Amid the hike in the cost of fuel, the Minister of Finance, Wale Edun, says the current prices reflect market realities and believes Nigerians should be thankful that the country can refine petroleum products.
With the Middle East crisis stretching into weeks, the cost of petroleum products has spiked in recent days, leading to a rise in transportation costs.
But Edun said the development is an interplay of the market forces.
“The market price for petroleum products is what has been instilled by Mr. President—a mechanism that was missing for so long. It is important to understand that this is not a one-way street,” the minister said during an exclusive interview, which was aired yesterday.
“We have seen Dangote [Refinery] reduce prices from around 1,200 Naira to just over 1,000 or 1,050 Naira; those are the natural dynamics of the market.”
He said, “the resilience that the Nigerian economy has is coming largely from the fact that we do have that investment by the private sector, by Alhaji Aliko Dangote, in refining, and we need to support our refiners just as others are supporting them to keep petroleum products flowing.
“I think we should be thankful at this time for the capacity we have in Nigeria to refine crude into petrochemicals and petroleum products.”
Meanwhile, the minister believes the nation’s economy is on course, arguing that despite global uncertainties, things are moving in the right direction.
“That resilience is what we are trying to build in the economy, and that is what we have built so far. Of all the things that have happened till date, Ukraine has continued beyond what people expected, and of course, we have this new flare-up in the Middle East,” Edun said.
“We are on our way out of the woods. We can see the light at the end of the tunnel as long as we stay the course,” he said.
“The global shocks are a factor. It is the resilience against global shocks that you can keep going when things change drastically at the international level,” he stated.
