• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
Thursday, July 16, 2026
Verily News
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Breaking News
    • Global News
  • Politics
    • Political Analysis
    • Government & Policies
  • Business & Economy
    • DIY and FAQ
    • Product Reviews
  • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Movie
    • Music
  • Technology
  • Trends
  • Fact-Check
    • Investigative Reports
  • Opinion
  • Share your story
  • News
    • Breaking News
    • Global News
  • Politics
    • Political Analysis
    • Government & Policies
  • Business & Economy
    • DIY and FAQ
    • Product Reviews
  • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Movie
    • Music
  • Technology
  • Trends
  • Fact-Check
    • Investigative Reports
  • Opinion
  • Share your story
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Business & Economy

Oil Marketers Rebel Against Market Stranglehold

April 14, 2026
in Business & Economy
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
Oil Marketers
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Linkedin
Spread the love

Nigeria’s leading oil marketers are pushing hard for downstream liberalization, insisting it is the key to ending the country’s chronic cycle of fuel price shocks and supply uncertainty.

Billy Gillis-Harry, National President of the Petroleum Products Retail Outlets Owners Association of Nigeria (PETROAN), made the call during an appearance on Channels Television’s “The Morning Brief” on Tuesday, laying out what he described as a pragmatic, market-driven path forward for an industry at a critical crossroads.

The timing of Gillis-Harry’s intervention could not be more pointed. Ongoing conflict in the Middle East has sent ripples through global energy supply chains, and Nigeria, still heavily reliant on imported refined petroleum despite its vast crude oil reserves, has felt the consequences acutely.

Petrol prices have surged past the N1,200 per liter mark domestically, squeezing household budgets and driving up the cost of logistics, manufacturing, and basic commodities across the board.

The situation is brought into even sharper relief by data published in the World Bank’s April 2026 Nigeria Development Update (NDU), which revealed that as of March 2026, Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) was retailing at approximately N1,275 per liter locally—roughly 12 percent above the estimated import parity price of N1,122 per liter.

In plain terms, Nigerians are currently paying significantly more for petrol than they would if competitive importation were freely permitted.

The World Bank’s report did not mince words, identifying restricted competition in the downstream petroleum sector and trade barriers on critical imports as key cost escalation drivers across the Nigerian economy.

Among its recommendations was the reinstatement of petrol import licenses—permits that were suspended earlier in the year—to reintroduce competitive pressure into a market it described as increasingly distorted.

At the heart of the debate sits the Dangote Refinery—the continent’s largest—which has emerged as a significant domestic supply source and a symbol of Nigeria’s long-frustrated ambitions toward energy self-sufficiency.

Gillis-Harry was careful to frame his liberalization argument not as an attack on the refinery or the broader local refining ecosystem, but as a complementary strategy during what he characterized as a transitional period.

“The fact that we are depending on the Dangote Refinery today is a great pointer to where we can go,” he said, while simultaneously arguing that temporary allowance of competitive imports would act as a pressure valve against supply shocks and price manipulation.

His vision extends beyond Dangote. Gillis-Harry urged the Nigerian government and relevant agencies to intensify pressure on the NNPC to restore the country’s state-owned refineries to full operational capacity, while also encouraging emerging players such as BUA and Azika to scale up refining operations. The ultimate goal, he stressed, is a diversified domestic supply ecosystem—not a permanent dependency on foreign products.

“Importation should not stop us from mounting pressure on NNPC to make our local refineries roar back to life,” he said emphatically.

In a notable departure from the cautious diplomatic tone often adopted by industry figures, Gillis-Harry offered pointed criticism of Nigeria’s tendency to defer to international financial institutions on domestic policy questions.

While his position on liberalization broadly aligns with the World Bank’s latest recommendations, he was unequivocal in rejecting the idea that such advice should be received uncritically or implemented wholesale. “I do not accept everything that the World Bank advises,” he stated. “We have enough intellectuals in this country. We have very great financial minds and economists who can give Nigeria the direction we can drive. Most of this advice is tinted, in my own opinion.”

It is a sentiment that echoes a growing strand of economic nationalism in Nigerian policy discourse — one that champions homegrown solutions while remaining open to international frameworks where they genuinely serve national interest.

Opponents of liberalized importation have long raised the specter of substandard or adulterated fuel entering the Nigerian market—a concern rooted in real historical episodes that caused significant damage to vehicle engines and public trust.

Gillis-Harry addressed this argument head-on, acknowledging past lapses while expressing confidence in the regulatory framework now in place.

He pointed to the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) as the institutional safeguard capable of ensuring that any imported products meet acceptable quality standards before reaching consumers.

“There will be no time that substandard products will be allowed into the system,” he asserted, adding that PETROAN members who hold import licences have strong commercial incentives to source quality products that will pass regulatory scrutiny.

Stripped to its essence, PETROAN’s argument is a straightforward economic one: more suppliers mean more competition, and more competition means more affordable prices for ordinary Nigerians. With five suppliers in the market instead of one or two, Gillis-Harry argues, the structural conditions for price gouging and supply hoarding simply cannot take hold.

“If you have five suppliers, there will be competition and products will be affordable,” he said. “Affordability is a good thing for Nigerians.”

For a country where the cost of transportation—almost entirely dependent on petrol—feeds directly into the price of food, medicine, and virtually every other commodity, that argument carries considerable moral as well as economic weight.

Whether the federal government and regulatory authorities will heed the call remains to be seen. But with prices stubbornly elevated, Middle East tensions showing no signs of imminent resolution, and the World Bank adding its voice to the chorus, the pressure to act is building from multiple directions at once.

WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Nigeria’s petrol crisis boils down to one core issue: lack of competition. With prices sitting 12% above import parity levels and supply heavily concentrated around a single domestic source, Nigerian consumers are paying more than they should.

PETROAN’s position is clear: open the market, let more licensed players import, and prices will correct naturally.

The solution is not dependence on foreign supply, nor monopoly at home. It is a diversified, competitive energy market that ultimately puts affordable fuel in the hands of everyday Nigerians.

Tags: Billy Gillis-HarryDangoteOil marketersPETROAN
Share201Tweet126Share35
Previous Post

FG declares four GMO products dangerous to health

Next Post

NERC Reports Major Dip in Electricity Debt

Related Posts

Inflation

Nigeria’s Inflation Dips to 15.91% Even as Food Prices Surge

by Victoria Ogbadu
July 15, 2026
0

Nigeria's headline inflation rate slipped to 15.91 percent in June 2026, down marginally from 15.93 percent in May, according to...

naira

Naira vs Dollar Exchange Rate—15th July 2026

by Victoria Ogbadu
July 15, 2026
0

The Nigerian naira delivered a split performance against the US dollar on Wednesday, weakening marginally in the official window even...

Oil

Global Oil Prices—15th July 2026

by Victoria Ogbadu
July 15, 2026
0

Crude oil extended its rally for a second straight session on Wednesday, with global benchmarks touching one-month highs as Washington's...

Business

Nigeria’s Business Confidence Index Slips in June — CBN Survey Shows

by Victoria Ogbadu
July 14, 2026
0

Optimism among Nigerian businesses cooled slightly in June, as firms grappled with rising costs and a shaky macroeconomic backdrop, even...

Naira

Naira vs Dollar Exchange Rate—14th July 2026

by Victoria Ogbadu
July 14, 2026
0

The naira showed continued resilience on Tuesday, trading at ₦1,379.62 per dollar on the official Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market (NFEM),...

Load More
Next Post
NERC

NERC Reports Major Dip in Electricity Debt

Gunmen

Outrage as Kidnapped UNIJOS Student’s Disturbing Video Sparks Nationwide Concern

Nigerian actor loses child few hours after birth

Olubadan Ladoja Speaks On Plan To Impeach Makinde

nigerian

Nigerian Singer Stakes Claim as the "Greatest Afrobeats Artist"

ADC Logo

ADC Declares Convention Valid, Accuses INEC of Dereliction

Former Federal Lawmaker Resigns From ADC

ADC Expels Nafiu Bala-Gombe

Tension Mounts As El-Rufai Suffers Nosebleed in Detention

Court Grants El-Rufai Bail

Nigeria

Minister Urges IMF, World Bank to Slash Borrowing Costs

Oil

Oil Prices Steady Despite U.S. Blockade

Naira

Naira Strengthens to ₦1,348 Per Dollar

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
cbn governor olayemi cardoso

CBN Approves Merger Between Two Banks

February 23, 2026
2027: APC Governors Endorse Next Senate President After Akpabio

APC Governorship Candidate Joins ADC

March 16, 2026
NNPC Increases Petrol Price

NNPC Reduces Fuel Price

March 17, 2026
Kenya Airways

Viral video: Drama at Airport as Nigerian Woman Clashes with Kenya Airways Over Visa Issue

0
NLC

NLC Suspends Nationwide Protest Over Telecom Tariff Hike

0
VeryDarkMan

VeryDarkMan Vows to Uncover Truth in Mercy Chinwo and Ex-Manager’s Controversy

0
State Assembly Suspends Two LG Chairmen

State Assembly Building Collapses

July 15, 2026
Diamond

Diamond Platnumz Fuels New Romance Rumours

July 15, 2026
Tinubu NYSC FG issues directive to civil servants

Shettima reveals what gets Tinubu angry easily

July 15, 2026
Verily News

Copyright © 2025 Verily News.

Navigate Site

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Breaking News
    • Global News
  • Politics
    • Political Analysis
    • Government & Policies
  • Business & Economy
    • DIY and FAQ
    • Product Reviews
  • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Movie
    • Music
  • Technology
  • Trends
  • Fact-Check
    • Investigative Reports
  • Opinion
  • Share your story

Copyright © 2025 Verily News.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Get Breaking News Alerts on WhatsApp