Site icon Nairametrics

Is This Clue That Buhari Is Now Considering Removing Fuel Subsidies?

It seems that Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari or ‘Baba go slow’ as some Nigerians call him may be finally beginning to get his reform engine revved up.

 

Emmanuel Kachikwu, group managing director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corp., has come out to say that Nigeria’s fuel subsidy is “unsustainable.”

“Subsidy creates distortions in government revenue distribution,” Kachikwu said in a speech delivered by Bola Ashafa, acting managing director of the National Engineering and Technical Co., in Lagos.

Nigeria is Africa’s biggest crude producer, and spent 20 percent of its budget in 2013 on subsidies for imported gasoline, heating oil and other refined products. Costs totaled 5 trillion naira ($25.1 billion) from 2006 to 2012.

News continues after this ad

The “government is not in control of factors that influence the retail fuel price, particularly fluctuations of crude oil price at the international market,” according to Kachikwu.

President Muhammadu Buhari appointed Kachikwu, a former executive at ExxonMobil Africa, as head of the NNPC on Aug. 4.

The president, who took office in May, has vowed to purge Nigeria’s oil industry of corruption, and restructure it to provide a greater contribution to the national economy.

“Deregulation is essential to the transformation and growth of the downstream sector of the oil and gas industry,” Kachikwu’s remarks said.

Exit mobile version