Business

Airlines to get 6m litres of aviation fuel at N480

The House of Representatives on Monday mandated the NNPC and the CBN to nip the planned strike by airline operators in the bud.

It ruled that the six million litres of aviation fuel available should be sold at N480 per litre to the operators.

It enjoined the two government agencies to provide the required assistance and declared that airline operators should name fuel marketer of their choice to supply them aviation fuel over the next three months.

The House enjoined marketers to begin the process of application for licences to import aviation fuel without intervention by middlemen.

Speaker of the House, Rep Femi Gbajabiamila, had earlier lamented that certain resolutions of the House in the past had not been implemented leading to the impasse being witnessed in the aviation sector.

ATK: Oil marketers fault airlines over N700 per litre claim

He added that although the strike had been called off, the nation did not need to wait for threats of strikes to nip them in the bud.

In his reaction, Mr. Allen Onyeama, Chairman, Air Peace, who represented the airline operators, said the sale of aviation fuel at N500 per litre was still on the high side.

He added that aviation fuel cost should not take more than 40 per cent of airline operators total operating cost.

Alhaji Abdulmunaf Sarina, Chairman, Airline Operators Association of Nigeria who is also the Chairman, Azman Airline, noted that 75 per cent of aviation fuel was imported by the NNPC through Duke Oil.

He added that as a palliative, NNPC should supply the 25,000 tonnes of aviation fuel promised to the operators which was approved by President Muhammadu Buhari.

He observed that earlier resolution on aviation fuel price reached with the operators was not implemented.

Group Managing Director of NNPC Ltd., Mr. Mele Kyari, however, countered that the agreed price of aviation fuel was not implemented because of price volatility.

Kyari added that going by market forces, the price of aviation fuel could be as high as N700 per lire, adding that the way out was for government to subsidise the price.

He noted also that accessibility to Foreign Exchange was another constraint face by airline operators.

CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, on his part said oil theft in the Niger Delta was exacerbating the unavailability of Foreign Exchange.

He said that the CBN had no Foreign Exchange to aviation operators and that since the landing cost of aviation fuel was N460 per litre, the price would come to N550 per litre at the pump.

Emefiele said that the CBN would not grant any concession because it would amount to giving subsidy to aviation operators.

The Star

Editor

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