Nigeria’s Petroleum Product Pricing Regulations Agency (PPPRA) has clarified the meaning of its market-based pricing regime regulations on Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), after some reports misinterpreted the initially released statement.
In a statement signed by the Executive Secretary, Abdulkadir Saliu, and released to the press on Sunday, the agency insisted that the prices would be advised by the agency, based on the realities of the oil market. The agency said that it would monitor the market trends and advise the NNPC and oil marketing companies on the monthly market-based guiding price at which the product would be sold across the country.
The statement read:
“It has come to the PPPRA’s attention that several publications in the print and electronic media have reported that the Agency has removed the price cap on Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), giving marketers the freedom to fix the price of the commodity and sell above the stipulated price.
The Agency hereby wishes to correct the misconception and clarify the following in no uncertain terms:
It would be recalled that the removal of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) price cap and implementation of a market-based pricing regime was first announced by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, in March 2020. This was followed by PPPRA’s publication announcing the Regulation on the market-based pricing regime, thus creating a legal framework for the policy.
The published Regulation does NOT confer on marketers the power to fix prices for the product as they deem fit, but rather guiding prices would be advised by the PPPRA according to market realities.
The Agency shall monitor market trends and advise the NNPC and Oil Marketing Companies on the monthly market-based guiding price, which shall include the indicative retail price at which the product shall be sold across the country.
The Minister had earlier stated that the Federal Government will continue to monitor the price of petroleum products and advise on monthly guiding prices that guarantee reasonable returns to Operators while ensuring consumers pay appropriate prices in line with market reality and are not overcharged.
The Minister in his statement, further stressed that the government’s role in a deregulated economy was to provide, through the operation of the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency, a pricing mechanism to create a market-driven price regime.
For the avoidance of doubt, it is instructive to state that no private individual or group, has the mandate to fix prices of petroleum products, however the statutory regulatory body is saddled with the responsibility of advising guiding prices.
Suffice to say that in a deregulated market, the role of a Regulator in monitoring and regulating activities in the sector cannot be over-emphasized” reads the statement in parts.