Nigeria’s petrol marketers have decried challenges faced in purchasing Dangote Refinery’s Premium Motor Spirit (Petrol) amid a fuel price hike.
Abubakar Maigandi disclosed this in an interview with Channels Television on Wednesday, monitored by the Daily Post.
His comment comes amid the President of Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote’s, statement on Tuesday that petrol retailers are snubbing his refinery’s fuel despite having 500 million litres of stock of the product
Dangote, who spoke when the Naira-for-crude implementation committee visited President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Tuesday, said the refinery is running at a loss.
However, reacting to the development, Maigandi blamed Dangote’s refinery for unending delays in registering IPMAN members to lift Dangote Fuel directly.
According to him, recently, marketers on NNPCL instruction went to Dangote Refinery to lift petrol but stayed four days without getting product.
“Recently, some of the IPMAN marketers that NNPCL sent to Dangote Refinery to lift gasoline stayed with their trucks for four days; they are unable to load.
“That is why we have been contacting Dangote Refinery to allow loading directly.
“So that immediately we pay for the product, we could lift it immediately.
“If Dangote has 500 million litres of fuel in stock, we are ready to buy the product directly.
“Until now, NNPCL is still the sole offtaker of Dangote Petrol.
“In buying directly from Dangote Refinery, there are some processes put in place by the company that we are still following. They said they can not sell the product to us individually. The company wants us to come in groups, which we have already done. We have submitted an application. Until the present day, Dangote Refinery has yet to register us, talkless of going to the refinery to lift the product.
“Yesterday (Tuesday), I called their attention; we were told to wait,” he said.
He added that oil marketers are boycotting Dangote’s Petrol for imported fuel because of the challenges they face in purchasing the product directly from Dangote Refinery and the pricing template.
This comes as Nigerians buy fuel between N1030 and N1250 per litre across the country.