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Marketers May Dump NNPCL As Price War With Dangote Rages - Politics - Nairaland 6q6318

Marketers May Dump NNPCL As Price War With Dangote Rages (11877 Views)

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adenigga(m): 6:04am On Feb 05
Some oil marketers are beginning to change the logo of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited on their filling stations, as the dealers dump the franchise deals with NNPCL due to the stiff competition in the prices of refined products in the downstream arm of the oil sector.

It was gathered that many others are considering the move, particularly those in Lagos, following the recent crash in the prices of refined products by the $20bn Lekki-based Dangote Petroleum Refinery.

Already some dealers that used to have the NNPCL logo on their filling stations located around Wawa on the Lagos-Ibadan expressway, as well as at Ibafo, still along the busy road, have dropped the name of the national oil firm.

Independent marketers are seeking to achieve adequate product off-take at a cheaper rate, as the deregulation of the downstream oil sector has led to intense competition.

Many filling stations formerly d with the national oil company are now being renamed and rebranded under the ownership of private oil marketers, particularly in Lagos and surrounding states.

It was also learned that more marketers may relinquish their licences with NNPCL due to the reduced loading costs of Motor Spirit (petrol) refined by the Dangote refinery, which is currently lower than the landing cost of imported petrol.

The PUNCH reports that a petrol price war was reignited in the sector recently after the Dangote Petroleum Refinery slashed its loading costs to N890 from N950 per litre.


Dealers explained that the rebranding of filling stations is a tactic by the marketers to pick up cheaper products from the Dangote refinery, and other import sources at a cheaper rate.

This assertion was confirmed by the National Publicity Secretary of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, Chinedu Ukadike, during an exclusive interview on Tuesday.

A franchise licence in the oil sector refers to an official authorisation granted to an individual or company to operate a business or distribute products under an established brand or system within the oil industry.

This typically involves a contractual agreement that allows the franchisee to utilise the franchisor’s brand, resources, and operational model in exchange for fees or a percentage of revenue.

Ukadike explained that marketers have adopted this new approach because the NNPCL is no longer the exclusive importer and distributor of refined petroleum products.

He said, “Yes, that observation is correct. Some marketers are changing and rebranding. that there was a time NNPCL was the sole distributor and importer of petrol. So, marketers then gave their filling stations as franchises so that they could get products.

“So marketers normally give their companies to NNPCL to be able to have petroleum products. But now that the game has changed, you can even see some marketers now changing to MRS filling stations. Because MRS is now selling cheaper than any other station.


“People want where they want to get turnover and return on investment. If you are carrying Total on as a brand name and Total is not giving you petrol products, what is the sense of carrying the name? You have to remove it and get a better alternative. Most of those filling stations (that are changing name), NNPC don’t own them. NNPC only collected them on the franchise.”

Attempts to the NNPCL spokesperson, Femi Soneye, for an explanation of why marketers are switching from the company’s brand, proved unsuccessful, as he did not reply to messages sent to his phone.

An oil and gas expert, Olatide Jeremiah, who confirmed the arrangement said marketers used the franchise licence as a method to secure cheaper products from NNPCL which was still importing at the time.

He confirmed that the avenue that provided more revenue was disrupted by the emergence of the Dangote refinery and the inability of the national oil firm to secure an agreement to fix petrol prices with the Lekki-based plant.

Jeremiah, who is the Chief Executive Officer of petroleumprice.ng noted, “Yes, it’s true. It all happened after the subsidy was removed but before the emergence of the Dangote refinery.”

He further narrated, “After the removal and petrol price went up, NNPCL was asked to manage the price and should not be allowed to keep skyrocketing. So NNPCL and the majors were pegging the price at N500 but the landing cost was above the amount. This affected importers and independent marketers who imported fuel. For instance, Petrocam imported and claimed that its landing cost was N700 but the majors and NNPCL were selling at N500 per litre. That is a difference of N200 and was a huge loss.

“So actually NNPCL was subsidising internally and when independent marketers noticed this and were losing sales, they began applying for NNPCL franchise lincence. The marketers paid millions to get the franchise licence because they were loading from NNPCL depot at a cheaper rate.


“NNPCL was the one dictating price for all the majors at that time because of public outcry and they used to buy, till Dangote came in. They also wanted to do the same thing with Dangote to fix the price but the arrangement didn’t work because Dangote wanted to sell to everyone. Its price was better and independent marketers could buy directly.


“The franchise licence was also an avenue to make more profit because some marketers got licence for one of their stations but would transport products to other stations and sell at a higher price to Nigerians. The slot of getting fuel tankers at that time was twice in a month.”

The Chairman of PETROAN in Lagos State, Akinola Ogunyolemi, said most of the outlets are not originally owned by the NNPC.

He said the removal of the NNPCL symbol might mean the end of an agreement or a breach of it by either party.

“These are individual outlets. What they do is that, if an NNPCL contract expires and they are not ready to move forward with them or if they get a juicy offer, they will remove the NNPCL logo. They will rebrand again and put other people’s names. That could be the reason.

“Most of the outlets are not NNPCL-owned. You can have your filling station built and put NNPCL there, with your contract to them. Maybe they could not meet up with your agreement with them, (because they too also have some breach of contract sometimes), you might decide to go and give the station to Mobil or Total. It is yours,” Ogunyolemi said.

Experts also noted that more licenses may still be revoked because the price of imported petrol now costs more than products obtained from the Dangote refinery.


According to the latest data released by the Major Energies Marketers Association, the on-spot cost of landing PMS has reached N910.14 per litre at the ASPM and N910.52 at the NPSC depot.

The document also stated the 30-day average cost of petrol surged to N939.03 per litre.

Meanwhile, fresh details emerged regarding the behind-the-scenes developments that contributed to the reduction in the ex-gantry loading cost of Motor Spirit, commonly known as petrol, sourced from the Dangote Petroleum Refinery and a possible reduced retail cost for Nigerians.

The refinery in a statement signed by Group Chief Branding and Communications Officer, Anthony Chiejina, said the strategic adjustment is a direct response to the positive outlook within the global energy and gas markets, as well as the recent reduction in international crude oil prices.

“Dangote Petroleum Refinery has reduced the ex-depot (gantry) price of Motor Spirit, commonly known as petrol, from N950 to N890, effective from Saturday, 1st February 2025.

“This strategic adjustment is a direct response to the positive outlook within the global energy and gas markets, as well as the recent reduction in international crude oil prices,” the statement read.

It noted that the price revision reflects the ongoing fluctuations in global crude oil markets, as highlighted in the refinery’s statement on 19th January, when a modest increase was implemented due to the previously rising international crude oil prices.


Brent crude, the international benchmark, was traded at $76.76 per barrel on Tuesday, marking a reduction of $4 from $81 per barrel recorded in early January.

While this assertion is totally accurate, marketers in the downstream sector informed our correspondent that a pricing competition between Dangote, the NNPCL and some marketers contributed to the decision to reduce its petrol costs.

This fresh pricing war started about a week ago after the NNPCL and some major marketers secured an alternative source to import refined products at a cheaper landing cost compared to Dangote’s price.

Recall that The PUNCH reported last Friday that the national oil firm and other marketers in the downstream oil sector imported more than 633 million litres of Motor Spirit (petrol) and Automotive Gas Oil (diesel) in January 2025 despite the production of these commodities domestically.

A marketer said, “We had noticed for some weeks that Dangote and private depot prices were at the same level unlike before when there was a N20 difference. So we found out that some people are sourcing cheaper products outside the country and that’s why they are going head-on with Dangote. Those depots didn’t want to get out of business and that was why they had to do it to be more competitive.”

Another source who confirmed the development said the concerns expressed by bulk buyers operating at a loss of N31.02 per litre or a total loss of N310,159,109.59 made Dangote senior executives hold a meeting.

The source noted, however, that despite the reduction in output, the refinery continues to maintain a steady profit, demonstrating its ability to adapt and remain financially successful.


He said, “The price reduction from Dangote was somehow inevitable because there were serious complaints and concerns from their buyers. This made Dangote senior executives to meet on Friday between 4 and 5 pm to discuss. What has happened is basically the effect of deregulation in the downstream sector and Nigerians should expect more pricing war between competitors in the sector.”

Source: https://punchng.com/Marketers-may-dump-NNPCL-as-price-war-with-Dangote-rages

2 Likes

cenaman(m): 6:10am On Feb 05
By the time BUA refinery comes into operation the price of PMS and other petroleum products will crash more..

40 Likes 3 Shares

Maxymilliano(m): 6:39am On Feb 05
Now there's a competition let the price war continue. NNPC can't keep manipulating the end s

23 Likes 4 Shares

Acekidc4(m): 7:11am On Feb 05
Huh🤔
merits(m): 7:59am On Feb 05
adenigga:



Source: https://punchng.com/Marketers-may-dump-NNPCL-as-price-war-with-Dangote-rages
Weldone let the clash of titans of price crash continue.

1 Like

cjudy(m): 7:59am On Feb 05
Evil Government with ers

9 Likes 1 Share

pinkyruledworld(m): 8:00am On Feb 05
Competition is good for the end s

8 Likes

bigdammyj: 8:00am On Feb 05
Their headaches.

1 Like

Arostar2023: 8:01am On Feb 05
Make nobody sabotage de other oO! Make everybody maintain him lane...

4 Likes

phemmie06(m): 8:01am On Feb 05
At the end all this, the consumer will surely win

14 Likes 1 Share

FunkyAlhaji2015: 8:02am On Feb 05
This is why they never wanted Dangote to come on board. He's pressing their neck back to back. Bua too is coming soon.

12 Likes

koladata(m): 8:02am On Feb 05
2 refineries is still monopoly. What advantage does the three cement companies has over cement prices? Until we have 500 refineries don't expect any magic in price of fuel
cenaman:
By the time BUA refinery comes into operation the price of PMS and other petroleum products will crash more..

18 Likes 1 Share

3seriez(m): 8:02am On Feb 05
Apart from the price slash, it is even better quality. Even if NNPC would meet Dangotes price, I'd rather drive to an MRS station to fill my tank.

4 Likes

omowolewa: 8:02am On Feb 05
There is no price war
kayperry: 8:05am On Feb 05
WE dont have the real competition yet, until we have another refinery with @least 450000 bpd

int'L market price is what is controlling the price for now not competition

8 Likes

Wickedfacts: 8:06am On Feb 05
cjudy:
Evil Government with ers

Can someone translate this into Igbo so this blockhead can understand what we're talking about.

7 Likes 1 Share

JASONjnr(m): 8:07am On Feb 05
Seems Dangote knows his onions.....

I hope he won't monopolise the PMS in the future, after successfully retiring the reigning cabals he's been talking about?

1 Like

cjudy(m): 8:07am On Feb 05
Wickedfacts:


Can someone translate this into Igbo so this blockhead can understand what we're talking about.
Sorry I’m not Igbo and don’t understand Igbo.

Anyone who doesn’t your Yoruba Muslim Terror!st agenda automatically is an Igbo. Shameless people

6 Likes

Wickedfacts: 8:11am On Feb 05
cjudy:

Sorry I’m not Igbo and don’t understand Igbo.

Anyone who doesn’t your Yoruba Muslim Terror!st agenda automatically is an Igbo. Shameless people

Friday, you're an old fool.
At your age, you no wan get sense.

4 Likes

Isokoboy(m): 8:12am On Feb 05
There is no competition going on..I feel dangote is reducing price to so that those importing will be at a loss always ... It's a marketing strategy

8 Likes

COMPAQ(m): 8:13am On Feb 05
Newspapers just generate sensational headlines to sell papers and generate clicks for online ments.

There is no price war raging anywhere! So reducing price from N950 to N890 (N60), when crude prices had fallen back from $82 to $75 and Naira had appreciated from N1600 to N1480 is tantamount to price war abi?

The way we like to use 'crash' and 'price war' and all these big words for N50 decrease ehn!!!

You will see some headlines, 'naira tumbles in market'. Then you read the story and the naira just fell from 1590 to 1600!!!!

8 Likes

Kingray10: 8:16am On Feb 05
Let the price war continue, that's the only way we will get a cheaper fuel

5 Likes

iwaeda: 8:17am On Feb 05
Import war just get messier. grin grin grin grin
iwaeda: 8:19am On Feb 05
COMPAQ:
Newspapers just generate sensational headlines to sell papers and generate clicks for online ments.

There is no price war raging anywhere! So reducing price from N950 to N890 (N60), when crude prices had fallen back from $82 to $75 and Naira had appreciated from N1600 to N1480 is tantamount to price war abi?

The way we like to use 'crash' and 'price war' and all these big words for N50 decrease ehn!!!

You will see some headlines, 'naira tumbles in market'. Then you read the story and the naira just fell from 1590 to 1600!!!!
You must be a novice to economics. This morning people already queue up at MRS, because of N10 difference. grin grin grin grin

3 Likes

wellmax(m): 8:20am On Feb 05
Newsmen making everything little thing a media item.

Buyers will always buy from cheaper supplier. Simple as that. Situations will change, price will fluctuate. Consumers are expected to benefit at last.

3 Likes

Inspirer1: 8:21am On Feb 05
I still bought #950 at NNPCL yesterday. There's no Dangote associated filling station close to me, so I make do with what I have.

1 Like

zikter(m): 8:27am On Feb 05
koladata:
2 refineries is still monopoly. What advantage does the three cement companies has over cement prices? Until we have 500 refineries don't expect any magic in price of fuel
Meaning there monopoly in every country and in each consumer goods category, because I doubt you can find any country with 500 companies in each manufacturing category. By the way, who has the monopoly now, is it Dangote, NNPCL or marketers with license to import from anywhere they wish?

2 Likes

Gotocourt: 8:30am On Feb 05
shocked
Nonybb: 8:31am On Feb 05
DANGOTE is a monopolistic snake in Nigerian green flag. NIGERIA IS A CRIME SCENE

1 Like

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