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Our Search for Happiness

Our search for happiness is actually the search for God; it is the search for this Golden Age when Soul dwelt in the high worlds of Spirit and the high worlds of God.
-Harold Klemp

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Xmas without fuel in Nigeria: personal experience.

December 24, the eve of Xmas. The need for fuel to move around called for frantic search. I heard earlier from the Information Minister that the fuel scarcity was because of hoarding of fuel by marketers awaiting government’s announcement of opportunities to make more money. I thought that driving 10 km from my location to NNPC mega-station at Madugu would provide succour. Usually, hoarding would not be an issue and pumps would be working at NNPC stations. I met a short queue on arrival at the station. After a while, the cars started to leave the queue. I went to the operatives to ask what the situation was. I was told the remaining fuel was on reserve for some selected cars and they were dispensing into a few ‘jerry cans’. Nine fuel tankers were parked around the premises. I asked whether the tankers were going to discharge their fuel so that I could wait or come back later. I was shocked to hear that they were empty and could not go back to the fuel depot because there was no diesel for them to drive back. I gave up my effort. Now, I hear that NUPENG is probably on strike.

Goodluck! Have a pleasant holiday.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

GTZ on international fuel pricing: Nigeria's discomfiture

Dr Metschies reporting from Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH:

In response to the current increases in world market prices for oil, the GTZ started a flash survey (prices of premium grade petrol, 95 octane) in the most heavily populated developing Countries and concluded as follows:

“An international harmonisation of fuel prices seems important. However, this requires a national energy pricing policy in developing countries covering the following points:

  • · eliminating fuel subsidies

(in countries with premium grade fuel prices at the pump below € 0.40/l)

  • · introducing and raising fuel taxes

(in countries with premium grade fuel prices at the pump from € 0.40-€ 0.80/l)

  • · harmonisation with EU fuel prices

(in countries with premium prices at the pump from € 0.80 to €1.20/l)

Because renewable energies can only establish themselves if traditional energy

sources (and specifically fuels) are appropriately taxed.

Note: For more data on international fuel prices collected by the GTZ for 165 countries, see

www.worldbank.org/transport or www.zietlow.com/docs/engdocs.htm .”

MY COMMENT

IF NATIONAL AGENCIES IN COUNTRIES LIKE NIGERIA RESPECT THE THOUGHTS OF EU COUNTRIES WITHOUT CONSIDERING INTERNAL PECULIARITIES, WE ARE IN FOR ANOTHER PHASE OF NEO-COLONIALISM.


Monday, November 16, 2009

Rising oil price is harmful!

"The International Energy Agency yesterday revised its 2010 world oil demand forecast slightly higher, but warned that rising crude prices, if sustained, risk smothering the fragile economic recovery under way.

The Paris-based agency said it expects global oil demand to rise to 86.2 million barrels a day next year, representing an upward revision of 140,000 barrels a day from its previous monthly oil market report in October" Vanguard, Nov. 6, 2009

The primary reason for insisting on deregulation and free market economy in the oil sector is to protect the energy sector in developed countries. The OPEC countries and independent producers must taste their own pills for contributing to the surging aggregate demand and increase in crude oil price. Increasing pump price is designed to force elasticity on the demand for local consumption. If local consumption drops at the expense of local productivity dependent on favourable energy cost, the local economy goes into recession. That is not the business of IEA. Afterall, when we suffer, they gain by our expanded dependence on them and brain-drain into their thriving economies. And Mr President has said Nigerians need to suffer as if that is the reason we voted for him. WE MUST define our interests from our needs for sustainable development. Anything that allows price of fuel to freely rise under greedy cabals supervised by weak government infrastructure, is dangerous to the Nigerian economy.

If rising oil price is harmful to the developed economies, it is dangerous to emerging economies without any internal protection. This is very obvious to me, but is it obvious to the Federal Government of Nigeria?

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Deregulation and Regulation Campaigns

"If government under the “regulation” system is impotent to regulate the conduct of the mafia in the oil sector despite its numerous regulatory agencies, including the Department of Petroleum Resources, the NNPC and the Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) is it when the market is deregulated that it would develop the political will to regulate their conduct? Everywhere I turn, I see government throw its hands in the air claiming to be helpless to tackle basic challenges of governance such as sanitising a system or even calling its employees to order". By Owei Lakemfa in Vanguard Nov., 11, 2009

We have leaders who think with the brain of colonial masters, who are slaves of economic doctrines and know very little of the political economy of emerging nations. Our leaders who preached and executed SAP are back again and they know our economy could not be structured along any western model. They have sucked in the so-called national economic council and the economic summit group. I have searched everywhere and could not find any convincing document analyzing the issues from the national perspective. We must go to the next higher level, not the vicious cycle of the 80s and 90s. I want to read something about the govt definition of deregulation and the model which presents a clear framework. I want to read the blogs of Nigerian economists with dispassionate analyses. We must be knowledge-driven to build a great nation. Labour must not relent. We do not have a Legislature in this regard. Nigerians on the street are left to their own devices.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

ON WHOSE AGENDA IS DEREGULATION OF FUEL PRICE?

After reading this piece, you will understand why our leaders are fighting us to deregulate the downstream oil sector and remove subsidies where they exit; you will see why our people must cry so that their people can laugh. We are not free from the colonial magnate with our leadership. Read on.

The picture of unfavourable market forecasted by the developed countries concerning future price of oil is captured by this statement:






In Nigeria, the use of personal cars increased in the past 10 years and recently, importation of fuel-inefficient cars from USA and Europe is in vogue among the political class and elite businessmen. This is apparent, although data are usually unavailable in our setting. The growing economy is stimulated by heavy use of oil for energy generation and transportation. The increasing demand for oil products in the country is expected in the circumstance, but can be reduced if the policy direction encourages alternative energy generation. Until sustainable cheaper alternative energy resources are available to the industries, it is not advisable for the government to create new strictures in the energy chain. We can take China and the Asian countries as good examples. They used subsidies in fuel price to drive their economies and now my computer, fridge, torch etc are either from China or Asia and the prices are affordable. Growing from economic dependence to economic independence and interdependence is only possible with nationally motivated decisions. Those who advocate absolute free market are already in a position to gain from it because they have instruments to control the market forces. Where they are not able to do so, they use political forces that are loyal to them. They cannot agree that China and several other countries have used subsidies to give leverage to their economies and achieve good fiscal balance sheets. What are the fears that surround fuel subsidy?







The above statements show why the developed world is unhappy with countries like Nigeria. What are we expected to believe? The West does not care about socio-economic pressures in the developing countries, since financial aids from their gains will be given to ameliorate them. Their concern is more about socio-economic stability in Western world and little attention is paid to what it costs the developing world. See how it is scripted:

The foregoing referenced statements clearly show the insensitivity of the West to socio-economic stability in the developing countries. The West has fully studied their economic needs and is using every agency to promote the satisfaction of these needs. Calling it an economic war against the developing countries may be an overstatement, but it sounds to me an insensitive aggression against the socio-economic sensibilities of these struggling nations, which the West has not studied their internal dynamics.

Some truth should be faced about increasing international fuel price and it is acknowledged by a Western writer:


The fact that other factors may be responsible for propping the oil price, other than the steep demand for oil in oil-producing nations with fuel subsidy, was clear when oil price collapsed with changes in the fiscal climate in the West. The stalling demand in the West, because of credit crunch, drove the price down, even when the oil demand in the oil-producing nations had not abated. The Western demand was apparently propelled by excess fiscal liquidity from foreign reserves in the hands of market speculators. Also, it was this liquidity that encouraged banks in the West to give outrageous loans to home owners. This makes it possible for the dollar to depreciate without the naira appreciating despite our growing foreign reserve. But we do not have any choice. The reason is that our wealth can only be secured in the institutions of rich nations in the West. Economics is so mixed with politics that what is done is frequently what is expedient.

The solutions suggested are the use of cars consuming less fuel and electric cars using cheap electricity. These cars are not likely to reach the poor countries in subsidy band until their second-hand rates make them affordable.




The education and health sectors are areas the West is not uncomfortable if the government does not embark on any deregulatory policy of subsidy removal.
A productive sector worthy of the governments’ attention like in USA is the productive energy sector that generates more fuel through their refineries or provides alternative energy that will make crude oil less significant. A substantial assistance was offered to private energy companies in USA to the tune of $6 billion dollars through Bush-Cheney Energy Bill, as a form of subsidy.



WE NEED POLITICIANS WHO THINK AND ACT FOR THE GOOD OF THE PEOPLE. WE MUST HAVE KWONLEDGE-DRIVEN DECISIONS
The entire subsidy as it is now in Nigeria goes essentially into the productive sector either directly or indirectly to entrepreneurs who need fuel for transportation to move people, goods and services, small-scale to large-scale industries that use energy to maintain some level of productivity. We have not had public power supply for more than a week in my part of the town and I have had to burn a gallon of petrol to be productive for my sake and for the sake of all Nigerians. I stop for today.


Wednesday, November 4, 2009

CBN and DEREGULATION

“Briefing the press on the outcome of the 66th Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja yesterday, the CBN governor, Mr. Lamido Sanusi, said various monetary and fiscal measures had reduced the average headline inflation to 10.4 per cent in September, lower than the 12.6 per cent in the preceding month but that this trend could be impacted upon negatively by deregulation.” By Emma Ujah, Vanguard


Sanusi is now making a lot of sense to me. It appears he and his team have given a lot of thought to several issues. The will to support and implement the policy guideline herein to stem inflation and restore investor confidence is required. Let's see the country grow with minimal socio-economic upheavals. The faith in democracy needs to grow and Sanusi has much to do about building the credibility of Yar'Adua's administration. The macro- and micro-economic failures and policy instability of 1980s and 1990s should never repeat itself, because we have learnt from history.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

FROM DEREGULATION TO REFORMATION

The lexicons of manipulation ring in the ears of Nigerians, from deregulation to reformation. I do not believe anyone representing the government in the petroleum sector. The loss of faith derives from their double-speaking and incoherence. They have lost the national flavour and are speaking in tongues of men in the dark, like the Speaker standing on the yogic head, confused about the intricacies of the sector. They are stooges trained in the poor management of the sector for the comic ending of our national pride. Management of subsidy requires transparency, sense of purpose and a clear direction to the national target. These individuals evidently continue to say they have lost the handle. The Yar’Adua administration began to fail with the infiltration of buy-out and buy-over mongers with experiences in sell-out strategies, who understand the interplay of supply and demand and how to use it against helpless Nigerians. Today, I spent more than two hours to buy fuel to run my kids to a distant private school (passing by a nearby “dead” public school in a deregulated Universal Primary Education) and run my power generating set at night. I am writing this piece in order to sleep well, knowing that I have bared my heart to Nigerians who practice the “blunders of the world” in order to leave no enduring legacy as building blocks of our nationhood
_________________________________________________________
Mahatma Gandhi’s list of the “Seven blunders of the world”
(1) wealth without work
(2) pleasure without conscience
(3) knowledge without character
(4) commerce without morality
(5) science without humanity
(6) worship without sacrifice and
(7) politics without principles.
____________________________________________

We need to redefine our paradigm. Saving money to help Nigerians has never been a sincere testament. If it is so, why has Nigeria continued to degrade in public execution of people-oriented policies (created militants)? If it is so, we won’t be having trans-regional (within Nigeria) high-ways that are not “motorable”, etc, since the time of PTF and DFFRI. We see high-ways with gullies and hospitals with new dysfunctional equipment and increasing failure of public service infrastructure, like FERMA roads that degrade in months. We continue to hear sermons of degradation to make us think of the past with nostalgia in some respect.

I have not lost faith in my President and may his silence reward him with inspirational touch to continue to direct the affairs of the nation creditably.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

LISTEN TO THE PEOPLE AND BE FINE!

“The price of petrol per litre, for which a proposal of ₦103 has been sent to the Nigerian president by the regulators in the petroleum industry to be announced by the Federal Government in December, is aimed at totally deregulating the downstream sector of the oil industry” By Festus Owete

“The atmosphere, as it were, shows that huge sums of money were expended by government to subsidise fuel which was imported by selected oil licensing companies in Nigeria, and 70 per cent of such imported products were exported to other African countries to make profit” ……“It would be absurdity for government to continue to subsidise fuel for a few oil dealers to enrich themselves, so the earlier the market is thrown open for competition, the safer for the Nigerian people, though government is anticipating a drop in the price of pump price soon after the sector is fully deregulated,…” By Iwuanyanwu, Imo State

http://234next.com/csp/cms/sites/Next/News/5472554-147/story.csp

“In a recession you do not have the luxury of striving to profit by raising prices for goods and services. The only thing that will achieve is to alienate customers and employees, kill any goodwill and bring business to a standstill.” By Debbie Ogunjobi

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2009/11/01/night-and-day-surviving-an-economic-meltdown/

>>>>>>>A broad look at the entire issue in Guardian newspaper!!!

D-E-R-E-G-U-L-A-T-I-O-N: Distilling Facts From Fiction
By Alabi Williams (Assistant Political Editor)

http://www.ngrguardiannews.com/sunday_magazine/article04//indexn2_html?pdate=011109&ptitle=D-E-R-E-G-U-L-A-T-I-O-N:

>>>>>>Let us do what is necessary to build a great nation by reducing poverty in Nigeria, standing at over 70% of the population (Population below PPP $1 per day) ………>> http://www.mdgmonitor.org/factsheets_00.cfm?c=NGA&cd=566#

STOP DEREGULATION AND START RESPONSIBLE GOVERNANCE

IT IS SAD THAT POLITICAL PARTIES HAVE TAKEN POSITION. NO TANGIBLE OPPOSITION AMONG POLITICIANS. BUT THIS IS AN ISSUE THAT WILL SEND THEM SCAMPERING. NO POLITICIAN SURVIVES THE DISPLEASURE OF THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE CHOSEN THEIR DESTINY.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Failing in the national call

Failing in the national call

“When the Nigerian National Anthem was played before the commencement of the World Cup qualifier between Nigeria and Mozambique in Abuja on Saturday, October 10, 2009, rather than obeying Nigeria ’s call, a large section of the football fans booed.

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2009/10/29/“arise-o-compatriots…”-booooo/

Is this the formation of the National Social Resistance Brigade?

A government that cannot bend to reason will break. When it does, the splinters hurt the ruled like fragments of an exploded bomb. The defence minister should watch out for assault to our national prestige by internal dissidents who shun the symbols of our nationhood. This is a build-up of resistance to bad governance and may culminate in a national social constipation. It shows that the National Orientation Agency is doing little and Akunyili's campaign is yielding negatively. Where do we go from here? The national anthem is laden with statements about where we are heading as a nation, but the words are meaningless in the actions of our national actors and operators. You can refuse to cheer a team that is failing in a national call, but you can’t refuse a call to our national ethos. That is an issue which must be made clear to the citizenry. The trait of unalloyed loyalty to the ideals of a nation is learnt in the formative years of human development. We must go there to revalidate the basis of our nationhood. I am not saying that the older ones are a lost generation. It is a well known fact the use of the right hand can’t be learned by left-handed individuals in adulthood. Reformation from left-handedness is always possible when you are young. I am a good example. I can use both hands and either of them equally. In my culture, this linguistic expression portrays me as a double-dealer full of ambiguities, but I can make wise choices of what is good for me and others. The youth development programmes should be given attention and streamlined towards achieving our national goals by instilling the compelling desire to work for our national greatness.

Several people are failing in national calls because they are square pegs in round holes. In great nations, people who lack purposeful convictions in an arena or area of performance refuse national calls because they do not want to fail the nation in such calls. Mohammed Ali refused the call of his nation to serve in the army during the Vietam war, because he wouldn’t be a good soldier in a war he did not believe in. In Nigeria, people hardly refuse a call even when they have a great chance of failing or performing below the expected target for national growth. It is irrelevant because national development is an undefined quantity. What has a clear definition is the self- interest or group-interest that must be protected. It is the failing in national calls among the “servants” in government that neo-colonialism crystallizes. Those who are true nationals now see the country as a colony exploited by cabals wearing Nigerian gabs.

This is a country of antitheses. We know what national development is. We control developmental processes so that there is no lopsidedness. We want to balance the nation on a tripod and not on a fulcrum. We remove outright competition and structure opportunities to favour those with obvious disadvantage in a fare competition. It is executed everyday because it is lawful. We see this in federal character policy for employment, university admissions, rotation of offices to balance power of national administration. Those who are stronger often have been conceding to the weaker so that the nation may thrive. These are few of the regulations that are nationally expedient. Now, the neo-colonialist among us has remembered that the quality of competition and the survival of the fittest would invigorate a nation in the threshold of greatness. We are reminded that competitive pricing is the hallmark of great nations. Are we going to move from here to consider the competitive pricing of human resource and allow Nigeria to grow heavy in the head even as tall as we are as a nation, in order to be caricatured as a heavy-headed giant who spun and fell on tiny feet?

Deregulation, as an instrument of testing competitive prowess or as an opportunity to invite more players, is not an attribute of this nation. Those we are inviting to come and compete do not believe us. Our policies are ambivalent and inconsistent. They cannot trust us fully with their investment funds. A foreign investor cannot trust a country that boasts about shareholders losing their money without caring to help with supporting instruments; a country with various institutional malfeasances. Who will trust a country that nationalized foreign investments in the oil sector some decades ago? Any investor you see is going for a pound of flesh when the going is good. Give them the pricing fluidity they want, they will come with as little infrastructural commitment as possible. In fact, the neo-colonial structure is the best for them; like the crude from our country and the refined products from theirs and the pricing mechanisms will balance the scale so that they lose less from crude oil price surge. These facts are very clear that they are not only in the imagination. Without bilateral agreements having structures that offer protection to the weak through concessionary pricing of fuel like it is obtainable in crude oil-rich nations, there is no guarantee for any foreign investors’ funds, because I would be one of those that would frustrate any contrary arrangement that is not in our national interest.

As I am writing I am watching workers like me walk on the streets of Abuja, telling those with ossified will of punishing the poor in a rich nation, like they did in the Niger Delta, that we are no fools even if they go against our will. They can be neo-colonialists, but we are more comfortable being nationalists, because those who founded this nation were like us. Our patrons wrote, they marched the streets, they called for national development and they knew our exigencies which we reiterate for the present government. Those patrons dug deep to reinforce the foundation of this nation and we do the same looking out to mend the frailties that may jeopardized the future viability of our nationhood.

Artificial scarcity of fuel in Umuahia

Fuel scarcity paralyses Umuahia:

“Investigations by Vanguard showed that petroleum marketers in the city were creating artificial scarcity, as they only sell at night at inflated prices of between N85 and N120. By Anayo Okoli

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2009/10/29/fuel-scarcity-paralyses-umuahia/

There is an official connivance any time when fuel scarcity occurs. People are making profit through official mandate. It means PPRA has been bribed and the State government is comfortable with it. PPRA must pretend not to be watching. It means failing the nation so that the cabals of the Nigerian economy can enjoy a free market at the expense of the powerless economic slaves. Do we have a government that cares for the people? This is God’s own State where God will do it after all.

In Maiduguri 2,000 Km from the coast, there is no queue because the government is working by insisting that all the agencies are closely monitored and supervised and black market rate is as low as 70-80 naira/litre. The South-East is a big question mark. It is a clear sign of what a deregulated regime will bring because it will be gangsterism and confusion. The Umuahia saga should not happen in a regulated system where laws are expected to be obeyed, and in a deregulated system, you expect PPRA to do anything to protect Nigerians from profiteering. Shame to us who cannot look after ourselves.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Is government telling the truth about the downstream oil sector?

The NTA Tuesday Live yesterday, October 27, 2009 was about understanding the problems of the downstream oil sector and the panellists were a number of government stooges who had limited information about the issues on the ground. Those who phoned in and the audience were better informed than the government officials. I did not waste my time and money watching the programme, because I came to a greater realization. Information is power and the power is still with the people. I was very interested in this topic and had to keep awake and fuel my electric power generator. I believe most Nigerians did the same. What the government does not know is that Nigeria has a very large population of highly educated and well informed people, but unfortunately, these people hardly act until the crisis point because of patience and hope in the ability of insensitive rulers. The honourable member on the panel believed that Nigerians are not knowledgeable enough and he was guiding them with his euphemisms and sophisms, thinking he had a platform for good arguments. A cautionary note here, however, is that history repeats itself. When the government does not know its people, and thinks it knows the manipulative instruments of public will, things happen in ways that the ruler and the ruled will regret. It is not far behind us that the government fixed gate fee that excluded Nigerians from watching our football team play in Abuja. The politics of exclusion is staring us in the face and a member of the Economic Summit Group is a protagonist. What baffles me is that those who should have information do not seem to have it, or they have it but refuse to work with it out of selective discountenance. The politicians we have now are going to mess up the oil sector, if we are not doing something within our capacity to redirect them. Our legislators seem not to have research workers who bring contents to their thoughts and therefore, alienate themselves from the people they rule. We cannot progress without reformation of the individuals that must rule us in the direction of knowing the real needs and feelings of the people.

The honourable member of the house on the panel said the leadership was taking decision on the oil sector for our own good because we do not have the facts. He positioned the argument that price of fuel will be the incentive for private sector participation. That is untrue. The government guidelines and the operational incentives that facilitate business are the stimuli. Lower cost of doing business, guarantee for policy stability, tax waivers and crude cost discounts are some of the incentives refinery entrepreneurs are looking for. When government has created several operational bottlenecks that have nothing to do with fuel price, the refineries will not be established; and foreign producers of fuel will not co-operate with Nigeria without bilateral agreement that will be favourable to them in the long run.

The oil cabals have worked well to sustain the skewed operation of the sector, but their operation will eventually end in favour of public good. I know this because we have great hearts for goodness. My reassurance came this morning during rush hours when a Nigerian motor cyclist in business suit stopped to control traffic in a messy hold-up. What a gracious thing to do! Nigerians know what is good for us. Arise Oh Compatriots, Nigerians call obey……. The workers in Nigeria and the general public must stand up to the issues now or never.

A different perspective on DEREGULATION as a word in economics

I am not an economist by training, but I understand its principles by seeing economic factors playing out everyday as a tangible reality. Besides, I read a lot of economics in my public secondary school that is now dilapidated with no motivated teachers. Having cleared the premise for discussing an economic issue, I would like to add that I know the word, DERGULATION, as an animal doctor with a specialist understanding of disease. I have slept and woken with this crazy word, because I have been thinking of it as a virus deserving attention and requiring an urgent vaccine like the Swine fever virus. I have tried to understand this word as a neo-colonial virus being created as a mutant from institutions in imperial economies. It is as dangerous as you want to see it depending on where you are; that is, if you have protective gears or you are a highly susceptible immunologically naïve juvenile economy.

Deregulation has become a phenomenon urgently called for in the downstream oil sector. Several reasons are given to justify that it is the cure for the ills of this sector. The danger signals flash from my test apparatus and tell me Nigeria wants to play with a fulminant invasive and malignant infective agent. The economic disease of the world is caused by deregulation, which is defined as unmitigated capitalism without welfarist impulse and with no protection for the defenceless poor in a deregulated regime and have no strength to find the potential richness embedded in everyone.

Deregulation is an impotent pill for weak economies brandished by experienced economies which know the theories and experiment them on the poor nations without good results. President Bush defended capitalism very well before he receded into ineffectiveness that caused economic recession. President Obama told us that capitalism failed because of irresponsible governance and failure to apply the necessary regulations required for sustainable execution of business activities. The West is coming out of the recession, but Nigeria is just going into it and trying to preach what Bush practiced and failed in a developed nation. Can we be less stupid to think that senseless deregulation will do us any good, when it has been the cause of misery in the homes of its protagonists?

Deregulation means abdication of responsibility by government in power. It means the punishment of the people by the people’s inaction. It is an uncontrolled romping of profit-driven capitalists who destroy gullible people with weak sense of self-protection. It no longer means removal of public monopoly. It has become institutionalization of private monopoly with ultimate destruction of increasingly weakened public governance, and enthronement of a faceless imperialism of cabals in strategic sectors.

The oil sector is the core of Nigeria’s existence and to consider trifling with it, is contemplating national suicide. Any decision in this sector should be carefully taken. In terms of strategic importance, the oil sector is far above the deregulated water and telecom sectors which enjoy little government interest and operate in haphazard manner reminiscent of the blinking lights. What is necessary now is to allow private refineries to spring up in Nigeria where crude oil is sold to them at a discount so that they can sell fuel to Nigerians at adjustable of retail price that is in congruence with per capita income of Nigerians. This is because we have been told that NNPC is corrupt and self-destruct, and about to be privatized like NITEL because of failure of government instruments.

Meanwhile, the government needs to find foreign refineries to import fuel from at concessionary prices in exchange for crude oil at discount rates, provided their cost of production is low and their home governments concede some export tax wavers to us through bilateral agreements. We can look for refineries in emerging economies that understand our problems and are eager to go into a synergy. Co-operation of countries with histories of similar political economies and targets may bring us the succour we are looking for. Let’s run away from economic lords with high-sounding theories because we can’t afford to continue in economic slavery in the 21st century.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Re: Let us deregulate now! Vanguard Newspaper

"It makes no sense insisting that a government that has demonstrated its inability to repair and operate the refineries must continue to spend our money in that direction.Government has also confessed its powerlessness to deal with the so-called cabal that freeloads on the over N600 billion it spends every year to subsidise fuel imports. Government has admitted its own failure. What is the need of insisting it must keep trying?" By Ochereome Nnannahttp://www.vanguardngr.com/2009/10/26/let-us-deregulate-now/

Deregulation is not merely the answer. The operators have a skewed definition of deregulation as free market for profiteers and enemies of our national economy called cabals and freeloads. The "government has admitted its own failure", but must that government fail to look at itself for correction in the area of failure or be corrected. An inefficient government that cannot be moved or removed is the cause of democratic instability in Nigeria.

It must be understood that the validity of a government is based on its functionality. The government wants to function in default like a man with fire extinguisher watching a match fire burn down his home. That is incredible for a sane society. The cabals have made the establishment intractable and inscrutable to goad us to a free market for the freeloads that will ensure a free flowing profit out of the exuberant tears of the owners of the black crude oil. We cannot wait for the worst thinking it can benefit us in the long run. Obasanjo co-operated with the cabals, but Yar'adua seemed not to have done so. The resolve to go beyond resistance is necessary for us to see important pro-active measures. If a poor country like Mozambique is thinking about its poor people by having concessionary fuel price in Africa, it is evident that good democracy can foster an emerging great nation built by good people in government ( http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-07-24-mozambique-to-pay-stations-keep-fuel-price-low ). We cannot make excuses for an outright deregulation. If we think well, we can come up with a model of deregulation in the downstream oil sector that would sustain development in Nigeria. What the government proposes now can only put us in strait-jacket and it is not our wishes 0r my wish.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Is fuel cheap in Nigeria? No!

Nigeria is not among nations with cheap fuel. We are among the top producing nations in crude oil. What is there to show in dividends. The little we have NNPC goes shopping with it! See what other counties are enjoying!
Cruisin'
Where gasoline is cheapest
RankCountryPrice/gal
1.Venezuela12 cents
2.Iran40 cents
3.Saudi Arabia45 cents
4.Libya50 cents
5.Swaziland54 cents
6.Qatar73 cents
7.Bahrain81 cents
8.Egypt89 cents
9.Kuwait90 cents
10.Seychelles98 cents
44.United States$3.45
155 countries surveyed between March 17 and April 1, 2008. Prices not adjusted for cost of living or exchange rates.
Correction: Due to data errors, previous versions of these charts were incorrect. The charts have been updated.
Source:AIRINC




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