Petrol to sell at N935/litre starting today – IPMAN

The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) has said the price of petrol will drop to N935 per litre effective from today.

IPMAN said the new price was necessitated by the reduction in Dangote Refinery’s fuel ex-depot price and uniform arrangement, which would enable marketers to sell at N935 in their outlets nationwide.

Speaking yesterday in Abuja during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria, IPMAN National President Maigandi Garima credited Dangote Refinery for the development.

The agency reports that Dangote refinery recently announced a significant reduction in fuel price by 7.27 per cent from N970 per litre to N899.50 per litre at its loading gantry and provided generous credit terms to marketers.

In the bid to ensure that the price reduction gets to the end consumers, it signed a partnership with MRS to sell petrol from its retail outlets nationwide at N935.

The price reduction, which is designed by Dangote refinery, to alleviate transport cost during the festive period and beyond, has already commenced in Lagos, and will be offered nationwide from Monday.

“Dangote refinery has brought another new arrangement of loading and pricing by which marketers would pay a fixed ex-depot price of N899.50k.

“The refinery is running a programme whereby it wants the fuel consumption across the country to be at the same rate. We are expecting the new arrangement to kick-start on Monday.

“We have been loading from the Dangote refinery and the refinery is saving us in this festive period,” he said.

The IPMAN president had said that previously it was loading at N970 per litre at Dangote refinery, but based on the arrangement and promise from Dangote, from today fuel price will drop to N935.

Read also:Dangote reduces petrol price to N899/litre

Garima said the downstream sector competition, being witnessed currently, was expected by marketers since due to deregulation, adding that it would see the price of fuel dropping continuously.

“That is the reason why we have been asking the government to allow private sectors to participate in the refinery business.

“Very soon, more refineries are coming up and the country will see a lot of price reduction in the downstream sector,” he said.

He recalled that during the 2023 Yuletide, per litre of fuel was sold at N2, 000 in the northern and eastern part of the country because fuel was being imported at that period.

According to him, the highest price fuel could be sold there currently is N1,100 because refineries are running in the country.

“By the time Warri and Kaduna resume production, one can buy products at cheaper rates and it is good for the economy,” he added.