Rising LPG price: Techno Gas Boss,Obi calls for FG’s intervention

By Uthman Salami

The Managing Director, Techno Gas Ltd., Mrs Nkechi Obi has called on the Federal Government’s intervention to halt the rising price of cooking gas in the country.

The Techno boss made this appeal during a panel session on the Nigerian Content Midstream and Downstream Oil and Gas Summit on Tuesday in Lagos.

Speaking during a session which was titled, “Gas as a Catalyst for Sustainable Economic Development- The Role of Nigerian Content,” an event organised by the Nigerian Content Development Board (NCDMB), Mrs. Obi explained that the domestic consumption of LPG, also known as cooking gas, had risen to about 1.2 million metric tons per annum whilst adding that the target of the country was to attain five million mtpa in the next few years.

But she decried that this was being threatened by the rising cost of cooking gas in the country as over 60 per cent of the product was being imported by marketers.

An array of factors including international gas pricing, access to forex, import duties, freight charges and other costs affect the final price of gas in the market, according to her, were responsible for this.

She said domestic demand for cooking gas had dropped because of the rising cost which was eroding the gains recorded in gas penetration in the country.

Obi also decried the continued importation of cooking gas cylinders into the country with its attendant safety implications and negative impact on businesses of indigenous manufacturers.

She, therefore, advised the government to establish a gas cylinder ownership exchange programme which would confer ownership of cylinders on companies instead of individuals.

However, Mr Okechukwu Mbah, Managing-Director, ANOH Gas Processing Company Limited, AGPC, said the company’s gas plant at Ohaji/Egbema Local Government Area of Imo was nearing completion.

Mbah said when completed, the plant would process 300 million standard cubic feet of gas per day and help to  stabilise the price of LPG in the domestic market.

The firm is owned by Seplat Plc, the parent company of AGPC and the Nigerian Gas Company, a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Ltd., in a 50-50 partnership stake.

“Our expectation is that we will be able to stabilise the price of LPG in that region and promote the growth of LPG utilisation in the country,” Mbah said.

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