Nigerian Fuel Subsidy Removal
The Nigerian government has over the last
three decades subsidized the price of refined petroleum products consumed in
the country. What started as a stop-gap
to meet supply shortfalls that occurred during scheduled Turn Around Maintenance
of the Eleme, Port-Harcourt and Warri refineries soon became the norm as the Nigerian
National Petroleum Cooperation (NNPC) seemed incapable of managing the
operations of these refineries leading to perennial fuel shortages and scarcity.
As the population of Nigeria grew, so
did the demand for refined petroleum products even as two additional refineries were
built in Kaduna and Port-Harcourt.
With a combined installed refining capacity
of about 445,000 barrels a day, Nigeria’s four refineries are enough to meet
the daily consumption requirement, currently estimated to be about 325,000 barrels per
day, with room for exportation.
Over time, the officials of the NNPC charged
with managing the refineries soon discovered that by keeping the refineries in
a perennial state of disrepair, they could award refined product supply
contracts to their cronies and proxies and pocket the profits. In order to stave off public criticism of the
scheme if they charged the market rate for the imported products, they decided
to subsidize the cost and successively set the pump rates, never mind the
arbitrage opportunity this provided hoarders of the products, who took
advantage of the endemic scarcity, and smugglers and diverters who saw the opportunity to
charge multiples of the cost price if they sold the products in neighboring
African countries. In 2011, the NNPC is
estimated to have spent over $8.00 billion on subsidized imported refined
petroleum products because the four refineries in Nigeria barely operated at
about 15% of full capacity (the Petroleum Minister, Diezani Alison Madueke, claims between 50% and 60% capacity utilization in a "Townhall meeting" in Lagos about two weeks ago).
There is no telling that removing the subsidy
on imported petroleum products makes sense.
However it does not take care of the intrinsic problems of corrupt
enrichment of selves, cronies and proxies by the managers of the refineries and
the perennial scarcity. In fact, it will only mean that importers of the
refined products have a license to charge higher prices for their products,
affording higher returns to their patrons in the NNPC, who will consequently have
a higher incentive to keep the NNPC refineries in disrepair and non-functional.
The way around the issue of the mismanagement
of Nigeria’s oil sector is for the government to totally divest its equity
stake in all the joint ventures it has with the various operators in the industry. These interests should be sold off in the
stock market encouraging a wide base participation and equity distribution with
a cap of say 1% to 2% of the total equity stake as the maximum any individual
or entity can hold. In addition to this,
the Nigerian government needs to liberalize the ownership of refineries by
issuing more licenses to allow as many private enterprises as possible to set up refineries all over the country. This will not only stem
the perennial fuel shortages, it will foster competition and reduce prices as
the incentive for operators who want to remain profitable will be to hone their
operations to be as efficient as possible.
Fully divested of its equity stakes in the
industry, the government will through its agencies provide regulatory and
oversight control of the industry and raise revenue through licensing fees, tariffs,
duties and taxes. This will in one fell
swoop take care of the current inefficiencies and massive corruption in the system.
This proposal however will take
about a year or two to achieve, as the required physical and organizational infrastructure
will have to be in place and operational before subsidies are abolished. That the Jonathan administration has chosen
to abruptly end subsidies on January 1, 2012 without any structures in place
guarantees a hard landing and will wreak untold economic and social hardships
on the common Nigerian folk. This limited understanding and analysis of the issue risks for the Jonathan
government a high political premium particularly as it comes at a period when
Nigerians are disenchanted with the harsh economic downturn and serious
security issues currently facing the country.