Prof. Wumi Iledare, former President of the Nigeria Association of Energy Economies (NAEE), has advised the federal government to engage in gradual deregulation of the downstream oil sector until the passage of the Petroleum Industry bill (PIB).
Iledare made this
known in an interview in Abuja on Sunday while reacting to the recommendation
of the Nigerian Governors Forum for N385 pump price of petrol.
“Only the Minister of
Petroleum has the power to fix Petroleum Product Price as it stands now. Others
are only advisory.
“I don’t see
deregulation taking place without the PIB becoming an Act. Fixing the price at
N385, does not make economic sense for now.”
It will be recalled
that the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) on May 20 at its virtual meeting
considered the report of a committee headed by Kaduna State Governor, Malam
Nasir el-Rufai.
The Forum accepted the
committee’s recommendation that backs full deregulation of petrol and suggested
that the pump price of the product should hover around N385 per litre.
Iledare said that the
only way to ensure the full deregulation of the downstream oil sector was by
speedy passage of the PIB.
“One would suggest a
gradual and partial deregulation over a specified period backed by a legislation
for perpetual decontrol.
“In the process there
can be parallel market with instruments in place to avoid round tripping.
“NNPC as part of
fulfilling social responsibility goal can institute price modulation with a
sunset date in mind for public transporters.
“And the downstream
sector can then be open to private willing sellers and willing buyers,” he
advised.
According to him, an
instant deregulation by fiasco for the enhancement of federation account as
proposed by the governors is as bad as subsidy payments for the economy.
“The unintended
consequences of fixing the price by fiasco will create an unprecedented and
dangerous shock to the Nigerian economy.
“Deregulation must be gradual and not
shocking. Don’t fix any price, let it find its level with time,” he added.
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