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Petrol soars to N955/litre as NNPCL, marketers hike prices

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The pump price of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), commonly known as petrol, has surged again to N955 per litre in parts of the country, including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), amid rising international benchmark prices and adjustments by both the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) and other marketers.

Most filling stations in Abuja, yesterday, were dispensing petrol at N955, with NNPCL retail outlets and independent marketers already reflecting the new price.

A few stations linked to the Dangote Refinery partnership, especially MRS, however, sold marginally lower at N885/litre, although there were indications that the ex-depot petrol price by Dangote Refinery moved to N858 per litre, from N820.

Sources at the refinery, however, said the refinery had yet to implement an upward review of the pump price. NNPCL, which had been accused by some marketers of underselling in terms of pricing, officially raised pump price at its retail outlets in the capital from N890 to N955, about a N65 hike.

Other stations that were previously selling at about N900 per litre moved their prices to NNPC’s benchmark of N955 per litre. Filling stations along major corridors such as the Kubwa Expressway and Airport Road were observed dispensing at the revised rate. Similar price increases were witnessed across the northern states.

The Nigerian Midstream Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) revealed that off-take from local refineries per day stands at about 15 million litres, while about 35 million litres were supplied from across depots in May.

In June alone, 455.2 million litres of PMS were trucked out from refineries, while depots accounted for 985.6 million litres (18.55 per cent increase from the 1.22 billion litres recorded in May).

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