Subsidy removal: Nigeria’s petrol import from Europe drops by 48%
Since President Bola Tinubu scrapped Nigeria’s fuel subsidy in May, Nigeria’s petrol imports from Europe have fallen by about 48 per cent.
According to data from S&P Global Commodities at Sea, the demand for Premium Motor Spirit has dropped by almost half on the back of the removal of fuel subsidy.
According to report, imports of petrol to Nigeria plummeted to 106,000 barrels per day (bpd) in July from 205,200 bpd in May, indicating a 48 per cent decline in demand, after local petrol prices increased since May 29 and total refined product demand has fallen 41 per cent in the same period.
“Scrapping the long-standing subsidy could save Nigeria as much as N11 trillion ($2.6 billion) in 2023, according to estimates from the World Bank in June, providing relief to a growing government deficit.”
According to the report, the subsidy removal has shaken up longstanding arbitrage for European refiners.
While Nigerian demand in particular has diminished, other destinations have picked up the slack. The US Atlantic Coast made up 28 per cent of total petrol exports from the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp region in July amid persistently low stocks, according to Kpler shipping data, increasing its share of the low teens almost in tandem with shrinking Nigerian demand.
As a result, European refiners have been unfazed by sinking demand in West Africa. “The arb is strong. Octanes are tight, so gasoline remains well supported,” a trader in Europe said.
The report revealed that European traders already faced being crowded out by Russian refined products that have flooded into Africa – including Nigeria – since the onset of the war in Ukraine saw European countries boycott Russian oil products.
“Yet even Russian exports to Nigeria have fallen sharply since the fuel subsidy was scrapped.”
Sinking Nigerian demand, driven by high fuel prices, has also led to a drop-off in demand for European exports, whose refiners had relied on thirsty West African markets and there is zero demand in West Africa at the moment
Another source said, “Considering the Nigerian subsidy removal, demand is indeed depressed.”