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NUPRC directs refiners to provide monthly price quote on crude supply

The Nigeria Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) has directed oil refiners in the country to provide monthly price quote on crude supply.

The NUPRC directed producers and refiners to provide the commission with cargo price quotes on crude supply and delivery for effective monitoring and regulation of transactions among parties.

The NUPRC gave this directive at a meeting with the crude producers, under the umbrella of the Oil Producers Trade Section of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Mr Gbenga Komolafe, Commission Chief Executive (CCE), in a statement on Thursday said the meeting agreed to concede to a framework that would be mutually beneficial to ensure that local refineries were not strangulated due to off-the-curve prices.

Komolafe said the meeting was focused on the status review of the Framework for Seamless Operationalisation of Domestic Crude Oil Supply Obligation Template.

He said the Federal Government and crude oil producers in Nigeria had committed to working toward a sustainable supply of crude oil to local refineries under a market-determined pricing system.

According to him, the aim is to ensure that while the operators do business optimally, the refineries are not starved of feedstock.

He said it was part of efforts to effectively implement key sections of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021, especially the issue of pricing and crude supply to the domestic refineries.

According to Komolafe, President Bola Tinubu is fully committed to providing a level playing ground for producers and refiners to do business in the industry.

He expressed the need for a rule of engagement to ensure that the pricing model from the oil producers does not hinder the domestic refineries.

“We need to have the price quotes monthly,” he directed.

He pointed out a convergence between the Domestic Crude Oil Supply Obligation and the nation’s energy security, indicating that his team is re-engineering its regulatory processes to address the challenges.

“We allow all our processes to be transparent. While the Federal Government targets the implementation of the regulation, all parties must submit to the rules of engagement as a guide for operation,” he said.

The regulator, he said, was committed to driving the willing buyer/willing seller provision.

“We have to discuss pricing, especially as parties have committed to respecting their domestic crude oil obligation.

“As the regulator, we don’t want the upstream sector to be operated sub-optimally through cost under-recovery.

“So, the regulator is very alive to that. In crude pricing we will never allow price strangulation to disincentives our domestic refining capacity optimisation.

“The regulator does not support cost under-recovery in the upstream sector, and we will continue to work to ensure that crude supply profiteering as a negative factor that can strangulate our domestic refining capacity optimisation is disallowed,” he said.

He emphasised the imperative for appropriate pricing to drive willing buyer willing seller referencing guided Fiscal Oil Price published by the Commission in line with the provisions of the PIA.

He assured that NUPRC would continue to attract the needed investments to boost upstream development and optimisation of our hydrocarbon resources for sustainability of domestic energy supply in the midstream and downstream sector.

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