Subsidy removal’ll discourage cross-border smuggling – Kyari

kyari NNPCL

The removal of petrol subsidy in Nigeria has effectively eliminated the incentives enjoyed by smugglers, Group Chief Executive Officer of Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd), Mele Kyari, has said.

Mr Kyari, who spoke in an interview with Channels TV on Sunday, explained that the subsidy created a price disparity between Nigeria and its neighbouring countries, making petrol smuggling highly profitable.

“Before the subsidy removal, the price difference was huge and that incentivised smugglers to move fuel across borders. The removal of the subsidy has effectively calibrated fuel prices, eliminating the profitability of smuggling,” Mr Kyari said.

He noted that the removal of fuel subsidies in Nigeria has been a game-changer in the fight against cross-border smuggling.

For decades, he said the subsidy created a lucrative opportunity for smugglers to profit from the price difference between Nigeria and neighbouring countries.

“This is a positive development for Nigeria’s energy sector, as it can help to ensure that consumers are paying fair prices for fuel. In the last 40-something years, PMS has always been subsidised, and subsidy is creating arbitrage, which means there is a difference between prices in one location, lower than what it should be in another location.

“And when Mr President announced the subsidy in June, what he did was recalibrate the price. There is no longer any value in anyone taking the product across the border. If you do, you’re not going to make those profits,” he said.

In his inaugural address on 29 May 2023, President Bola Tinubu announced the removal of the subsidy to relieve the government of a major financial burden.

The development caused hardship for many Nigerians with an attendant increase in the prices of goods and services.

Mr Tinubu’s announcement led to an increase in petrol price from N197 per litre to between N480 and N570, which immediately triggered a rise in transportation fares and prices of goods and services in the country. In July 2023, the petrol pump price was subsequently reviewed upward to N617/litre at various outlets of the NNPC Ltd.

Earlier in September, petrol pump prices rose to N897 per litre at various outlets of NNPC Ltd.

Last Wednesday, PREMIUM TIMES reported that petrol pump prices rose to N998 and N1,030 per litre at various outlets of the NNPC Ltd in Lagos and Abuja, respectively.