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Fuel Scarcity: Motorists To Be Served Free Petrol From Stations Found Hoarding

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JUST IN: Buhari Deceives Nigerians, Increases Petrol Price Again
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Mr Umar Ajiya, the Managing Director, Nigerian Product Marketing Company, NPMC, on Wednesday, said petrol from filling stations found to be hoarding products would be confiscated and served free to motorists.

Ajiya said this after an inspection of six stations around the FCT in company of other officials from Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC.

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According to him, the dissapearance of long queues in Abuja is as a result of hard work and effort between sister agencies – the NPMC, Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency, PPPRA, Department of Petroleum Resources, DPR, and security agencies.

He said “we moved our operations to 24 hours in all depots and affiliate retail stations.

“Similarly, our majors have done the same in Abuja to complement our efforts. In addition, we increased our truck-out capacity to over 1,300 a day. As you can see, trucks are arriving at several stations.

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“We had also beefed up surveillance and directed to serve motorists free petrol confiscated from depots or filling stations found to be hoarding products.

“The genesis of the whole problem was the proposed increase in price, but we had since debunked that. There was no iota of truth in that and people should not indulge in panick buying.”

Ajiya said a plan had been put in place to ensure steady supply of products all through the Christmas season and beyond.

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‘”We have a robust supply plan. Every day, we have a minimum of one ship arriving Nigeria. Today, we received two ships, tomorrow, we have a ship and the day after; we are expecting two ships, and that is the trajectory going forward until the end of the year.

“One ship on the average carries 50 million litres and in our belief, average consumption in Nigeria is about 35 million litres.

“Once we sustain our current operationss, we will not have this kind of situation,” the NPMC boss assured.

He further assured that the DPR had asked its operators to go to depots and monitor prices “and anyone caught selling above official rate should be penalised.”

The NNPC Chief Operating Officer (Ventures), Dr Babatunde Adeniran, who is also in charge of the task force monitoring team told newsmen “we have a robust plan that will take us to the end of the year.

“Our hands are on deck to ensure normal supply and demand without chaos and to clear Lagos, Abuja and every other part of the country.

“Our target is to see black market operators disappear.”

A News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) correspondent observed that trucks were either arriving filling stations visited or they were offloading or dispensing product.

NAN also noticed that the queues that resurfaced on Dec. 4 at most filling stations in the capital city had reduced drastically.