ABUJA — The Federal Government has issued a direct warning to petroleum marketers against profiteering at the pump, directing the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority to ensure prices reflect actual market costs without excessive margins. Vanguard and Champion Newspapers confirmed the directive, with the minister warning that the government will act if marketers do not voluntarily reduce prices.
The directive responds to the FCCPC’s ongoing probe into why pump prices remain elevated despite a significant decline in global crude oil prices. Marketers have attributed sustained prices to exchange rate costs, logistics, storage, and distribution margins. However, the government said those explanations do not justify the current gap between international crude benchmarks and Nigerian pump prices.
NMDPRA has been specifically ordered to provide exact fuel quantity data to consumers and to implement price monitoring mechanisms that allow the regulator to identify and act against outlets charging above market-justified rates. The agency said it has deployed additional field officers to monitor compliance at filling stations nationwide.
The Marketers’ Counter
Petroleum marketers said the government’s framing oversimplifies complex downstream economics. They pointed to the cost of dollar-denominated imports, port charges, inland logistics, and the cost of maintaining reserve stocks required by NMDPRA regulations as legitimate factors that sustain prices even when international crude falls.
Analysts said the fundamental tension is that Nigeria’s fuel market is partially deregulated in theory but not fully competitive in practice. Without a fully functioning competitive market, the kind of price reduction that theory predicts in response to falling crude costs does not automatically materialise at the pump.
Consumer Impact
Ordinary Nigerians said they are deeply frustrated by prices that have not reflected the global oil price decline. Transport workers, small business operators, and households relying on generators all said high fuel prices continue to erode their purchasing power daily. They welcomed the government’s warning but said it must be backed by enforceable action rather than declarations alone.
Discover more from News247 Nigeria
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
