Consumers have asked the Federal Government to spend the saving on
the removal of subsidy on kerosene on making the acquisition of cooking
gas kits affordable.
Despite the huge spending on kerosene subsidy, the Chairman, House of
Representatives Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), Mr. Dakuku
Peterside, recently bemoaned the situation whereby the masses could not
buy the product at the regulated price of N40.90k per litre.
Only those who can bear the long queues at the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation’s outlets and a few other outlets are able to buy
the product at the government approved price despite the huge subsidy
expenditure over the years.
Without any hope of getting the product at N50 per litre, consumers
are envisaging a hard time and lament the lack of financial wherewithal
to switch to Liquefied Petroleum Gas as an alternative.
Eighty per cent of Nigerian households depend on kerosene as their
cooking fuel, with an average consumption rate of eight million litres
per day.
Analysts, who argued that the N634bn spent on kerosene subsidy had
little impact on the masses but enriched only a few people, welcome the
removal as the right step in driving a nationwide shift from kerosene to
LPG.
However, it was equally argued in some quarters that majority of the households lacked the financial capacity to switch to LPG.
“Kerosene is expensive for the common man and we heard that the price
may still go up; but we cannot afford cooking gas because of the high
cost of cylinders and cookers,” Mrs. Sikirat Okanlawon, a petty trader
who lives in Oshodi area of Lagos, said.
Mrs. Folashade Anibaba, a call card vendor in Ikeja, remarked that
most households using kerosene as cooking fuel were poor, adding that
the cost of migrating to gas was prohibitive.
Mrs. Esther Obi, a housewife based in the Ojo area of Lagos, said the
removal of kerosene subsidy by the Federal Government was in order
considering the fact that most consumers seldom get the product at the
subsidised rate.
She, however, decried the financial inability of many households to adopt a better alternative energy such as the LPG.
To prevent more Nigerians opting for environmentally unfriendly
alternative sources of energy such as firewood, charcoal and sawdust,
Obi said the government should spend the savings from kerosene subsidy
on providing cheaper access to cooking gas.
The President, Nigerian Liquefied Petroleum Gas Association, Mr. Dayo
Adeshina, who lauded the plan to remove the subsidy, said, “Government
needs to take a conscious decision to drive a mass shift from kerosene
to LPG as it was done in Indonesia. The Indonesian government took a
conscious decision to stop kerosene subsidy, which was gulping $9bn a
year. They found that they would only need to invest $2bn in cylinders
and cooking stoves and save $7bn.
“We need a roadmap to solve all the various challenges, which plaque
the sector such as tariffs and duties on equipment and cylinder
manufacturers.”
The Executive Secretary, Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria,
Mr. Obafemi Olawore, urged the government to deregulate kerosene, focus
on LPG, resuscitate local production of cylinders and subsidise them for
Nigerians.
He said, “I have always said that kerosene subsidy should be removed,
but I am gradually getting convinced that instead of subsidising
consumption, it probably will be better to subsidise production.”
No comments:
Post a Comment