Page added on January 2, 2012
Irate drivers in Africa’s most populous nation paid more than twice the usual price Monday after the government quietly removed a long-cherished consumer subsidy that had kept gas affordable, prompting fears of strikes and unrest.
Gas powers Nigeria’s generators because the national electricity supply is sporadic at best, and fuel also keeps engines running in traffic that can snarl for hours. The government’s announcement — made over a long holiday weekend — drew outrage.
“This New Year ‘gift’ by the presidency is callous, insensitive and is intended to cause anarchy in the country,” said a joint statement by two unions who said they were planning general strikes and protests in the coming days. “We shall neither surrender nor retreat.”
Unrest would only add to Nigeria’s security woes: President Goodluck Jonathan already declared a state of emergency over the weekend in parts of the country hit by a growing Islamic insurgency that is fueled in part by widespread poverty.
And the fuel price hike is likely to result in even higher prices in the landlocked and violence-plagued north, as Nigeria’s refined oil is mainly imported through ports in the country’s south.
Previous attempts to tamper with the subsidy over more than two decades have been met with nationwide protests, compelling even heavy-handed military governments to reduce it instead.
The labor unions also preemptively warned police and security forces “not to accept any order to shoot Nigerians or attack them for publicly resisting these evil hikes in fuel prices.”
Tensions already are on the rise in the capital of Abuja, where police officers promptly dispersed a protest using tear gas and arrested five people including a former lawmaker. And at one bus stop in the megacity of Lagos, a conductor pushed a policeman trying to board his bus for free, saying that the hike meant that even uniformed officers would henceforth have to pay.
Many gas stations were shut down altogether on Monday, since gas station owners had only learned about the change at the same time as everyone else.
Signs at a few stations put the cost at $3.50 per gallon (94 cents per liter) — just over double Sunday’s morning price of about $1.70 per gallon (45 cents per liter).
While that’s cheap by American standards, most Nigerians subsist on just $2 a day and the rising gas prices are expected to force food prices to spiral as well.
“I don’t want to lose customers by doubling my rates, so I’ll have to bear some of this cost myself,” said Yomi Esan, 31, a driver for a taxi chain. “My biggest worry is losing my customers because this is how I feed my family.”
Nigeria, an OPEC member nation producing about 2.4 million barrels of crude oil a day, is a top supplier to the United States, but virtually all of its petroleum products are imported after years of graft, mismanagement and violence at its refineries.
The Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency announced Sunday it was stopping to pay the subsidy on fuel to petroleum importers effective immediately.
The government has said the move will save the country some $8 billion, some of which will be dedicated to much-needed infrastructure projects. Previous attempts to lift the subsidies have been met with nationwide strike actions.
An executive with a top gas station owner, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, said the move would push companies to be more efficient so they can cut costs and sell at more competitive prices.
But in a country where few people see any wealth from the country’s staggering oil revenues, the subsidy was a rare government benefit and one Nigerians don’t want to lose.
Esan, the taxi driver who is afraid to raise his prices, is despondent about his financial future if he stays in Nigeria. He’s already started immigration procedures for three other countries.
“I had been saving to buy my own car, but with this, I just want to leave this country,” he said.
5 Comments on "Outcry in Nigeria as fuel prices more than double"
Kenz300 on Mon, 2nd Jan 2012 9:51 pm
Countries around the world that subsidize fuel prices will see their budgets sky rocket. Subsidizing energy in some countries has led to wasteful use of the resource. As the price of oil continues to rise we will all use energy more wisely. A gradual increase in price may give some time to make the needed adjustments. A sharp spike in price will cause huge economic disruptions. We all need to prepare as best we can. Energy efficiency will become a factor in everyones daily life.
jaime on Tue, 3rd Jan 2012 12:36 am
Poster-child for oil consuming nations.
MrEnergyCzar on Tue, 3rd Jan 2012 12:46 am
Imagine what would happen in the states if they passed on some of the Middle East military costs/subsidies to pump prices or the special oil company tax breaks. How much does it cost to operate just the Navy’s 5th fleet in the Strait of Hormuz?
MrEnergyCzar
DC on Tue, 3rd Jan 2012 10:55 am
What are peoples first response when they have to start paying the true cost of fossil-fuels, if only a little bit like this instance here? Do they seek alternatives? Talk about useing less? No, they get mad. Which is exactly what we do here too. We may not burn things down(not yet anyhow), but our primarly re-flexive response to higher FF costs is simply-get pissed off about it. The reason for this, is somewhat understandabe. Weve been forced to build the kind of society big-oil\auto\rubber wanted built. And if fuel gets too high, there is quite literally in many cases, no alternative. People dont get mad about the lack of alternatives however, or even stop to question WHY they want cheap so badly, they just get made about the price of gas….
North americans need there wake-up call about gas’s real cost too. Its two to three times what we pay at the ‘pump’. Drivers, long haul truckers, suburban ‘developers’, the airlines etc need to start charging end-users the full cost for FF, not the care-bear pricing weve had for way too long.
Anvil on Tue, 3rd Jan 2012 11:16 am
Suck it up and die.