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Post Debate Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy Be Removed? - Politics (4) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Post Debate Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy Be Removed? (11062 Views)

Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy be removed??

No, Never.: 12% (39 votes)
Not Now. Build Refineries first.: 57% (173 votes)
Yes but phased.: 14% (43 votes)
Yes. Now: 15% (48 votes)
This poll has ended

Fuel Subsidy To Go Next Year. FG To Sell Petrol At 97 / Which Governor-Elects Are Likely To Be Removed By Tribunals? / Post Debate Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy Be Removed. (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Post Debate Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy Be Removed? by toluxa1(m): 1:18am On Dec 24, 2011
Please can anyone provide me with a link where I can get to watch the debate. I missed it and I really want to watch it as alot of people have learnt from it. Anyway please?
Re: Post Debate Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy Be Removed? by Iolo(m): 1:47am On Dec 24, 2011
abenelo:

Finally The Hidden Truth About Fuel Subsidy Comes Out


No doubt, many Nigerians have not seen the facts about fuel subsidy this clearer before: On December 10, 2011, if you stopped at the Mobil filling station on Old Aba Road in Port Harcourt , you would be able to buy a litre of petrol for 65 naira or $1.66 per gallon at an exchange rate of $1/N157 and 4 litres per gallon. This is the official price.

The government claims that this price would have been subsidized at,
N73/litre and that the true price of a litre of petrol in Port Harcourt is N138/litre or $3.52 per gallon.

They are therefore determined to remove their subsidy and sell the gallon at $3.52. But, On December 10, 2011, if you stopped at the Mobil Gas station on E83rd St and Flatlands Avenue in Brooklyn, New York, USA, you would be a able to buy a gallon of petrol for $3.52/gallon. Both gallons of petrol would have been refined from Nigerian crude oil. The only difference would be that the gallon in New York was refined in a US North East refinery from Nigerian crude exported from the Qua Iboe Crude Terminal in Nigeria while the Port Harcourt gallon was either refined in Port Harcourt or imported.

The idea that a gallon of petrol from Nigerian crude oil cost the same in New York as in Port Harcourt runs against basic economic logic. Hence, Nigerians suspect that there is something irrational and fishy about such pricing. What they (Nigerians) would like to know is the exact cost of 1 litre of petrol in Nigeria.

We will answer this question in the simplest economic terms despite the attempts of the Nigerian government to muddle up the issue. What is the true cost of a litre of petrol in Nigeria? The Nigerian government has earmarked 445,000 barrel per day throughput for meeting domestic refinery products demands. These volumes are not for export. They are public goods reserved for internal consumption.

We will limit our analysis to this volume of crude oil. At the refinery gate in Port Harcourt, the cost of a barrel of Qua Iboe crude oil is made up of the finding /development cost ($3.5/bbl) and a production/storage /transportation cost of $1.50 per barrel.

Thus, at $5 per barrel, we can get Nigerian Qua Iboe crude to the refining gates at Port Harcourt and Warri. [/b]One barrel is 42 gallons or 168 litres. [b]The price of 1 barrel of petrol at the Depot gate is the sum of the cost of crude oil, the refining cost and the pipeline transportation cost.

Refining costs are at $12.6 per barrel and pipeline distribution cost are $1.50 per barrel. The Distribution Margins (Retailers, Transporters, Dealers, Bridging Funds, Administrative charges etc) are N15.49/litre or $16.58 per barrel. The true cost of 1 litre of petrol at the Mobil filling station in Port Harcourt or anywhere else in Nigeria is therefore ($5 +$12.6+$1.5+$16.6) or $35.7 per barrel . This is equal to N33.36 per litre compared to the official price of N65 per litre. Prof. Tam David West is right. There is no petrol subsidy in Nigeria. Rather the current official prices are too high. Let us continue with some basic energy economics.

The government claims we are currently operating our refineries at 38.2% efficiency. When we refine a barrel of crude oil, we get more than just petrol. If we refine 1 barrel (42 gallons) of crude oil, we will get 45 gallons of petroleum products. The 45 gallons of petroleum products consist of 4 gallons of LPG, 19.5 gallons of Gasoline, 10 gallons of Diesel, 4 gallons of Jet Fuel/Kerosene, 2.5 gallons of Fuel Oil and 5 gallons of Bottoms. Thus, at 38.2% of refining capacity, we have about 170,000 bbls of throughput refined for about 13.26 million litres of petrol, 6.8 million litres of diesel and 2.72 million litres of kerosene/jet fuel.

This is not enough to meet internal national demand. So, we send the remaining of our non-export crude oil volume (275,000 barrels per day) to be refined abroad and import the petroleum product back into the country. We will just pay for shipping and refining. The Nigerian government exchanges the 275,000 barrels per day with commodity traders (90,000 barrels per day to Duke Oil, 60,000 barrels per day to Trafigura (Puma Energy), 60,000 barrels per day to Societe Ivoirienne de Raffinage (SIR) in Abidjan, Ivory Coast and 65,000 barrels per days to unknown sources) in a swap deal.

The landing cost of a litre of petrol is N123.32 and the distribution margins are N15.49 according to the government. The cost of a litre is therefore (N123.32+N15.49) or N138.81 . This is equivalent to $3.54 per gallon or $148.54 per barrel. In technical terms, one barrel of Nigerian crude oil has a volume yield of 6.6% of AGO, 20.7% of Gasoline, 9.5% of Kerosene/Jet fuel, 30.6% of Diesel, 32.6% of Fuel oil / Bottoms when it is refined.

Using a netback calculation method, we can easily calculate the true cost of a litre of imported petrol from swapped oil. The gross product revenue of a refined barrel of crude oil is the sum of the volume of each refined product multiplied by its price. Domestic prices are $174.48/barrel for AGO, $69.55/barrel for Gasoline (PMS or petrol), $172.22/barrel for Diesel Oil, $53.5/barrel for Kerosene and $129.68/barrel for Fuel Oil. Let us substitute the government imported PMS price of $148.54 per barrel for the domestic price of petrol/gasoline.

Our gross product revenue per swapped barrel would be (174.48*0.066 +148.54*0.207+172.22*0.306+ 53.5*0.095+129.68*0.326) or $142.32 per barrel. We have to remove the international cost of a barrel of Nigerian crude oil ($107 per barrel) from this to get the net cost of imported swapped petroleum products to Nigerian consumers. The net cost of swapped petroleum products would therefore be $142.32 -$107 or $35.32 per barrel of swapped crude oil. This comes out to be a net of $36.86 per barrel of petrol or N34.45 per litre.

This is the true cost of a litre of imported swapped petrol and not the landing cost of N138 per litre claimed by the government. The pro-subsidy Nigerian government pretends the price of swapped crude oil is $0 per barrel (N0 per litre) while the resulting petroleum products is $148.54 per barrel (N138 per litre). The government therefore argues that the “subsidy” is N138.81-N65 or N73.81 per litre.

But, if landing cost of the petroleum products is at international price ($148.54 per barrel), then the take-off price of the swapped crude oil should be at international price ($107 per barrel). This is basic economic logic outside the ideological prisms of the World Bank. The traders/petroleum products importers and the Nigerian government are charging Nigerians for the crude oil while they are getting it free.

So let us conclude this basic economic exercise. If the true price of 38.2% of our petrol supply from our local refinery is N33.36/litre and the remaining 61.8% has a true price of N34.45 per litre, then the average true price is (0.382*33.36+0.618*34.45) or N34.03 per litre. The official price is N65 per litre and the true price with government figures is about N34 per litre (even with our moribund refineries).

There is therefore no petrol subsidy. Rather, there is a high sales tax of 91.2% at current prices of N65 per litre. The labor leaders meeting the President should go with their economists. They should send economists and political scientists as representatives to the Senate Committee investigating the petroleum subsidy issue. There are many expert economists and political scientists in ASUU who will gladly represent the view of the majority. The labor leaders should not let anyone get away with the economic fallacy that the swapped oil is free while its refined products must be sold at international prices in the Nigerian domestic market.

The government should explain at what price the swapped crude oil was sold and where the money accruing from these sales have been kept. We have done this simple economic analysis of the Nigerian petroleum products market to show that there is no petrol subsidy what so ever. In the end, this debate on petrol subsidy and the attempt of the government to transfer wealth from the Nigerian masses to a petrol cabal will be decided in the streets.

Nigerian workers, farmers, students, market women, youths, unemployed, NGO and civil society as a whole should prepare for a long harmattan season of protracted struggle. They should not just embark on 3 days strike/protests after which the government reduces the hiked petroleum prices by a few Nairas. They must embark upon in a sustainable struggle that will lead to fundamental changes. Let us remove our entire political subsidy from the government and end this petroleum products subsidy debate once and for all. It is time to bring the Arab Spring south.

This piece was written by Izielen Agbon Izielen Agbon
He writes from Dallas, Texas. izielenagbon@yahoo.com
He is former HOD, Petroleum Engineering Dept, former ASUU chairman, University of Ibadan,
trained many operators in nation’s energy industry with practical experience on
our practices and policy focus in the last 20yrs.


*head spinning after reading this - But even if the government truely swaps crude oil I don't think (1) they swap in enough quantity to meet total local demand. (2) do they really buy back resulting refined products from the swap deal? My point would be that the importers purchase from the free market at international prices hence the high cost of N138 or so.

And then my question is who pays for the swapped crude - the govt doesn't get it for free as they'd have to pay whoever drills it out of the ground also at international prices. This means the govt makes a loss of about $34.86 per barrel. The writer is assuming that importers purchase from the resulting swapped crude oil which I don't buy.
Re: Post Debate Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy Be Removed? by larikky: 8:57am On Dec 24, 2011
Of course the removal of subsidy will free funds which the federal government CAN use to provide social amenities but let's face facts THEY WONT!

The funds realized from the removal of subsidy will go into maintaining the high cost of governance,The FG will share these realized funds among the various arms of government and will one again be pocketed,the politicians keep getting richer.
Much of our country's budget goes into funding the various arms of government and this is what has become too expensive and as such the government needs more funds to sustain.

The masses who now have to pay higher for transport and as such for all goods and commodities will only get poorer with no improvement in the country to show for it and i really pity the civil servants in those states where the governors have refused to pay the 18k minimum wage,they will be impoverished to the base.

If our government is not competent enough to stop this cabal from feeding fat on the subsidy then we should be rest assured that the funds accrued from subsidy will still enter other pockets and this govt is too crippled to stop it.

SUBSIDY CANNOT GO BECAUSE WE WILL SUFFER THE BRUNT AND GAIN NOTHING FROM IT
Re: Post Debate Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy Be Removed? by sheyguy: 10:21pm On Dec 24, 2011
To put a stop to Fuel Subsidy Misery facing us please join hands with me and let's brainstorm on the idea of small scale refineries here:
https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-832026.0.html#msg9829636
Thank You.
Re: Post Debate Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy Be Removed? by 1025: 7:54am On Dec 25, 2011
God in heaven has blessed nigeria with numerous mineral resources but we are doomed with the worst sets of rulers in the history of man.
how much does it cost to build a refinery? if we have oil and have refinery, where will subsidy come in from again.
why will you import your own product? the six highest oil producer in the world does not have a refinery is the joke of the century.
how much was recovered from the abachas? and how did those funds help un the development of nigeria?
we have no good roads, no hospitals, no quality education, no security, no airline, no refinery, no power supply and a human being believes that the only thing we benefit from our resources will be removed and everything will be okay.
if a cabal is enjoying the subsidy money, who is saying they will not sieze the money when the remove it since they are above the law.
Re: Post Debate Poll: Should Fuel Subsidy Be Removed? by iluvnaija: 12:23pm On Dec 25, 2011
nnpc should import the fuel themselves and remove the so called (scam) subsidy. if govt can implrt dustbin why cant they import the fuel?

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