Again, Dangote Slashes Petrol Ex-Depot Price, Now ₦835

For the second time in the month of April, Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals has again reviewed its ex-depot (gantry) loading cost of petrol to ₦835 per litre. The $20bn Lagos-based refinery informed its marketers and customers of the slash on Wednesday. An official at the refinery confirmed the price reduction from ₦867 to ₦835 per litre to Channels Television. The official also said the refinery would release a statement. Checks into petroleumprice.ng also confirmed that the private refinery reduced its gantry price to ₦835 on Wednesday afternoon. Filling stations like MRS Oil & Gas, Ardova Plc, Heyden, and others with special agreements with the Dangote Refinery are expected to reduce their pump price to below ₦900 to reflect the marginal reduction in the ex-depot price of the premium commodity. The price reduction by the private refinery followed a meeting between representatives of the Dangote Refinery and the Minister of Finance Wale Edun last week. At the end of the meeting, the government said that the naira-for-crude was still in effect and that the initiative was not a temporary measure but a “key policy directive designed to support sustainable local refining”. The government also said the initiative is still in effect and will continue immediately, overruling the decision of the NNPCL under its former boss Mele Kyari which tenured the initiative. For decades, Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, has been faced with intractable energy challenges, no thanks to an epileptic power supply that significantly affects productivity levels. All the state-owned refineries were non-operational for decades until recently. Before the production of refined products by the Dangote Refinery, the country was heavily reliant on imported refined petroleum products, with the state-run NNPC being the major importer of the essential commodities. Prices of petrol have risen fivefold since the removal of subsidy in May 2023 by President Bola Tinubu, from around ₦200/litre to around ₦1000/litre, compounding the woes of the citizens who power their vehicles, and generating sets with petrol, no thanks to decades-long epileptic electricity supply.
Admin | 2025-04-16 17:10:44