Berliner Boersenzeitung - As Ukraine pushes oil over $100, Nigerians see mixed blessings

EUR -
AED 3.819085
AFN 72.923682
ALL 98.400033
AMD 411.81361
ANG 1.870929
AOA 948.275923
ARS 1066.346027
AUD 1.665067
AWG 1.871598
AZN 1.774655
BAM 1.95322
BBD 2.096032
BDT 124.056146
BGN 1.955809
BHD 0.391119
BIF 3069.745459
BMD 1.039777
BND 1.410637
BOB 7.173525
BRL 7.001132
BSD 1.038129
BTN 88.366285
BWP 14.417957
BYN 3.397313
BYR 20379.622457
BZD 2.088941
CAD 1.492532
CDF 2984.15938
CHF 0.935253
CLF 0.037279
CLP 1028.640378
CNY 7.5885
CNH 7.596832
COP 4588.336825
CRC 527.103798
CUC 1.039777
CUP 27.554081
CVE 110.119553
CZK 25.141596
DJF 184.788905
DKK 7.459879
DOP 63.236477
DZD 140.212533
EGP 52.917768
ERN 15.59665
ETB 132.178418
FJD 2.410878
FKP 0.823484
GBP 0.828926
GEL 2.921582
GGP 0.823484
GHS 15.259845
GIP 0.823484
GMD 74.864316
GNF 8972.149524
GTQ 7.996438
GYD 217.19313
HKD 8.076668
HNL 26.376162
HRK 7.45822
HTG 135.740713
HUF 411.929391
IDR 16857.431024
ILS 3.795429
IMP 0.823484
INR 88.811119
IQD 1359.90383
IRR 43761.598707
ISK 145.079924
JEP 0.823484
JMD 161.746364
JOD 0.737517
JPY 163.583937
KES 134.172535
KGS 90.460267
KHR 4172.488948
KMF 484.665904
KPW 935.798409
KRW 1517.205717
KWD 0.320439
KYD 0.865157
KZT 537.799671
LAK 22703.013706
LBP 92963.313428
LKR 305.955891
LRD 188.940446
LSL 19.303104
LTL 3.070191
LVL 0.62895
LYD 5.096269
MAD 10.468873
MDL 19.153702
MGA 4896.532627
MKD 61.355449
MMK 3377.154019
MNT 3533.160942
MOP 8.304831
MRU 41.441264
MUR 48.942502
MVR 15.998315
MWK 1800.122386
MXN 20.989712
MYR 4.665446
MZN 66.445606
NAD 19.303104
NGN 1602.461915
NIO 38.199546
NOK 11.806529
NPR 141.386256
NZD 1.841894
OMR 0.399227
PAB 1.038129
PEN 3.865694
PGK 4.213435
PHP 60.821765
PKR 289.011572
PLN 4.263147
PYG 8096.306344
QAR 3.775613
RON 4.973978
RSD 116.674579
RUB 103.963167
RWF 1448.187225
SAR 3.90363
SBD 8.717025
SCR 14.82412
SDG 625.423267
SEK 11.52112
SGD 1.412927
SHP 0.823484
SLE 23.686037
SLL 21803.599736
SOS 593.316344
SRD 36.452516
STD 21521.277478
SVC 9.084002
SYP 2612.470294
SZL 19.311493
THB 35.544248
TJS 11.357
TMT 3.649616
TND 3.310128
TOP 2.435262
TRY 36.588836
TTD 7.054682
TWD 34.007453
TZS 2516.866743
UAH 43.528308
UGX 3799.980959
USD 1.039777
UYU 46.208967
UZS 13402.298154
VES 53.62702
VND 26441.520361
VUV 123.444367
WST 2.872682
XAF 655.09175
XAG 0.035139
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.810048
XDR 0.795949
XOF 655.09175
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.334065
ZAR 19.4006
ZMK 9359.204571
ZMW 28.730053
ZWL 334.807659
  • SCS

    0.0800

    11.73

    +0.68%

  • BCC

    0.9500

    123.19

    +0.77%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    34.03

    -0.09%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    22.9

    +0.26%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    58.86

    -0.27%

  • RIO

    -0.0300

    59.2

    -0.05%

  • RBGPF

    59.8000

    59.8

    +100%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    23.65

    +0.42%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.24

    -0.14%

  • CMSC

    -0.1321

    23.77

    -0.56%

  • RELX

    0.3000

    45.89

    +0.65%

  • AZN

    -0.3300

    66.3

    -0.5%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    8.43

    +0.71%

  • BP

    0.0400

    28.79

    +0.14%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    36.26

    +0.11%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.15

    +0.41%

As Ukraine pushes oil over $100, Nigerians see mixed blessings
As Ukraine pushes oil over $100, Nigerians see mixed blessings

As Ukraine pushes oil over $100, Nigerians see mixed blessings

Weaving in between the Lagos traffic, hawkers selling plantain snacks and water more recently offer drivers another treat: jerry cans filled with petrol to help with fuel shortages.

Text size:

Petroleum-producing nations may be reaping extra revenue since Ukraine's crisis pushed oil prices above $100 a barrel, but Nigerians this week were struggling with yet another round of fuel scarcities.

President Muhammadu Buhari says Africa's top producer has a "great opportunity" with higher oil prices, but that was a hard sell for Lagos accountant Abdulazeez Oyefeso after three hours in a line for fuel.

"It's more revenue for the country, but it doesn’t get down to the common man," Oyefeso said, leaning against his Lexus among the cars snaking along Lagos’s main Alfred Rewane road near a gas station.

On the opposite side of the major avenue, touts carrying plastic jerry cans filled with yellow fuel and funnels crafted from water bottles flagged down passing cars offering to fill tanks for a premium.

Oil sales account for nearly 90 percent of Nigeria's export revenue. But soaring prices -- the highest in ten years after the invasion -- are a mixed blessing.

OPEC member Nigeria has little capacity to refine its own crude and relies heavily on fuel imports so higher oil prices mean more budget spending.

Nigeria also operates a byzantine system of fuel subsidies that costs the state billions of dollars to artificially keep fuel costs low.

In place since the 1970s, fuel subsidies are politically sensitive and Nigeria's import reliance also leaves the domestic market open to sporadic fuel shortages.

Currently, a litre of gasoline costs an average of 165 naira (40 US cents). On the black market this week it was fetching between 350 to 500 naira.

Since last month, the government said a batch of adulterated fuel was removed from the market, causing a shortfall.

State-run Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation chairman Mele Kyari on Thursday said measures were in place to get adequate supplies to depots.

"I am very sure that very soon we will see relief from this," he told reporters.

- Sleeping in car -

Unruly lines of cars searching for fuel caused massive traffic jams earlier this week in Lagos and other cities. Motorbikes ferrying men on the back clutching four or five jerry cans to find fuel were a common sight.

Some commuters just walked. Others jumped off Lagos' typical yellow Danfo minibuses caught in jams to continue on foot.

"My gauge was on reserve when I left home early this morning but the car stopped mid-way. Luckily, I have a small keg," said one Lagos driver Onifade. "The government has to do something."

Around Awolowo district of Lagos, where several filling stations operate, roads were blocked early in the week. Drivers wait on the sidewalk under the sun. Some had slept in the line overnight.

"People that had fuel this morning are the ones that slept in the queue yesterday night," taxi driver Ali said. "And those people you see right now might sleep here tonight."

- More budget costs -

Nigeria approved a long-awaited new oil law last year that aims to improve operating conditions to bring in more foreign investment to the flagging sector.

But some of Nigeria's production is tied up in deals with refining companies for fuel and swaps for infrastructure projects so oil high prices are not the revenue boon they should be.

Today, most of Nigeria's 1.4 million barrels per day oil output comes from off-shore "deep water" projects, where the government takes only 20 to 30 percent of revenue, said Bismarck Rewane, an economist at Financial Derivatives Co.

"The increase in price is not enough to compensate for the loss in production," Rewane said. "Theoretically the picture looks great, but in reality it is more complicated."

Nigeria's finance minister last year suggested the costly fuel subsidy programme would end in June as urged by the World Bank and IMF.

But in January, ministers delayed the plan, saying the timing was problematic.

Less than a year from an election, ending subsidies could be costly as Nigerians see cheap fuel as one tangible they get from oil wealth.

"Nigeria, however, is in the uncanny position of being stuck in a subsidy arrangement that guarantees that high oil prices leads to an exponential rise in government expenditure," said local risk analyst group SBM Intelligence.

"Momentary gains in the government’s coffers, therefore, might not make a big dent in the fiscal deficit."

Lagos hawkers, though, did not let macroeconomic concerns deter them from a another chance for a fast buck.

Sitting on an empty blue 10-litre jerrycan on the roadside, Ahmed said he came just to make cash to supplement his carpet business.

"This is just a hustle," he said. "This is our oil, and it's a way to make quick money."

(F.Schuster--BBZ)