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Manufacturers Send SOS To FG As Diesel Price Hits N730
The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) is seeking urgent intervention from the Federal Government to support the production of goods, as diesel price hits N720-730 per litre.
The Chairman, Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Oyo, Osun, Ekiti and Ondo branches, Mr Lanre Popoola, made the appeal in Ibadan, yesterday, as the prices of petroleum products skyrocket, with electricity also not available.
“It is a difficult thing ensuring production at this time, as diesel has gone up to N720-N730 per litre.
“It is getting extremely difficult to produce and I don’t know how we are going to cope because 70per cent of industries are running on diesel, there is no light.
“There is no power supply, we are having 30per cent of what it used to be, whereas the disposable income of people is not increasing and the cost of products are going up.
“Even in my factory now, we are only running one shift instead of three shifts of eight hours each.
“Other businesses are also running limited hours on diesel as they cannot afford to use generators all day,” Popoola added.
The chairman noted that, if the situation persisted, it could lead to bigger issues that would further affect the nation’s economy and increase the hardship of Nigerians.
“The worst part is that diesel suppliers cannot agree for organisations to make a flexible payment plan such as instalments, while they deliver the products in trust.
“They cannot again supply you with diesel and allow you to pay in two weeks. It is either you do cash and carry, or pay ahead, because they too cannot predict the cost of the product.
“And I don’t blame them, imagine you bought diesel last week at N630 per litre and the next day it is sold for N730 per litre, how will you replace your stock,” he said.
Popoola stated that the way forward was for the government to come in and assist manufacturers, by giving some rebate on diesel, adding that, that was the only lifeline.
“Aside manufacturers, for transporters that are bringing food from the North or taking products to the East or Lagos, now the cost of their logistics would have doubled by 100per cent if not 200per cent.
“May be the government can come in and do a kind of palliative for us, it is either we have light 24 hours per week, to run our factories or do a palliative on diesel.
“But unfortunately, we don’t produce diesel in this country, if the refineries are working, it is a different ball game, the country would have had it better now, if the refineries are working.
“So, the more the international prices of petroleum products go up, the higher the prices of what we are going to get from them,” Popoola said.
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