Economy

Nigeria Consumes 65 Million Litre Daily, Spends N18.397 Billion on Fuel Subsidy Per Day

The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed on Thursday said Nigeria spent N18.397 billion on fuel subsidy every day.

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The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed on Thursday said Nigeria spent N18.397 billion on fuel subsidy every day.

The minister disclosed this at the House of Representatives’ Ad Hoc Committee set up to Investigate the Petroleum Products Subsidy Regime from 2013 to 2022.

Responding to questions on subsidy payments for Premium Motor Spirit (petrol) by the Federal Government, Ahmed said the federal government spends N283 per litre of PMS or N18.397 billion per day as fuel subsidy.

She said, “For 2023, the projection is that the average daily truck out will be N64.96 million litres per day; that is about 65 million per day, using an average rate open market rate of N448.20k and then a regulator pump price of N165 per litre. This gives us an average under-recovery, that is the difference between N165 and N448 of N283.2k.

“So, just multiply the amount of litre per day, the open market exchange rate of naira to the dollar and then, the gap between the pump price and open market price, the total amount of subsidy per day is N18.397bn.

“So, if you are projecting for the full year, from January to December, it will be N6.715tn. If you are projecting for half a year, it will be 50 per cent of that, 3.375tn. I said earlier in the recommendations that we sent to parliament for consideration on MTEF is half-year, that will be N3.357tn.”

Ahmed added that, “Fuel subsidy is the difference between the pump price which is now fixed at N165 (per litre) and the landing cost which we are projecting at an average of N448 per litre in 2023. Even now, the cost is around that.

“So, the PMS subsidy we are carrying today in the nation is around N283 per litre; that is what we are carrying. So, it is the difference between the pump price and the landing cost of petroleum products in the country.”

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