Taiwo POPOOLA
Dangote Refinery-backed MRS and other Nigerian filling stations adjusted their petrol retail prices on Saturday, less than 24 hours after the 650,000-barrel-per-day plant hiked its gantry petrol by N70 to N1,245 per litre on Friday.
DAILY POST observed that MRS filling stations in Abuja and environs have hiked their pump price by N100 to N1,367 per litre on Saturday from N1,267. Similarly, Ranoil, Empire Energy, and AA Rano in Abuja increased their petrol prices to N1,440, N1,430, and N1,370, respectively.https://urbanexpresslive.com/how-burna-boy-tems-became-african-artistes-with-most-billboard-hot-100-entries/
A manager at the MRS filling station who preferred anonymity confirmed the latest price hike to Urban Express News in a telephone interview.https://urbanexpresslive.com/davido-withdraws-loses-legal-custody-fight-for-daughter/
“MRS filling stations now sell at N1,367 per litre, an N100 per litre increase from N1,267. This is because of Dangote Refinery’s latest gantry petrol price increment to N1,275 per litre,” he said.
This means that Nigerian filling stations dispense petrol between N1367 and N1440 per litre. However, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited retail outlet still sells petrol at N1261 per litre.
Dangote Refinery’s fourth fuel price hike would mean the majority of Nigerians would have to pay more to get petrol because the refinery supplied 61 percent of Nigeria’s domestic petrol consumption, according to the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority’s February data.The domestic petrol price hike comes as a ripple effect of the global crude oil spike to above $110 per barrel as of Saturday, as the Iran-United States-Israel impact on global economies.
