Minimum wage, Nationwide protest, Nigerians, Warning strike, Power sector privatisation, NLC, Labour unions, Fuel scarcity
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The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has expressed displeasure over the increase in price and prolonged fuel scarcity across the country.

The NLC condemned the price hike and scarcity of aviation fuel, diesel and Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), popularly called petrol, describing the situation as “great pain and sadness”.

The labour union made this known in a statement issued by the NLC President, Comrade Ayuba Wabba, a copy of which was made available to The Star on Friday.

The NLC President stated: “A crisis that started with the supply of sub-standard Premium Motor Oil (PMS) has now degenerated into a persisting scarcity of not only PMS but also other petroleum products such as diesel and aviation fuel.

“It is deeply disturbing that motorists, keke operators, bike riders and other users of petrol products now spend incredibly long hours at filling stations before being serviced or sent away empty-handed. This is indeed a daylight premiere of unending episodes of nightmare.

“Currently, a litre of aviation fuel sells as high as N580 while a litre of diesel goes as high as N625. In many parts of the country, a litre of PMS goes as high as N220. The socio-economic strain of both the scarcity and the high cost of petroleum products on ordinary Nigerians and manufacturing firms is best imagined.

“In many parts of Nigeria, manufacturing has ground to a halt. The current haemorrhage induced by the prevailing scarcity of petroleum products has very grave concomitant effects on the already parlous unemployment and security situation in our country.

“At the root of the current pain being faced by millions of Nigerians all over the country is the monstrously defective policy of nearly one hundred percent importation of refined petroleum products.

“Nigeria is about the only OPEC country trapped in the quagmire of complete dependence on foreign refineries for products it has capacity to produce locally. This is a most unfortunate commentary on our sovereignty.”

Wabba added that the NLC had earlier called the attention of the Federal Government to the “grand danger of outsourcing our energy needs to foreign interests”, noting that the labour union warned the FG on the looming crisis of energy insecurity, adulterated petroleum products, capital flight, decline in productivity, de-investment in the Nigerian economy, massive loss of jobs and upsurge in violence across the country.

He noted: “The persisting scarcity of refined petroleum products has unleashed a tsunami of very dire economic realities including exorbitant airfare, cancellation of scheduled flights, destruction of thousands of automobile engines by adulterated fuel and wastage of productive hours.

“As clearly captured in the Nigerian Workers’ Charter of Demands, the only way out of this energy impasse is for the Federal Government to take very seriously the local refining of petroleum in Nigeria.

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“We had severally identified the complete rehabilitation of our public refineries and the building of new refineries, both public and private, including modular refineries as the only sustainable panacea out of this national embarrassment and vulnerability in the security of our energy sector.

“With the current surge in the price of crude oil, we urge the Federal Government to make judicious use of the bumper harvest of petro-dollars to fix our oil refineries.

“We must re-think Nigeria’s hydrocarbon as a strategic asset for sustainable wealth creation and development. We must now ditch the over-laboured gospel of deregulation which has been proved to be mere moniker for incessant increase in the price of petrol.

“The fact that NNPC cannot keep to its promise of 24-hour supply of petrol in advertised gas stations shows that the petrol importation policy has failed completely.”

The NLC President further stated that despite the claims that diesel and aviation fuel had been deregulated based on import model, the products remain scarce and expensive which proved that deregulation is not the answer to the crisis in the downstream oil sub-sector.

He added: “Now is the time to go back to the basics. Fix our local Refineries! Build new Refineries!! Local Refining is the answer!

“The Nigeria Labour Congress and Nigerian workers are in solidarity with the Nigerian people all over the country who have been made to bear the brunt of a crisis that is not their making rather consequent on poor policy choices of successive governments and which has been compounded by inefficient and incompetent management of Nigeria’s oil and gas sector.

“Consequent on the foregoing, the Nigeria Labour Congress cautions that there is an extent to which the people can endure the current hardship occasioned by the scarcity of refined petroleum products.

“There is a limit the people can stomach prevailing disruptions caused by petrol scarcity especially increased fares and associated dislocations in land, air, rail and water transportation and indeed hiccups in the manufacturing sector all linked to the current scarcity of refined petroleum products in the country.

“This scarcity of refined petroleum products in our country must be treated as a national emergency,” Wabba said.

The Star

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