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HomeNewsPetrol May Sell for N212.61 as PPPRA Releases Price Guide

Petrol May Sell for N212.61 as PPPRA Releases Price Guide

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Petrol pump price is likely to hit N212.61 per litre soon as the authorities approve the latest price guide set by the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA)

Although the agency said last year that it would no longer be involved in fixing the price of the product since the market had been “deregulated”, it however released a lower band of N209.61 and higher band N212.61 per litre for the month in its latest template.

To put it in context, the price for February was N186.74 for the upper band and N183.73 for the lower band, although Nigerians paid less for the product last month, with the federal government saying it was still negotiating with organised labour.

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The pricing template showed the average price per ton of the commodity was about $561.96, or N169.22 per litre, while the average freight rate coat (North-West Europe to West Africa) was about $21.63 per or N6.51 per litre.

Also, the agency in the figures released on its website earlier this morning, said the ex-coastal price was N175.73 per litre, average lightering expenses was fixed at N4.81 per litre while the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) charge was put at N2.49 per litre;

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In addition, the template revealed that the NIMASA charge is now N0.23 per litre; jetty thruput N1.61 per litre while storage charge is N2.58 per litre and average finance cost of N2.17 per litre, giving an Expected Landing Cost (ELC) of N189.61.

Further analysis put the wholesale margin at N4.03 per litre; administration charge at N1.23 per litre; transporters’ allowance (NTA) was fixed at N3.89 per litre; bridging fund cost was N7.51 per litre and Marine Transport Average (MTA) remained at N0.15 per litre.

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With this, the expected ex-depot price for wholesale products marketers would be N206.42 per litre.

Earlier in the month, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) assured Nigerians that there will be no price increase for the product in March until all negotiations with labour are concluded.

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