The price of Liquefied Petroleum Gas, popularly known as
cooking gas, has jumped by 45 per cent in less than a week amid scarcity of the
product.
It was gathered that
the price of 20 metric tonnes (about 35,000 litres) of the LPG, which was N2.4m
last week Wednesday, had increased to N3.5m by Monday this week.
The Executive Secretary/Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian
Association of LPG Marketers, Mr. Bassey Essien, while addressing journalists
in Lagos on Thursday, decried the emergence of price instability in the
domestic LPG market, which he said was caused by delays in berthing of the LPG
bearing vessels at the terminals.
He said, “Recently, we have been contending with the issue of
price instability because a couple of people have hijacked the government’s
good gesture of installing the domestic scheme. Under the scheme, gas will be
readily available in the major terminals in Lagos. When there are no supply
shortages, there will be a level playing ground in terms of competition and
pricing.
“Today, what we are having is the other way round. Last week
Wednesday, gas was selling for N2.4m per 20 metric tonnes. On Thursday, it rose
to N2.6m and on Monday this week, we got a text that it would sell for N3.5m.
We feel that if nothing is done, it will go to N4m,”
Essien added that increasing the price of a 12.5kg cylinder
to about N3,500 from less than N2,500 would frustrate the efforts made to
encourage the use of LPG in the country.
The Pipelines and Product Marketing Company, a subsidiary of
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, is tasked with the responsibility
of managing the berthing of the LPG vessels at the terminals.
Essien said most of the terminals had been starved of gas,
causing a near monopoly in the LPG market as only a private terminal was able
to receive product, adding “The gas is not imported. It came from Bonny. So,
why the sudden jump in price?
“We feel it is exploitation of Nigerians. Why are the vessels
not berthing in other terminals? If it is a deliberate scheme, why should they
not berth in other terminals? If those vessels berth in those terminals, then
definitely there will be price stability.”
He said with increased awareness, the consumption of the LPG
had increased over the years, buoyed by the government’s intervention by
mandating the Nigeria LNG Limited to allocate a sizable portion of its LPG to
the domestic market.
The NALPGAM executive secretary said the intervention brought
about a reduction in the cost of cooking gas from N7,000 in 2007 to less than
N3,000 per 12.5kg cylinder presently.
“The intervention was in line with government’s effort to
build a healthy Nigeria and significantly stimulate the development of domestic
usage of cooking gas,” he stated.
Essien said the NLNG had made commitment to delivering
250,000 tonnes of the LPG into the Nigerian market every year.
Credit: Punch

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