Diesel prices have surged to between N900 and N950 per liter in multiple states due to the ongoing foreign exchange crisis in Nigeria and the recent enforcement of a 7.5 percent Value Added Tax (VAT) on Automotive Gas Oil (diesel), GOOD EVENING NIGERIA has learnt.
This price escalation has raised alarms among local manufacturers, who fear potential factory closures and job losses as a result.
Speaking during a press briefing in Abuja, the Natural Oil and Gas Suppliers Association of Nigeria (NOGASA) explained that their inability to access the United States dollars is hampering their diesel imports.
The National President, NOGASA, Benneth Korie, told journalists that the cost of diesel was around N650/litre before the Federal Government introduced a 7.5 per cent VAT on the commodity.
According to reports, the Federal Government had commenced the implementation of the payment of 7.5 per cent VAT on diesel.
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Officials of the Nigeria Customs Service and Federal Inland Revenue Service had confirmed this in Abuja, stressing that AGO was not exempted from the payment of VAT based on the VAT Modification Order 2021.
Speaking at the press briefing on Monday, the NOGASA president said, “Diesel price is now approaching N900 to N950/litre depending on where you are buying it from. Before the introduction of VAT on diesel by the FIRS, diesel was around N650/litre.
“This increase in price is also due to the scarcity of the dollars. The government has to intervene in this dollar situation. All bank CEOs, Central Bank of Nigeria and others must meet to address this dollar issue. The way it is going, it will destroy a lot of things for us if it is not controlled.”
Korie also called upon President Bola Tinubu to prioritize the revival of Nigeria’s refineries. He reasoned that when domestic refineries become operational, the pressure on dollars from importers would naturally decrease.
“Our refineries were built by human beings and can be fixed by human beings. I believe Nigerian engineers can fix these refineries, instead of us depending on imports. This is not sustainable.
“We are pilling pressure on the very limited dollars in the country by importing petroleum products and other commodities. But once our refineries start working, this pressure will drastically reduce. The government has to fix our refineries,” he stated.
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The NOGASA president also decried the state of Nigerian roads, as he gave an instance with the Port Harcourt-Warri road, stressing that about 500 tankers were currently trapped on that road due to its abysmal nature.
“For two weeks now our tankers have been on that road; you can’t cross it. Our roads are bad, our trucks trapped on the Warri-Abuja road for two weeks, our drivers are kidnapped, killes, while others suffer.
“Some of the roads are blocked. If the government does not fix those roads, then petroleum products will stop coming to Abuja and other locations across the country,” Korie stated.
Manufacturers lament possible shut down, job losses
Speaking on the development, the Director-General of the Nigerian Textile Manufacturers Association, Hamma Kwajaffa, has said several textile manufacturers were contemplating to shut down their operations owing to rising costs, largely caused by skyrocketing energy costs.
The DG said textile manufacturers could not afford to buy diesel at the projected price of _
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He said, “Many are contemplating closing for now. We can’t meet up with that kind of amount. We have less than 24 textiles today, those who are working are contemplating closure. They have been pushed to the wall. These businesses are not in charity. They have to break even.
In the same vein, the Chief Executive Officer of Coleman Technical Industries Limited, George Onafowokan said increased diesel costs implied increased cost of production for the company.
He urged the government to find lasting solutions to the constant increase in diesel costs.
Onafowokan said, “Whenever the price of diesel goes up, it makes everybody’s cost go up. Logistics costs will go up for everybody, power costs will go up if diesel sells at N950.