Business
‘NNPC Spent $10bn On Fuel Subsidy In 2022’
The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) spent 4.39 trillion naira ($9.7 billion) on petrol subsidy last year, according to latest data from the state-owned firm on Friday, which showed a cost the government has blamed for dwindling public finances.
The data further showed that NNPC did not remit funds to Federal accounts last year, leaving a hole in public finances at a time when the government has been warning that low revenues and large deficits left it unable to stimulate the economy.
It stated that successive governments in Nigeria have tried and failed to remove or cut the subsidy, a politically sensitive issue, in the country of 200 million people.
Nigeria imports nearly all its refined fuels because local refineries were shut due to years of neglect.
Oil production, which has started to recover, has been throttled by crude theft and pipeline vandalism, which means Nigeria is spending more on fuel imports than it is getting from crude oil production.
Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed, has said the country will keep its costly but popular petrol subsidy until mid-2023 and set aside 3.36 trillion naira ($7.5 bln) to spend on it.
Business
Boat Mishap Kills Pastor, Wife And Church Members In Brass Water
Business
Rivers Workers Seek Scrapping Of Contributory Pension Scheme
Business
FG Begins South-West Tour To Promote New Cooperative Bank
-
Environment10 hours agoMOSOP – Tinubu Not Sincere With Ogoni People For Oil Resumption
-
Nation8 hours agoRSU, Otonti Nduka Foundation Hold Centenary Conference, Unveil Book on Values in Nigeria
-
Maritime11 hours agoProducts, Others, To Arrive Lagos Ports Today — MPA
-
Oil & Energy10 hours agoSEED: FG To Train 6,000 Energy Professionals
-
Environment10 hours agoNGOs Task Media On Investing In Climate Literacy
-
Environment10 hours agoNEWSAN Urges Investment For Water And Sanitation services
-
Education9 hours agoUNIPort Senate Grants Two-Year Amnesty to U2010–U2018 Students
-
Politics9 hours ago
Primaries: Diri Lauds APC’s Unity, Cohesion In Bayelsa
