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Buhari Suspends Payment On Petrol Subsidy Until Oil Price Rises At The Int’l Market

The Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, says the Nigerian government led by Muhammadu Buhari has suspended the subsidy on petroleum products as at today, December 27, as a result of the current low price of crude in the international market.

Dr. Kachikwu said the non-payment of subsidy would remain the same, as long as market trends allow.

He told reporters on Sunday in Kaduna that if crude prices increase, there would be a review which would be tackled under the newly introduced price modulation in the sector.

The price modulation, according to the Minister, is not an outright removal of petrol subsidy.

On December 17, the Minister said that the government was not interested in the removal of subsidy on petroleum products, but rather a price modulation that would reduce its involvement in pricing starting 2016.

He explained that a periodical review of the Petroleum Pricing Template and a flexible management of the pricing system would be considered.

The price modulation, the government stressed, would be predicated on a 97 Naira per litre projection, which would be a cap on the price of fuel with a gradual increment between the band of the current price of 87 Naira and 97 Naira until a fair price is reached in the pricing review.

Few days after he announced plans for a price modulation, he told reporters that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation would announce a pump price of 85 Naira per litre of petrol in January 2016.

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