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Fuel Consumption has Fallen in Nigeria since President Bola Tinubu Removed Costly Subsidies

The average daily petrol consumption reportedly reached 48.43 million litres in June, down from the previous average of 66.9 million. The end of subsidies has caused fuel prices to nearly triple, leading to a rise in transport costs and higher food and electricity prices for many Nigerians using petrol generators. Business may soon be impacted. The Stanbic IBTC’s latest Purchasing Power Index links the subsidy scrap to a marginal decline in business confidence in June 2023 as inflationary pressures surged. Respondents said issues around the ending of the fuel subsidy acted to limit the pace of output growth, although activity was still up markedly in the latest survey period. For decades, Nigeria’s low-cost gasoline has been transported illegally by road to its neighbours, primarily Benin, where it is resold on the black market by a multitude of informal sellers. The scale of the trafficking is such that the price of taxi fares has almost doubled in Cotonou (Benin). In Cameroon, another neighbour of Nigeria, several motorcycle taxi unions have gone on strike in protest.

SOURCE: AFRICA NEWS