NUPENG shuts petrol loading bay, scarcity looms

Fuel queue refuse to go away.

A Fuel queue in Lagos: Nigerians

The National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) has shut down the operations of Nigerian Independent Petroleum Company (NIPCO).

A News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) correspondent who visited NIPCO operational headquarters at Apapa, Lagos, on Friday, reported that more than 100 trucks were on queue at the loading bay.

A top management staff of NIPCO told NAN on condition of anonymity, that NUPENG ordered the shut down,following the leadership tussle within the top echelon of the Nigeria Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN).

According to the source, the situation, which is the fallout of union politics, may lead to another round of petrol scarcity.

•Motorists queue to buy fuel in Lagos: shut down may worsen supply
•Motorists queue to buy fuel in Lagos: shut down may worsen supply

“We don’t have any industrial crisis that could have warranted the shutdown of operations.

“I urge the Federal Government to intervene in the matter before its gets out of hand,” the source said.

The top management source said that the company was losing an average of N600 million as they load about 200 trucks daily at the cost of about N3 million each.

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“We also run an average of over one million Naira on operational expenses daily.

“NIPCO serves as the Federal Government’s strategic depot for fuel storage and distribution across the country,” he said.

The source also said that the situation had demoralised and embarrassed the members of staff and management of NIPCO.

Some of the tanker drivers caught up in the crisis lamented their long stay in Lagos, stressing that majority of them came from the Northern states to load petrol.

They appealed to the relevant authorities to intervene and restore normalcy before it would get out of hand.

NAN also reports that effort to interview NUPENG national President proved abortive, while the Secretary refused to pick his calls and did not reply the text messages sent to his phones. (NAN)

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