Marketers Accuse PPMC of Diverting LPG Vessels

Fri, Jun 10, 2016
By publisher
2 MIN READ

Energy Briefs

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THE Nigerian Association of Liquefied Petroleum Gas Marketers, NALPGAM, has accused the Pipelines and Products Marketing Company, PPMC, of inefficiency in handling berthing of Liquefied Petroleum Gas, LPG, vessels in Lagos, saying this has triggered instability in the price of the product.

Bassey Essien, executive secretary, NALPGAM, alleged that the Marine Transport Department, a unit under PPMC in charge of scheduling vessels ‎for berthing at various terminals in Lagos, has been diverting LPG vessels meant for other jetties in Lagos, to a private company (Navgas) that owns a particular jetty in Lagos, thereby creating a monopoly and causing a hike in the price of the product.

Essien alleged that the deliberate diversion of LPG vessels to Navgas and the jetty in question by the PPMC has made the price of the product to increase from N2.4 million per 20 metric tonnes of truck to N3.5 million for the same quantity in less than one week. He maintained that the price instability caused by the development has also affected the price of the 12.5 kilogram cylinder of LPG which has increased from N2,500 to between N3,500 to N4,000.

He noted that government’s effort to supply major terminals with LPG in Lagos was currently been thwarted by PPMC conspiracy. “Major terminals are being starved of the product‎, but if products are made available to all the terminals, the issue of price instability will not exist. Now that only one terminal receives product, they will be the one that will determine the market price. So, this is not an issue of price increase, it is an issue of price instability ‎because if it is price increase, we should know why it is going up and if is coming down, we should know why it is coming down.”

He urged PPMC to create a schedule that would allow LPG vessels from Bonny, Rivers State, to berth twice in a month in Lagos, noting that vessels not berthing twice were creating supply gaps. Essien maintained that beside the profit making aspect of the business being affected, Nigerians, who are the end users of the product, were being affected. “When end users can no longer afford LPG, they will be forced to go back to dirty fuel like kerosene, charcoal and firewood which is hazardous to their health,” he said.

— Jun 20, 2016 @ 01:00 GMT

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