Transporters hike fares as fuel scarcity worsens

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The current scarcity of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), popularly called petrol, has led to hike in transport fares across the country as commuters have had to pay double their prices.

According to reports, drivers and car owners in Nassarawa, Kaduna and Lagos paid as high as N250/per litre.

In Lagos particularly, transport fares around the city was hiked despite the heavy traffic caused by queuing vehicles.

A popular journalist while speaking with KAFTAN Post said she paid as high as N500 from Obalende to Victoria Island which went for N100 before the scarcity.

This is the same situation in other parts of the town as many have had to trek long distances to be able to get home or pay the exorbitant fares.

This development is in contrast to the Federal Government’s approved pump price of N162-N165/litre.

In Abuja, black marketers freely sold petrol at N400/litre and above.

The National Public Relations Officer, Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria, Chief Ukadike Chinedu, in a recent interview had also said the price of petrol in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, was above N200/litre in filling stations.

“The queues in Port Harcourt are clearing out and filling stations sell at N200 and above for a litre of petrol,” he said.

In Ilorin, Kwara State, the transportation situation grew worse on Tuesday, as petrol scarcity continued.

Many petrol stations locked their gates, as only a few outlets, such as Bovas and the NNPC dispensed petrol to motorists at the approved price of N162/litre amidst long queues.

More findings showed that fuel was being sold at between N350 to N500/litre in some independent petrol stations.

As a result of the fuel scarcity, transport fares increased by more than 300 per cent for both inter and intra-city transport.

In the Ilorin metropolis, commercial vehicles charged between N150 and N300 for short-distance trips, instead of the N50 that was previously charged.

Inter-city fares from Ilorin to Offa and Omu-Aran rose to between N800 to N1,500, instead of N300 and N800 as was previously charged.

In Ondo State, fuel was sold for N200 per litre at the black market level which thrived better late in the evening or at midnight.

Meanwhile, the queues persisted in many filling stations as the scarcity of petrol continued on Tuesday.

In Osogbo, the Osun State capital, some residents exploited the situation as they sold petrol at between N250 and N300/litre to motorists.

In a few of the filling stations that sold the product, there were long queues of vehicles and motorcycles waiting to get the PMS.

Many residents also bought the product in plastic containers, while black marketers were sighted along Station Road and Dele Yes Sir Area of Osogbo on Tuesday.

Similarly, petrol scarcity grew worse in Ado Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital, on Tuesday, as the product sold for as high as N300/litre.

At the pumps, the product went for between N162 and N250/litre on Tuesday depending on the ownership of the station. Black market operators sold at N300/litre.

At the NNPC outlet and Bovas Petroleum along Bank Road, where the product sold for N162/litre, the queues of vehicles and motorbikes were endless.

It was the same situation at the NNPC outlet along Iyin Road in the capital city where the product was sold at N165/litre.

In Enugu State, fuel was sold in a few stations owned by independent marketers at between N200 and N220/litre, while major marketers sold the product for N165 and N189/litre.

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