UPDATE: Fuel Price Jumps To N400/ltr As Queues Return To Filling Stations

New Petrol Pump Price: We Need NNPC Letter To Comply – Marketers

by AnaedoOnline
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The petrol marketers under the aegis of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN ) are waiting to receive an official directive from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC ) before complying with the new petrol pump price of N108 per liter.

The National Vice President of the association, Alhaji Abubakar Maigandi revealed this to newsmen on Wednesday.

According to him, the corporation may send the go-ahead notice once the marketers exhaust their stock at the previous price.

Just In: NNPC Reduces Petrol Pump Price To N108.00k Per Litre

Despite NNPC ‘s announcement of a reduction of the pump price of the product from N125 to N125. 50 per litre on 30th March, virtually all the retail outlets, including the corporation’s affiliate ones still retain the former price.

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But Maigandi, who commended the Federal Government on the downward review of the pump price, disclosed to The Nation that the marketers were still buying petrol for N111 per liters even when the NNPC had announced the penultimate price reduction of N125. 50 per litre.

He submitted that “Immediately we receive order from the government we can reduce the price.”

Asked why the marketers refused to comply with the previous announcement of price decrease, he said: ” now we have the old stock, once the old stock is finished, I know we are going to receive the order from the government then we will reverse to the new price.”

News Update: Oil Price Collapses To $0.01/Barrel

Commenting on supply of petrol from the depots, he said it was fair but “they (depots) have not started selling at the new rate. We are also waiting for them to start selling at the new rate so that we can also adjust. The depots are still selling at N111 per litre.”

He said it was the same rate the depots sold while the government directed that petrol should sell for N125 per liter.

Maigandi revealed that the rate at which the Petroleum Equalisation Fund (PEF) was paying marketers was very slow.

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