Fuel scarcity: Anxiety as Kachikwu’s deadline ends today
LESS than 24 hours to the April 7 deadline given by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, for fuel supply to normalize, Daily Sun investigations revealed that the timeline might not be achieved.
The situation in the Federal Capital
Territory , Abuja
and Lagos , at
press time was still chaotic, as most petrol stations have remained without
products while the few that have are contending with.
There is anxiety as the
scarcity still bites harder in Abuja
and neighbouring states.
Observers believe that
except by sheer magic or miracle, the scarcity might linger for some more days.
Kachikwu had during a
meeting with the Senate said he expected that “between now and about April 6
and 7, the fuel queues will disappear, the Direct Sale Direct Purchase (DSDP)
will begin and the foreign exchange allocation will see us smoothly through the
track.’’
He had also promised
that the situation would ease off finally in other states by this weekend.
In Lagos , a visit to depots in Apapa and Ibafon
revealed that the inefficiencies in the loading process and logistics process
to enable trucks load out products have compounded the fuel scarcity.
However, the Nigeria
Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) has expressed readiness to
partner with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to end the
perennial scarcity.
The union president,
Igwe Achese said NUPENG has the capacity, men and will to end the perennial
scarcity and therefore called for collaboration with the NNPC to end the
scourge.
NUPENG said since 60
per cent of its members are involved in the distribution chain and most of the
Independent Marketers (IPMAN) and NARTO members either NUPENG members or
former members, it will be able to get the issue right and end the present
scarcity of petroleum products.
Meanwhile, Nigeria ’s fuel shortages have caused power cuts
across the border in Niger .
A statement by the
state electric company, NIGELEC, said the cut has affected seven of Niger ’s eight
regions for the past 72 hours.
Landlocked Niger became an oil producer in 2011 but still
imports about 70 percent of its power needs from Nigeria .
“This situation has
caused (NIGELEC’s) principal provider to limit to a third its normal imports,
which is at the base of the current disturbances observed on networks lately,”
the statement explained.
“NIGELEC has found
itself therefore with the obligation to proceed with rolling blackouts.”
But, Niger ’s
uranium-mining region Agadez, which has an independent power plant, has not
been affected by the power cuts.
At the time of this
report, many filling stations in the major cities across Nigeria were
still locked up without products while those selling have long queues of
vehicles to attend to.
Check the Sun newspaper
for the full story.
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