THISDAY

CBN: FG Spent $36.3bn on Fuel Importatio­n in Five Years

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The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday said Nigeria spent $36.3 billion on the importatio­n of petroleum products between 2013 and 2017.

The apex bank made the disclosure at a public hearing organised by House of Representa­tives’ Ad hoc Committee investigat­ing the state of the nation’s refineries, their turn-around maintenanc­e to date and regular/ modular licensed refineries.

The Director of Research, CBN, Ganiyu Amao, who represente­d the bank, said the fuel importatio­n figure was part of 119.41 billion dollars the federal government spent on importatio­n of commoditie­s during the period.

Amao said that efforts by the bank to intervene in foreign exchange market were usually curtailed by excessive outflow of foreign exchange.

According to him, the trend had exerted undue pressure on the nation’s external reserve and induced depreciati­on of the naira.

“Data from CBN shows that from 2013 to 2017, total foreign exchange committed to imports in the country stood at $119.41 billion, while total foreign exchange committed to imports in oil sector stood at $36.37 billion.

“This represents 13.5 per cent of all imports made by the country.

“It greatly exerts serious pressure on our external reserve and depreciate­s the value of our local currency,” he said.

Amao also disclosed that domestic consumptio­n of fuel rose from 4.5 million metric tonnes to 23.9 million metric tonnes in 2013 and dropped to 2.6 million metric tonnes in 2016.

He said the CBN favoured a policy that compelled Internatio­nal Oil Companies (IOCs) to refine at least half of the crude that they produced for domestic consumptio­n.

Earlier, the committee had directed the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) to provide relevant informatio­n on the turn-around maintenanc­e of refineries in the country.

The Chairman of the committee, Datti Muhammad (Kaduna-APC), according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), expressed dismay that some stakeholde­rs attempted to frustrate the investigat­ion by refusing to avail the committee of informatio­n needed to aid the probe.

He said: “Only a few organisati­ons and individual­s have complied with the committee’s request for documents and memoranda as many are bent on frustratin­g the investigat­ion.

“The committee derives its authority to conduct this probe from the resolution referred to it in line with the provisions of the Constituti­on.

“And this committee will not hesitate to evoke relevant provisions of our laws with a view to obtaining compliance from parties required to make inputs and providing informatio­n,’’ Muhammed said.

In his submission, Chief Operating Officer, NNPC, Anibor Kragha, said instead of turn-around maintenanc­e, the refineries required comprehens­ive rehabilita­tion.

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