, and you issue directives to people under you, who are keeping public funds like the Governor of the Central Bank, and an illegal order is given to him for the release of funds, that, in itself, will raise a case for Jonathan to answer if in fact he issued such an order.”
Another SAN, Mr. Yusuf Ali, said it was too early to exonerate anyone as investigations into corruption that took place under the previous administration were still ongoing.
Ali stated, “The whole process is ongoing. Investigations are still ongoing. Until somebody is convicted, nothing bad can be said about such person. I believe when we get to the bridge, we shall cross it.
“There is no point for anybody to be excited or be happy for now until the whole story is in the open. Investigations are ongoing.”
On his part, a Lagos-based lawyer, Mr. Jiti Ogunye, described Suleiman’s statement as provocative and highly irresponsible.
Ogunye said the fact that a number of persons, who served under the Jonathan administration, were facing criminal trial was enough grounds to charge the former President with conspiracy.
According to Ogunye, Jonathan, as the head of the executive arm, had liability for everything done by his subordinates because the buck stopped at his table.
Ogunye said, “That statement by him is provocative and highly irresponsible. And the reason I say that is that former President Goodluck Jonathan was the head of the executive arm of government at the time he presided over the affairs of the country.
“All the officials that are being held to account and during whose trials, as we speak, Nigerians are now learning about the mind-boggling  stealing or looting of public treasury, were answerable to him; they were running his errands and therefore Nigerians expect that being the person on whose table the buck stopped as of the time he was the President, that he would be able to superintend them and ensure that those his subordinates didn’t loot the nation’s treasury.
“It’s too early in the day for any Suleiman or anybody to give the former President or any other member of that administration a clean bill of health. When you are talking about no money has been traced to former President Goodluck Jonathan, what does it mean?
“On his instruction and while he was running for office, people turned our national security vote into a bazaar and they were giving this money out to his allies and acolytes. So, whose errand were those people running when they were distributing the money? Who wanted to become the President then? And based on those revelations alone, he is culpable, contrary to the claims of Suleiman that nothing has been traced to him.
“Can’t the former President be charged with conspiracy? He can, on the basis of those revelations because for what purpose was the money given to those people? On the strength of that alone, a charge of conspiracy can be sustained against the former President.
“For anybody to be annoying Nigerians with such a statement that nothing has been traced to the former President, one wonders what he was thinking. This is not theatrics, we are talking about things that have wrecked this country and then people are engaging in ludicrous polemics.”

Source: Punch

Bishop Tom Samson receives 2014 Rolls Royce with the suicide doors as birthday gift (photos)





The General Overseer of Christ Royal Family Int’l Church, Bishop Dr. Tom Samson on Sunday March 27th received a Rolls Royce Phantom as birthday gift. The 2014 customized extended wheel base beast was a gift from his 50th birthday organizing committee to appreciate his impact in their lives as his flock. See more photos after the cut...





The luxury wonder on wheel with its attendant special features only driven in this part of the world by few men of class and panache is said to have cost a fortune.
Rolls Royce Phantom 2014 model confers an instant princely feeling of royalty and opulence on anyone within, little wonder the committee led by Deacon Iyke Kanu said that for the impact of Bishop Tom Samson in their lives and contribution to the body of Christ, there is aptly nothing more befitting to celebrate him at 50 than an automobile of royal ensemble to compliment his status as a joint heir in the Kingdom.


Other members of the Committee include Pastor Eromosele Agbonselobho, Deacon Nosa James , Deacon Charles Okoko, Deacon Jim Sakpere, Deacon Ndubuisi, Special Servant Rosemary Ulu, Miss Uche, Pastor Ngozi, Deaconess Nnenna David, Evangelist Joan Mukoro, Dave Agwazim, Pastor Ohis Bamidele, Pastor Julius Ochigbo Onoyima, Elder Femi Oboye, Mrs. Eugene Emelieze, Evangelist Chinasa, Pastor Wale Samson, Ambassador D’Bling, Mr Oyinlola Oluwatoyin,and Barr.Charles,completes the committee members.




Bishop Tom Samson’s Rolls Royce is quite unique. It is the 2014 Bespoke Phantom.  Exclusively designed for the upwardly mobile dudes, the wondrous auto is the brainchild of Rolls Royce Dubai brand manager, Mohammed El-Arishy.  Rolls Royce says that this exotic model is meant to evoke the history of motoring heritage of Goodwood Racetrack.  Sporty and rugged with ostentatious demeanour, the wonders-on-wheel is a delight to behold and intimidating.
Rolls Royce was created over a famous launch in May 1904, after Henry Royce, a successful engineer, struck a deal with Charles Rolls, owner of one of the first car dealerships.  The ensuing series of two, three, four and six cylinder cars broke the mould for engineering and craftsmanship and ushered in one of the best cars in the world.  Rolls Royce’s collaboration with BMW in the last few decades has produced the Phantom series, which was launched in 2003 to revive the brand from near obscurity to one of the foremost symbols of extreme wealth. 

The latest luxury toy will certainly compliment Bishop Tom Samson’s already intimidating garage filled with state of the art automobiles including his much talked about N80m 40ft Hummer Limousine. Other notable high points of the activities marking Bishop Tom Samson’s golden jubilee anniversary on planet earth includes the commission of Faculty of Humanity block and Library complex for the proposed Monarch University.






Wednesday 23 March 2016

Donald Trump comes for Ted Cruz, Hilary Clinton & Pres. Obama


See more tweets after the cut...




FG To Inject N350bn To Revive Economy

To rebound the dwindling economy, the Federal Government, yesterday, announced its readiness to inject a total of N350 billion in the next few months.



The decision was reached at the end of a two-day retreat for governors of the 36 of the federation and members of the National Economic Council (NEC) at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

The Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, made the disclosure alongside Minister of National Planning, Mr Udoma Udo Udoma; Governor Abdul’aziz Yari of Zamfara State, who is also chairman of the Nigerian Governors Forum and Governor Willi Obiano of Anambra State at a press conference.


According to her, part of the money will help offset the debt owed local contractors, who had laid off their workers for lack of funds.
The minister added that the state governors were also advised to reduce the number of political appointees and aides as a way of reducing the cost of governance.


She said: “We deliberated extensively on the drop in revenue, particularly as to how it affects the state governments and their ability to pay salaries and obligations. The general resolve of the house and consensus was that there was need to bring in more cost efficiency in their operations.

"In particular, to look at the setting up of the efficiency unit within the state governments, to rationalise expenditure and, of course, to increase IGR. To that end, there was a need to generate data because data is the basis of any revenue collecting efforts.
“The federal and state inland revenue services collaborate to do joint audits to invest in revenue, relevant technology and efforts to improve collection. There is a need to develop incentives for both federal and state revenue generating agencies to ensure that there is an alignment of interest.
"There is a focus at state level on property and consumption taxes to help in improving revenue in a fair manner. Tax payer education must be intensified and to expand the tax base and ensure that there is a buy-in in the revenue collection agencies from the populace.

“State governors were encouraged, where possible, to rationalize numbers of commissioners and general political appointees and, in addition, cost control measures to be identified and implemented on an on-going basis and there was a sharing of best practices from a number of states that could be applied elsewhere.

“From the Federal Ministry of Finance in anticipation of the approval of the budget, we have virtually lined up about N350 billion which we would be pumping into the Nigerian economy in the forth coming months. We explained our rational and the processes that we have put in place, safe guards to ensure that this money actually achieves the desired objective which is to stimulate the economy."
In a similar note, Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udo Udoma, stated that the council resolved to focus on agriculture. The resolve was in collaboration with state governments.

According to the minister, Nigeria has slated December 2018 and 2019 to achieve self-sufficiency in both rice and wheat productions.
He also revealed that state governments had been encouraged to identify at least two crops in their respective states for development just as they were also enjoined to open up some rural and feeder roads in their states.


Vanguard reportage

FG Declares March 25 And 28 Public Holidays For Easter

The Federal Government has declared Friday, March 25 and Monday, March 28
as public holidays to mark the Good Friday and Easter celebrations respectively.


The Minister of Interior, Abdulrahman Dambazau, declared this in a statement in Abuja on Tuesday. Dambazau urged Nigerians to use the occasion to pray for peace and unity across the nation while wishing Nigerians and Christians the world over a happy Easter celebrations.

News Headlines Today - 23/3/2016



DAILY POST

*Truck owners’ strike down cargo movements at Lagos ports

*Minister of Education orders probe into alleged sexual assault at Queens College

*Suspected thieves buried alive in Ondo community

*Police promotes 156 senior officers

*Osun sends 250 Grade Level 15 council staff on compulsory leave

*Investigate election related killings in Bayelsa, Rivers – Dickson tells Buhari

*Fresh crisis brews in PDP over Sheriff’s defiance of NEC’s directive

*Imo PDP members fight dirty in public

*Nigeria will have additional 10,000 megawatts by 2019 – Buhari
METRO

*Jonathan abandons foster father in kidnapers’ den, vows not to pay ransom

*Soldiers storm Abia community, destroy illegal crude oil reservoir

*Newborn baby found abandoned in Niger

*Fire razes Navy mammy market in Ojo

*Iwobi trains with Super Eagles after recovering from food poisoning

*Spend big or leave the club – Arsenal board orders Wenger

*It will be hard to beat us – Elneny warns Iwobi, Super Eagles

*Acting nude is against my culture – Susan Peters

*Nollywood: New actors lack respect for elders – Grace Amah

*Perfect Computer-Based Test procedure – Ex-Minister tells JAMB



VANGUARD

*FG, NYSC rise against killings in Rivers; UK, US condemn violence

*Police probe alleged sexual assault at Queens College

#RiversRe-run: Nobody can accuse Police of complicity 'IGP

*Soldiers destroy illegal crude oil farm in Abia

*EEDC urges consumers to help arrest 'energy theft

*Imo govt appoints new SSG

*How cultists beheaded 2 ABSU students

*N10 billion for IDP's resettlement not enough

*RIVERS: Diminishing public confidence in elections

*FG to focus on rail, inland waterways for trade facilitation

*Nigeria needs additional 40,000 towers to meet growing data traffic demands

*Protect your business from malware threats, Kaspersky boss

*Pharaohs more stable than Eagles ' Enyimba coach

*Ikpeme leads U-23 into Brazil

*Pharaohs storm Kaduna today

*We won't give Egypt room to operate ' Siasia

*Iwobi 'll play against Egypt ' NFF

*Nig vs Egy: Please don't come with 'weapons', NFF begs Kaduna fans

*Women and the struggle for gender parity (2)

*Leicester to face Barcelona & PSG in International Champions Cup

*ISIS claims responsibility for Brussels Attacks

*Belgium Under Attack

*US Government condemns Rivers Re-run

*Obasanjo blames Africa Leaders for conflicts in the continent

*Fire destroys 100 buildings, kills two in Lagos

*At least 5 dead in Guinea Ebola flare-up: health officials

*Herbalist's near-death experience and ordeal in hands of gunmen

*Desperate migrant sets himself on fire at refugee camp

*Afolabi Akanni: After 19 days in detention, DSS releases 'sick' Ekiti lawmaker - Pulse



CNN

*Terror could shut fans out of Euro 2016

*Cruz: 'Secure' Muslim areas

*Trump: I'll 'spill beans' on Cruz's wife

*Dad wants death for daughter's killer

*Police release photo of suspect in Brussels bombing

*Yemen's Jews furtively flee to Israel

*Why keeping us safe from terrorism is so hard

*Belgium terror attack: From Paris attacks to Brussels bloodshed

*Former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford dies

*Obama engages in baseball diplomacy in Cuba

*Cuba dissident and wife detained on way to CNN interview

*ISIS says it targets Iraqi military in day of attacks

*Emma Stone to star as Rosemary

*Fans say Britney Spears' bikini photo is bit too perfect

*American football arrives in Egypt

*Cristie Kerr celebrates 20 years in golf

*Tennis director steps down after sexist comments



ENTERTAINMENT


*Hulk Hogan Speaks Out  Following $140 Million  Gawker Win ~E

*Kendall Jenner ''Very Happy''  That Rob Is Hanging With the Family~E

*Olajumoke Orisaguna is Google Nigeria's Most Searched Person between January & March 2016

*Justin Bieber Abruptly  Cancels All Future Meet-and- Greets During Tour~E

*Ciara's Son Is the Epitome of  Swag While Driving His Little  G-Wagon~E

*Demi Lovato to Her Haters: "Take Your Negativity  Elsewhere''~E

*Iggy Goes Topless, Talks  Feuding With Other Artists~E

#BrusselsAttacks: CNN doesn't give a sh*t about dead Nigerians, Kenyans - AKA

*Adele Sends Her Love To Brussels With Touching Tribute - Huffington Post

*Africa-in-Self-Conversation as IREP film festival begins - New Telegraph

*All The Photos From The OmogeMuRa Meet And Greet - Guardian

*Beyonc Casts ***Flawless Model With Muscular Dystrophy As New Campaign Face - Huffington Post

*Carey, 50 Cent, Minaj part of TV's new music partnerships - Associated Press

*Comedian Kevin Hart to write memoir on struggle, motivations - Associated Press

*Emily Ratajkowski: Top model ditches top as she stars in racy jewelry line shoot - Pulse


*Emma Stone to star as Rosemary Kennedy in 'Letters From Rosemary - CNN




Source: SDK

Tuesday 22 March 2016

Fuel scarcity… an unending scourge

Fuel scarcity… an unending scourge

Fuel scarcity and long queues at filling stations are no longer strange to Nigerians. Hardly can a quarter pass without the harrowing experience of buying petrol above the approved pump price, with many stations dispensing a little as high as twice the official price. Will Nigeria ever outgrow this anomaly? EMEKA UGWUANYI takes a critical look at the perennial fuel shortage and possible way of ending what is fast becoming a national embarrassment.
WITH over 26,716 filling stations and more than 123 depots spread across the country, and having started crude oil refining since five decades, Nigeria, as Africa’s largest oil producer and world’s sixth, should have nothing to do with the importation of refined petroleum products importation and persistent fuel scarcity.
As a prominent member of the 13-member Oganisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), Nigeria should be a reference point to other oil producers in Africa. But, unfortunately, the ‘giant of Africa’ still battles to meet its internal energy needs. It depends on huge external supply, importing about 75 per cent of its local fuel consumption needs.
The inability to refine in-country has also been responsible for enormous subsidy payments and recurrent fuel scarcity.
According to a data obtained from the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), the country had 26,716 filling stations as at 2013. Out of the number, Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN) members comprising Mobil Oil, Total, Oando, Conoil, Forte Oil and MRS, own 2453 stations. Their counterparts in the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), own 24,226 and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) 37. The data also showed that there were 129 depots owned in the ratio of 83:24:22 among the independents, majors and NNPC respectively.
The first refinery began operation in Port Harcourt some 51 years ago. It had a nameplate capacity of 60,000 barrels per day (bpd). In 1976, the Kaduna refinery was inaugurated with a capacity to refine 60,000 bpd and later upgraded to 110,000bpd. The Warri Refinery followed in 1978 with a refining capacity of 100,000 bpd and later upgraded to process 125,000bpd in 1987. The Port Harcourt’s second refinery was inaugurated in 1989 with an installed capacity of 150,000bpd.
A private refinery, built by the Niger Delta Petroleum Resources Plc. has capacity to refine 1000 barrels of crude per day.
So, with 50 years of refining experience and a combined capacity to produce 446,000 bpd, where exactly did Nigeria get it wrong?
Of its contemporaries in OPEC cartel, Nigeria remains the only member of the cartel that imports fuel for domestic consumption. The long queues often triggered by perennial scarcity are also peculiar to it.
Successive administrations since the return to democratic rule 1999, have battled without success to find an enduring solution. Not even the yearly Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) of the refineries could guarantee local production. Yet, several billions of naira had gone down the drain under the guise of reactivating the refineries.
Attempts by some administrations to deregulate the downstream sector and discourage government’s control of the oil industry have been unsuccessful. Such efforts have been met with stiff opposition and protests by the coalition of labour and civil society groups.
Unending problem
To IPMAN’S National Operations Controller, Mr. Mike Osatuyi, the perennial fuel scarcity is due to lack of planning on the part of the government, saying that it has degenerated into a grave systemic problem.
According to him, the government has been sincere in addressing fuel scarcity. He alleged that the right people have not been put in right positions, and when they are hired, the government has not made the environment conducive for them to operate.
Alluding to lack of foresight in planning alongside population growth and improvement in the standard of living, Osatuyi said the Federal Government has failed to provide for the future.
According to him, no concerted effort has been made to build a new refinery to meet up with the rising population since the last refinery was built 26 years ago.
“Even if the refineries have been working at installed capacities, common sense should have informed the government there was the need to make additional provision for the people 26 years after, he added.
Describing as appalling the abandonment of existing refineries, Osatuyi said: “The refineries were neglected to rot.”
Since 2000, the fuel scarcity challenge has been a recurring decimal as Nigerian depends on the importation of products to meet domestic needs.
Records show that in 2003, every litre of petrol consumed in the country was imported. As a matter of fact, a staggering $3 billion was spent between 2000 and 2014 on TAM.
The IPMAN’s spokesman said the figure could have been embarrassing if last year’s expenditures had been added.
“No government makes progress when it has no well-articulated and implementable plans for short and long term matter issues. He also noted that the recent allocation of 78 per cent importation of national fuel need to NNPC alone is a policy somersault because the Corporation lacks storage and distribution facilities”, Osatuyi said.
He said the insufficient fuel supply has left the NNPC with no option but to ration what is available.
Records have also shown that the most efficient, prudent and cost-saving method of fuel distribution all over the world is through the pipes.
But, with the collapse of the pipeline system in the country – no thanks to vandalism, NNPC subsidiary – Petroleum Products Marketing Company (PPMC) has not been able to supply fuel from the depots to end-users at regulated prices.
Is fuel subsidy
regime gone for good?
The prevailing situation may frustrate government’s plan to end the contentious fuel subsidy regime. Besides the threat it poses to lives and properties, transporting fuel from the depots to filling stations in trucks is uneconomical.
It also breeds corruption and encourages sharp practices in the sector as many trucks, laden with products are often diverted. The failure of government to fix the refineries, ensure safe pipelines for transportation of crude and refined products to and from refineries to all parts of the country have compounded consumers’ travails.
Hiding under regulatory failure and laxity, oil marketers engage in all forms of practices to undermine the system. They sell petrol above approved pump price, hoard and divert products allocated to them despite the margins and subsidies the government pays. And the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), the oil regulator is helpless.
In Kwara, the DPR was recently in a supremacy contest with IPMAN members. Under the watch of DPR officials, who sealed some filling stations for selling above regulated price and under-dispensing products from the pumps, IPMAN members unsealed the erring stations.
Industry watchers described the development as a confirmation of the regulator’s shortcoming in the enforcement of compliance and the application of the rules.
Across the country, including Lagos and Abuja, most of the filling stations belonging to IPMAN members sell product far above the regulated price. Some of the errant filling stations are affiliated to the major marketers’ and even branded in NNPC colours.
The regulator turns blind eyes to the ongoing abuses even when such anomalies are reported. Allegations abound that some of these defaulting stations are owned by DPR and NNPC staff members, or their cronies.
The Nation learnt that whenever there is a gap or delay in the supply chain due to late arrival of cargoes at the port, workers at the depots will unofficially raise depot price of a litre of petrol from N77 to N100, or above, depending  on the severity of scarcity.
Owners of the depots have repeated claim ignorance of such sharp activities at their facilities. But, investigations show that such development accounts for the biting scarcity and rooftop prices.
As a result of inadequate supply and allegations of sharp practices, many of the independent marketers no longer get supply from NNPC. They pay more than the official price at the depots to get loaded. They have bribing their way through to get their trucks loaded without delay. When these expenditures are factored into the cost, they have no option than to sell at above regulated price of N86.50 per litre, to make profit and remain in business.
NNPC as sole importer
For almost a year now, the NNPC has been the sole importer following major marketers’ decision to shun importation to protest their unpaid ‘controversial’ subsidy debts.
The corporation imports and engages the marketers in the supply chain to sell products at their retail outlets across the country. The NNPC lacks enough storage and distribution facilities to meet the consumption needs of the nation.
When NNPC supplies to the marketers, it adds some margins to them (marketers) for making use of their facilities. But, to make more profit, some of the marketers divert products across the borders and to other parts of the country where they sell almost the twice the approved pump price.
Memories of 2012
subsidy scam
In the aftermath of the 2011 fuel import row and subsidy scam, which made the Federal Government to spend over N2 trillion on subsidy reimbursements, local companies, especially the independent marketers, were found culpable.
To avert a reoccurrence, the Federal Government through NNPC, decided to reinforce its retail division, focus on the majors and cut off supply and issuance of import allocation to many independent marketers. But, the problem lingers till date.
By May 29, last year, when the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan left office, apart from billions of naira paid to major marketers, MOMAN members were still being owed over N300 billion in unpaid subsidies, interests on bank loans, and differentials in foreign exchange (forex).
In November last year, the government approved the payment of N413 billion to clear the outstanding subsidies, yet scarcity continued.
The NNPC, under the management of the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, reels out daily the number of trucks loaded with petrol at the depots and their destinations, all in an effort to show improved transparency. But, there are no measures yet to ensure the trucks get to their destinations.
Wielding the big stick
Last week, the NNPC moved to end festering fuel shortage in major cities by wielded the big stick, cutting off allocation to IPMAN members, except few credible ones such as NIPCO, Ascon, Capital Oil and Folawiyo.
The focus is now on MOMAN members as the NNPC believes IPMAN members are major culprits in fuel diversion and hoarding.
But, the fundamental problem of fuel scarcity remains unresolved. Hence, buck-passing has been the game among players in the sector in times of scarcity. The NNPC blames the marketers for product diversion and hoarding. The marketers and depot owners insist the corporation has not given them enough supply and that they cannot get forex to import on their own.
Prior to the forex crisis, major marketers claimed they were unable to import because of their outstanding subsidy payments. But, the excuse has changed to their lack of access to forex. They argue that it would be unprofitable form them to import products and sell below landing cost. They are renewing their clamour for deregulation of the sector. But, will deregulation end fuel scarcity?
Way forward
The long-term solution to the perennial fuel shortage is deregulation. But, without proper monitoring, the policy may trigger a breakdown of the sector as marketers are likely to engage in profiteering. The short-term measure is massive importation to ensure the country is wet with petrol. Vested interests in the downstream sector of the oil industry will work to frustrate the interim measure. This interest is part of the reason monitoring and compliance is very low or non-existent, hence the thriving sharp practices in the sector.
To MOMAN’s Executive Secretary, Mr. Obafemi  Olawore, as long as the NNPC remains the sole importer, it might be difficult to adequately meet national demand because the corporation does not have enough facilities to drive distribution.
According to him, the NNPC imports about 78 per cent of national demand and that is putting pressure on distribution because of logistics constraints. He, however, expressed optimism that the importation ratio of 78:22 per cent for NNPC and other marketers respectively may be reviewed next quarter.
Olawore stated that the only way out of these problems is for the government to be courageous enough to deregulate the downstream.
The spokesman of Mobil Oil Nigeria Plc., the products marketing arm of ExxonMobil in Nigeria, Mr. Akin Fatunke, corroborated Olawore’s position. He said that besides allocations from the NNPC, Mobil Oil and Total imported their own cargoes.
According to him, fuel scarcity is caused by the gap or delay in supply.
“There was a short delay in delivery of cargoes recently, and the ripple effect of that delay is the current scarcity and long queues we see all over the place,” he said
Fatunke also noted that due to forex issue, all the private companies, apart from Mobil and Total have not been importing.
He insisted on the deregulation of the nation’s downstream oil industry as the way out.
His words: “With the clout and policy thrust of the present government, we thought the industry should be controlled by market forces of supply and demand, especially now that the prices of crude are fairly low. Government at certain points should intervene but the operation of the downstream should driven by market forces especially in the face of foreign exchange scarcity.”
He also urged the government to make the downstream sector a standalone unit of the oil and gas industry, in operation and regulation and not lumped together with the upstream and midstream sectors.
Fatunke said: “When made to be a standalone unit, it would be able to police smuggling and diversion of products and other irregularities. With deregulation, private companies would be able to build refineries in Nigeria and more local and foreign investors will come into the downstream sector.
“The government should also know that it has no business being in business of the downstream. The government should have the courage and will to enthrone level playing field for players in the sector and allow economic forces come into play.”
The Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Niger Delta Petroleum Resources Plc., Dr. Layi Fatona, said: “There must be a focused and firm implementation of multiple small to medium sized oil and gas processing facilities, such as refineries, tied strictly to producing assets.”
According to him, oil companies that have crude producing fields should have at least a small refining facility attached to it. That is the only way to ensure sustainable increase in in-country refining.
To IPMAN’a National Operations Controller, Mr. Mike Osatuyi, the Petroleum Resources minister has failed.
He said: “It was difficult to meet national consumption efficiently when the NNPC was importing less than 50 per cent of the consumption, now it is importing 78 per cent, what does he expect?”
He, however, described the appointment of Mr. Ahmed Farouk as PPMC’s helmsman, as perfect if he is given the enabling environment to operate.
Osatuyi said: “He (Farouk) will change the face of petroleum products marketing and distribution. Ahmed knows the industry inside out. NNPC should stop the monopoly it practices because it is not in the interest of the economy and Nigerians.”
On the remedial solution to stem recurring fuel scarcity, the NNPC is in fresh talks with some foreign refineries for exchange of crude oil for refined petroleum products (swap) deals.
Although the contracts have not been signed, the corporation has shown optimism that the deal, when sealed, will take away the queues from filling stations.
According to a report, the swap deals will be with seven refining companies – ENI, Essar, Litasco, Total, Cepsa, Societe Ivorienne de Raffinage (SIR) and Vitol, refining arm Varo, with local oil companies as partners, to take oil in exchange for petrol.
“Nobody wants to see people spend two hours on fuel queues,” Kachikwu said on his Twitter handle, adding “We are working on long-term solutions.”
Under preliminary agreements, each refiner will ship about 90,000 tonnes of petrol in exchange for 950,000 barrels of crude oil. The arrangement will see the NNPC swapping 330,000 bpd of crude, which is well above the 210,000 bpd initially agreed last year with four refineries.
The swap arrangement will see Litasco with MRS as the local partner exporting estimated 60,000 bpd; Cepsa with Oando (60,000 bpd);  Varo with Calson (60,000 bpd);  Societe Ivorienne de Raffinage with Sahara (60,000 bpd); ENI with Oando (30,000 bpd); Essar with Shoreline, (30,000 bpd) and Total with Total Nigeria (30,000 bpd).
The new agreements are billed to kick-off next month with crude loading programmes.
Price modulation principle
The fuel price modulation mechanism adopted by the government is another time-bomb waiting to explode. It is an initiative that can be best described as secret deregulation. For now, the implication is hidden because the low price of crude at the international market.
By the time, crude prices soar to $60 per barrel and above, petrol price in relation to the modulation principle, will shoot up to about N100 per litre and may hit as high as N140/150 per litre should crude prices appreciate to $90 and $100 per barrel.
The implication is that such price increase will certainly be unacceptable, and expectedly, organised labour and civil society groups will mobilise Nigerians to the streets and what the government has on its hands will by the January 2012 scenario, when the anti-fuel subsidy removal protests brought the economy to its knees.
So, the Federal Government has indirectly removed subsidy and that is the reason. Already, there is no budgetary provision for fuel subsidy in this year’s Appropriation Bill.
Price modulation mechanism provides an automatic way of adjusting the regulated retail price of fuel in order to minimise or eliminate subsidy.  But, it must be noted that the main component that determines the Open Market Price (OMP) of fuel – the price at retail outlets – is cost and freight.  Therefore, the central challenge facing the price modulation system is the extreme volatility of cost and freight price of fuel.
Repeatedly, the government has stated that fuel subsidy is unaffordable and unsustainable and therefore should be reduced or completely erased. As a step to realising this objective, the government has been implementing the price modulation method by reviewing the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) template in December last year. The template will be due for review quarterly.
The challenge, however, is that oil price has begun to appreciate slightly above $40 per barrel. How the government will convince Nigerians that petrol price has gone up again to N87 or more per litre will be another litmus test for Kachikwu, who doubles as the Group Managing Director (GMD).
However, there is a distinction between reviewing the cost components of the template (storage, and distribution margins), among others, and adjusting the retail price.
With the oil price ramping up, the government may not be able to keep the price of petrol at the regulated prices of N86 and N86.50 per litre for so long without upward review or without substantial subsidy payment.
Frequent price adjustments are important because the cost and freight change daily. Therefore, it is a good idea for the retail price to be adjusted at least monthly, or even more frequently.  The reason for this is that if price adjustments are only done quarterly, because of changes in world prices, they are much more likely to be large, and it is doubtful if the public would accept such frequent and substantial adjustments in price.
However, if the government fails to make these adjustments, the size of the subsidy could grow and if the government wants to minimise subsidy, the best approach is frequent (at least monthly), small adjustments.
A key principle of good practice is to engage in extensive dialogue and communication with stakeholders in the industry before a major change.  A national dialogue around the price modulation principle will be of immense value.
Once these principles are broadly accepted, designing the actual formula to meet the principles is relatively straightforward and will be seen as a response to a set of agreed principles, rather than a formula unilaterally imposed by the government.



Source: The nation