Wednesday 28 December 2011

The (True) Cost of One Litre of Petrol - By Dr. Izielen Agbon

On December 10, 2011, if you stopped at the Mobil filling station on
Old Aba Road in Port Harcourt, you would be able to buy a litre of
petrol for 65 naira or $1.66 per gallon at an exchange rate of $1/N157
and 4 litres per gallon. This is the official price.

The government claims that this price would have been subsidized at N73/litre and that the true price of a litre of petrol in Port Harcourt is
N138/litre or $3.52 per gallon. They are therefore determined to
remove their subsidy and sell the gallon at $3.52.

But, On December 10, 2011, if you stopped at the Mobil Gas station on
E83rd St and Flatlands Avenue in Brooklyn, New York, USA, you would be
a able to buy a gallon of petrol for $3.52/gallon.

Both gallons of petrol would have been refined from Nigerian crude oil. The only difference would be that the gallon in New York was refined in a US
North East refinery from Nigerian crude exported from the Qua Iboe
Crude Terminal in Nigeria while the Port Harcourt gallon was either
refined in Port Harcourt or imported.

The idea that a gallon of petrol from Nigerian crude oil cost the same in New York as in Port Harcourt runs against basic economic logic. Hence, Nigerians suspect that there is something irrational and fishy about such pricing. What they would like to know is the exact cost of 1 litre of petrol in Nigeria.
We will answer this question in the simplest economic terms despite the
attempts of the Nigerian government to muddle up the issue.

What is the true cost of a litre of petrol in Nigeria?

The Nigerian government has earmarked 445000 barrel per day throughput for meeting domestic refinery products demands. These volumes are not for export. They are public goods reserved for internal consumption.

We will limit our analysis to this volume of crude oil. At the refinery gate in Port Harcourt, the cost of a barrel of Qua Iboe crude oil is made up of the
finding /development cost ($3.5/bbl) and a production/storage
/transportation cost of $1.50 per barrel.

Thus, at $5 per barrel, we can get Nigerian Qua Iboe crude to the refining gates at Port Harcourt and Warri. One barrel is 42 gallons or 168 litres.

The price of 1 barrel of petrol at the Depot gate is the sum of the
cost of crude oil, the refining cost and the pipeline transportation
cost.

Refining costs are at $12.6 per barrel and pipeline distribution
cost are $1.50 per barrel. The Distribution Margins (Retailers, Transporters, Dealers, Bridging Funds, Administrative charges etc) are N15.49/litre or $16.58 per barrel. The true cost of 1 litre of petrol at the Mobil filling station in Port Harcourt or anywhere else in Nigeria is therefore ($5+$12.6+$1.5+$16.6) or $35.7 per barrel . This is equal to N33.36 per litre compared to the official price of N65 per litre.

Prof. Tam David West is right. There is no petrol subsidy in Nigeria. Rather the current official prices are too high.

Let us continue with some basic energy economics. The government
claims we are currently operating our refineries at 38.2% efficiency.

When we refine a barrel of crude oil, we get more than just petrol. If
we refine 1 barrel (42 gallons) of crude oil, we will get 45 gallons
of petroleum products.

The 45 gallons of petroleum products consist of 4 gallons of LPG, 19.5 gallons of Gasoline, 10 gallons of Diesel, 4 gallons of Jet Fuel/Kerosene, 2.5 gallons of Fuel Oil and 5 gallons of Bottoms. Thus, at 38.2% of refining capacity, we have about 170000 barrels of throughput refined for about 13.26 million litres of petrol, 6.8 million litres of diesel and 2.72 million litres of kerosene/jet fuel.

This is not enough to meet internal local national demand. So, we send the remaining of our non-export crude oil volume (275000 barrels per day) to be refined abroad and import the petroleum product back into the country. We will just pay for shipping and refining.

The Nigerian government exchanges the 275000 barrels per day with
commodity traders (90000 barrels per day to Duke Oil, 60000 barrels
per day to Trafigura (Puma Energy), 60000 barrels per day to Societe
Ivoirienne de Raffinage (SIR) in Abidjan, Ivory Coast and 65000
barrels per days to unknown sources) in a swap deal.

The landing cost of a litre of petrol is N123.32 and the distribution margins are N15.49 according to the government. The cost of a litre is therefore
(N123.32+N15.49) or N138.81 . This is equivalent to $3.54 per gallon
or $148.54 per barrel.

In technical terms, one barrel of Nigerian crude oil has a volume
yield of 6.6% of AGO, 20.7% of Gasoline, 9.5% of Kerosene/Jet fuel,
30.6% of Diesel, 32.6% of Fuel oil / Bottoms when it is refined.

Using a netback calculation method, we can easily calculate the true cost of
a litre of imported petrol from swapped oil. The gross product revenue
of a refined barrel of crude oil is the sum of the volume of each
refined product multiplied by its price.

Domestic prices are $174.48/barrel for AGO, $69.55/barrel for Gasoline (PMS or petrol), $172.22/barrel for Diesel Oil, $53.5/barrel for Kerosene and
$129.68/barrel for Fuel Oil.

Let us substitute the government imported PMS price of $148.54 per
barrel for the domestic price of petrol/gasoline. Our gross product
revenue per swapped barrel would be (174.48*0.066
+148.54*0.207+172.22*0.306+ 53.5*0.095+129.68*0.326) or $142.32 per
barrel.

We have to remove the international cost of a barrel of Nigerian crude oil ($107 per barrel) from this to get the net cost of imported swapped petroleum products to Nigerian consumers. The net cost of swapped petroleum products would therefore be $142.32 -$107 or $35.32 per barrel of swapped crude oil.

This comes out to be a net of $36.86 per barrel of petrol or N34.45 per litre. This is the true cost of a litre of imported swapped petrol and not the landing cost of N138 per litre claimed by the government.

The pro-subsidy Nigerian government pretends the proceeds from swapped
crude oil is $0 per barrel (N0 per litre) while the cost of the resulting petroleum products is $148.54 per barrel (N138 per litre).

The government therefore argues that the “subsidy” is N138.81-N65 or
N73.81 per litre. But, if landing cost of the petroleum products is calculated at international price ($148.54 per barrel), then the proceeds from the swapped crude oil should be calculated at International price ($107 per barrel). This is basic economic logic outside the ideological prisms of the World Bank.

The traders/petroleum products importers and the Nigerian government want
to charge Nigerians for the crude oil while they are getting it free.
They want us to pay international prices for our nation’s crude oil
while Nigeria sells crude oil to neighboring ECOWAS nations at a
discount.

So let us conclude this basic economic exercise. If the true price of
38.2% of our petrol supply from our local refinery is N33.36/litre and
the remaining 61.8% has a true price of N34.45 per litre, then the
average true price is (0.382*33.36+0.618*34.45) or N34.03 per litre.

The official price is N65 per litre and the true price with government
figures is about N34 per litre (even with our moribund refineries).

There is therefore no petrol subsidy. Rather, there is a high sales
tax of 91.2% at current prices of N65 per litre.

The labor leaders meeting the President should go with their
economists. They should send economists and political scientists as
representatives to the Senate Committee investigating the petroleum
subsidy issue. There are many expert economists and political
scientists in ASUU who will gladly represent the view of the majority.

The labor leaders should not let anyone get away with the economic
fallacy that the swapped oil is free while its refined products must
be sold at international prices in the Nigerian domestic market. The
government should explain at what price the swapped crude oil was sold
and where the money accruing from these sales have been kept.

We have done this simple economic analysis of the Nigerian petroleum
products market to show that there is no petrol subsidy what so ever.

In the end, this debate on petrol subsidy and the attempt of the
government to transfer wealth from the Nigerian masses to a petrol
cabal will be decided in the streets.

Nigerian workers, farmers, students, market women, youths, unemployed, NGO and civil society as a whole should prepare for a long harmattan season of protracted struggle. They should not just embark on 3 days strike/protests after which the government reduces the hiked petroleum prices by a few
Nairas. They must embark upon in a sustainable struggle that will lead
to fundamental changes.

Let us remove our entire political subsidy from the government and end this petroleum products subsidy debate once and for all. It is time to bring the Arab Spring south.

Izielen Agbon, Dallas, Texas.
c/o
*Adaku Onwuzurike
ThreeSearch Nigeria Ltd*

Friday 7 October 2011

Birthday 2011

A really good evening with the Class of '85 from Federal Government College, Enugu.

Friday 25 February 2011

Naija Votes 2011: The Facebook Aspirants

This is an update on the Facebook popularity of the more active Nigerian politicians and provides likes to follow them in the social media.



Goodluck Jonathan


June 2010: 140,176 fans
August 2010: 164,844 fans
Current:  492,576 fans

The once daily updates have now fizzled out into occasional updates as the President concentrates on day to day issues and his campaign on the ground. His fan base has grown to a staggering near half a million Nigerians. This is brilliant as he has indeed encouraged participation although recently he has turned off the ability for people to post to his wall. Whether this is as a result of not wanting to get less than favourable feedback or hopefully (and this is my true joy) stop the near lunatic daily posts riddled with sycophancy. It is indeed a good thing as I had stopped wasting time going there to here the nauseating levels of baseless praise worship.

GEJ continues to do some good things and some rather baffling ones. BUT he has steadied the ship.


June 2010: 144 Followers
August 2010: 417 Followers
Current: 6,893 Followers

As with GEJ's FB page, his Twitter account has seen a dramatic rise in followers. It is to be expected though as he is incumbent.

Babatunde Fashola


August 2010: 10,223 fans
Current: 99,249 fans


Fashola, a complete sensation in the world of Nigerian politics, has seen fans flock to his page in record numbers. He has set the pace in electioneering with daily progress reports where others are mud slinging. The future of Nigerian politics.


June 2010: 303 Followers
August 2010: 860 Followers
Current: 16,627 Followers

Unsurprisingly, his Twitter account has also see masses flock there as he Tweets almost on the hour.

Pat Utomi


July 2010: 45,818 fans
August 2010: 52,653 fans
Current: 144,229 fans

Utomi has finally declared his intention to run for the office of President.

He was at TEDxEuston in November and spoke very well to the audience of Nigerians.


August 2010: 538 Followers
Current: 881 Followers

Despite not being active on this platform since September 2009, Pat has seen an increase in the number of Followers - probably out of curiosity and expectation rather traffic driven.

Nasir El Rufai


June 2010: 38,617 fans
August 2010: 43,741 fans
Current: 101,061 fans

Despite announcing a break from active politics, Nasir has seen his fans more than double. He is not contesting any election but this does not seem to have deterred Nigerians that have flocked to his page.


June 2010: 955 Followers
August 2010: 1,042 Followers
Current: 1,840 Followers

With a break from active civic engagement, Nasir's tweets have also slowed down considerably. But still, he has seen an increase in followers to nearly double.

Nuhu Ribadu


June 2010: 28,578 Fans
August 2010: 33,463 Fans
Current: 139,785 Fans

Having secured the ACN ticket for the 2011 Presidential elections, Ribadu's fan base has grown to nearly 5 times what it was. He has also got the a flagship youth volunteer movent on Fb, Team Ribadu. The only FB candidate with a volunteer organisation behind him.


June 2010: 1,431 Followers
August 2010: 1,556 Followers
Current: 4,108 Followers

As expected Ribadu's Twitter Followers have also grown to more than 3 times what it was in August.

Buhari

I have not been able to decipher an official page for Buhari. There are so many out there with the largest having no more than 12,000 odd fans.

But interestingly an on-line poll currently gives him the early lead.

Naija Citizenship Abroad: A passport renewal experience

When I applied for a passport in 2001, the Nigerian High Commission was marooned in the infamous Fleet Street address in what can best be described as a dingy basement that was not fit for sorting mail. However, the Nigerians working there on that day gave me no problems and issued my passport following their own guidelines on their untidy website. The process was straight-forward and I suffered no delays or inconveniences. You see I like to be prepared and had all the necessary supporting documents and accompanying requirements. I still went away saddened that it could not have been a more fitting venue for citizens of Africa’s most populous nation and a top ten oil producing nation.

Ahead of a Christmas trip to the motherland in 2009, it was time to renew passports for my wife and my two girls who were making the trip. My mother’s passport too was ready to be renewed and so off I went to the High Commission’s website. From the much better website, to the new and better location to a video welcome from the High Commissioner, it was obvious that a lot of work had been going on. Clearly, everyone felt like me that we had to improve and improve we did.



On to the application process and instantly I could spot a point for nerves. All of the processing was now being done online. You are directed to http://www.immigration.gov.ng/ where you fill out an application form and, with the exception of issues about the drop down menus only showing Nigerian towns, it works. You then get the option to pay for your passport and at the time the options were either to pay in dollars via Google Checkout or in Naira using Nigerian Immigration Service pre-pay debit cards which you can buy at a bank in Nigeria. I have an excellent brother-in-law in Nigeria and within minutes he had acquired the said cards and sent me by text the card numbers, expiry dates and PIN. A few minutes later, the online platform carries out a live verification of the card details and I have an appointment date for the passports.

At the time all I could think that could have improved the process was the issue about the drop down cities and perhaps a way to “shopping basket” applications so that they all get the same day for appointment as a group. But this was brilliant improvement so I was happy enough. This was also time to change to the new biometric ECOWAS passports so finger printing had to be done and that was pretty straight-forward. I did not go but the family reported a stress free day.
My passport had 8 months validity on it and so I was happy that with such improvements it was going to be a breeze when the time came. Fast forward May 2010 and I decide to start making arrangements to renew mine. On getting online to the immigration service website, I am welcomed with a message that they were making further improvements. I was elated. No one had waited all of ten years to improve things further!!

Anyway, several weeks later I returned and the improvements were in place. So now you still had the naught drop downs with Nigeria only cities BUT they had “improved” the payment system!! You still had the choice of paying in dollars via Google Checkout but if you wanted to pay in Naira you now had to:

1. Print off an acknowledgement slip with a specific number
2. Send this number to someone in Nigeria
3. They take this number and go to the bank
4. The bank accept the money and put in the number
5. They then issue you with a confirmation number
6. The person texts this back to you
7. You go back in to the website
8. Then enter that number to confirm payment
9. Then you get an interview date

Or do you? I will get back to that in a moment.

So basically, for some reason, the improvement involved taking an automated system, removing the automated part of it and making it manual. I cannot begin to know what drove this sort of improvement except cost but surely this cannot more efficient than what was there before running off the INTERSWICTH platform. How did the PAY4ME folk sell this as a better service and who agreed with them? What was the basis for switching to this system?

Anyway, on with my passport renewal and I printed off my appointment date for the 8 September 2010. As this was several months away, I had time to get my requirements together and I was set. The baby in the house though had other ideas and come 7 September, I had a confirmation slip that now had the previous week’s cornflakes taking residence so I decided to log back in and reprint a fresh confirmation letter for my interview the next day.

The same next day I had an evening flight to Washington D.C. to catch. But more relevant was the upcoming 50th Jubilee Celebrations of Nigeria which coincided with that of my school association. There were also plans to celebrate my secondary school class’ silver anniversary of finishing high school. So I had a couple of pretty important dates in the diary for October.
So imagine my shock horror when I logged back in to reprint my confirmation number to find out that it now had a new appointment date of 12 November. Panic set in and first thing in the morning I called the High Commission and after explaining my dilemma to the gentleman that answered, he advised me to come with both letters to the embassy as planned. When I got there, and after a couple of hours of waiting, the cashier informed me that even though the first confirmation had given me a date, it was not the valid date as it was missing a line that said “payment confirmed”. Looking at both sheets of paper, it was obvious what she was talking about. However, it was the same confirmation number that had produced both print outs and that number can only have been issued upon full payment at the bank.

I was running late for my flight to Washington and simply did not have the luxury of hanging about to argue the toss and so I resigned myself to my fate and left.

We have certainly not improved the process and I firmly believe that the previous payment process with INTERSWITCH was more straight-forward and efficient. Maybe it had problems and others did not find it equally smooth. But this is my experience.

I missed two important trips to Nigeria and went back on the 12 November. The process from there all in was smooth and straight-forward. However, I will suggest that a lot of time is wasted at the High Commission waiting for what amounts to a biometric collection for the passport application and this can be improved by simplifying the reception process where you hand in your Postal Order. At the moment it amounts to a full day for the basic task of handing in your postal order and getting your finger prints taken. We can do better than that.  Well done to the High Commissioner and the team who have really improved things since my last visit. Well done also to the team that has brought business centre services to the High Commission. This has helped a lot of people that previously had to leave the embassy to do simple things like photocopies and buy postal orders. These are welcome improvements. Let us go a step further and make it a more efficient service.

Sunday 30 January 2011

Let us re-brand Nigeria with this fantastic and inspiring song.

Anyone who knows Nigerians even remotely, will tell you that any meaningful change with us MUST involve some music. This is a classic example and my pick for our re-brand efforts.


Saturday 20 November 2010

Partnership and Collaboration for a Successful Nigerian Health Programme


On Saturday, 6 September, 2010, I was privileged to attend Nigeria Health 2010 (www.nigeriahealth.org) convened by the Nigeria Public Health Foundation (www.nphf.org). My good friend and TEDxEuston (www.tedxeuston.com) and Project Hope (www.fgce-hope.com) colleague, Chikwe Ihekweazu, had asked me to join him and our other colleague, Ike Anya despite the fact that I am no medical professional. Coming from a family with a good number of doctors and nurses, I was acutely aware of how a day spent with doctors can easily become an exercise in will power for the uninitiated, so I approached the day with cautious optimism. I have believed for a long time that Nigerian doctors often do not take a holistic approach to solving our healthcare problems. There tends to be a master/servant attitude from the doyens of the profession to other contributing professionals.

So I was immediately pleasantly surprised to find a conference that was highlighting collaboration and partnership as the way forward. Throughout the day this theme was born out in many of the excellent presentations from a vibrant group of speakers.

The work of the leadership at the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (www.nphcda.gov.ng) was particularly notable, demonstrating what is achievable when you have leadership that is focused and inspired. Our remarkable progress in the fight against Polio (http://one.org/blog/2010/07/14/progress-on-polio-in-nigeria/) is worthy of all the accolades possible.

In achieving this feat, the team sought to think outside of the box, involving local expertise and knowledge like traditional, religious and political leaders in the task of education and mobilisation to great effect. The key here is the partnership and collaboration. It works every time. Remember I said I was no professional? True but in 2010, you need people in my profession too – Information Technology. And it was notable that at the NPCDA, they have already trialled Video Conference solutions for delivering training remotely. At the end of her presentation, Dr. Ugo Okoli, who is currently the Project Adviser/National Programme Consultant to the Midwives Services Scheme of the National Primary Health Care Development Agency, concluded by calling for help and support from other professionals to help the agency consolidate on the progress it was making within the agency.

Other speakers carried this theme through. Professor Gyoh delivered the keynote address and called for us all, Naija people, to put pressure on Politicians to put health at the top of their priorities as an unhealthy nation will never make it to the Promised Land.

Dr. Agomoh, Medical Director, Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital Enugu Nigeria, shared the result of excellent collaboration demonstrated in the execution of the Amaudo Community Nurse led mental health initiative which has been running successfully for 20 years.

The effervescent, Gloria Urhoma, Maternity Public Health Development Lead at North West London Hospital NHS Trust, made a strong case for patient empowerment as a key to driving improvement in Nigerian healthcare standards. Gloria won the Mary Seacole Award in 2008 – a Department of Health and NHS Employers award that provides opportunities for nurses, midwives or health visitors in England in leadership positions to undertake a project, or other educational/developmental activity, to enhance patient/client-focused care. We can certainly copy this!

There was so much to admire at this well attended conference and it really is a call for professionals in other fields to look to the medical field in Nigeria and bring innovative ways to support the gallant efforts of organisations like the NPHCDA towards improving our primary care.


All in all, I got to spend a day with friends and hear from the good people that clearly care about the health of the ordinary Nigerian and came away feeling inspired to support any effort in this direction. So how about we start with steering our politicians away from discussions on zoning to health in the coming months before the general elections.