Major oil marketers are set to start purchasing petrol from the Dangote Refinery directly as the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) ends its agreement with the facility......See Full Story>>.....See Full Story>>
A report cited sources from the NNPC and the Major Energy Marketers Association of Nigeria (MEMAN), confirming on Tuesday, October 8, 2024, that the state oil company is no longer the sole distributor of Dangote petrol.
NNPC hikes petrol prices
The decision now paves the way for marketers to buy the product directly from the mega refinery.
The development comes as the NNPC hiked petrol prices from N897 to N987 per litre in Lagos and above N1,000 in other states.
Meanwhile, oil marketers said the NNPC’s decision to quit the middleman’s role in the Dangote refinery means that the petroleum industry has been deregulated completely.
Punch reports that the Nigerian government may spend about N236 billion monthly on petrol subsidies.
An NNPC official reportedly confirmed on Tuesday, October 8, 2024, that dealers are yet to commence direct purchase of petrol from the Lekki-based refinery.
New NNPC price list surfaces
Legit earlier reported that PMS data pricing framework across eight states from the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) shows that petrol prices at retail outlets nationwide will rise to at least N991.21 per litre from N987 per litre.
A data review shows that in Abuja, petrol may sell for as high as N1,029 in all retail outlets, while petrol prices in Lagos will rise to N991.21 per litre, N,1040.31 in Kano, and N1,007.35 in Calabar.
PMS will sell at an average price of N1,045.72 per litre in Sokoto, N1,059.39 in Maiduguri, N999.27 in Ibadan, and N1,022 in Enugu.
NNPC to cease paying subsidy on Dangote petrol
Premium Times reports that the NMDPRA document provides insight into the subsequent payment differentials paid by the state oil firms in major Nigerian states and what Nigerians may pay at the pumps without subsidy.
The agency regulates midstream and downstream operations in Nigeria, including technical, operational, and commercial activities.
A ten-day petrol data list pricing framework weighted averages from September 23 to October 4, 2024, shows that the NNPC paid about N134.5 per litre as a differential in eight cities.
Dangote to take 400,000bpd of Nigerian crude
A previous report by Legit showed the Dangote Refinery is ready to process 400,000 barrels of crude daily over the next two months and will reach total capacity in the coming months.
Bloomberg reports that a cargo allocation list shows the plant is set to get about 24 million barrels of crude in October and November, showing a shift towards using more domestic supplies.
Analysts believe the increased demand from the 650,000 bdp-capacity refinery could significantly tighten the West African crude oil market in the last quarter of 2024.