Nigerians may soon pay more for Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) following a fresh hike in ex-depot prices by the Dangote Petroleum Refinery.
The refinery on Friday raised the rate to N880 per litre, up from N825, according to information obtained by Chronicle NG.
This N55 increase is expected to reverberate across the fuel supply chain, potentially pushing pump prices above N900/litre in some areas, particularly those distant from major depots.
The hike comes amid a global decline in crude oil prices. On Friday, Brent crude dropped by 3.02% to $76.47, WTI declined to $74.93, and Murban fell to $76.97. However, this price relief on the international market offers little benefit locally due to ongoing concerns about supply disruptions and exchange rate instability.
Dangote Group President Aliko Dangote attributed the price adjustment to operational costs and an increased reliance on imported crude oil. He disclosed that the refinery is now “increasingly” sourcing crude from the United States due to local shortages.
Reports show that the refinery is projected to import 17.65 million barrels of crude oil between April and July 2025, with 3.65 million barrels already received in the past two months. This development is taking place under the Federal Government’s naira-for-crude policy.
Addressing the Technical Committee of the One-Stop Shop for the crude and refined products initiative, Dangote explained that the refinery continues to battle crude shortages, necessitating U.S. imports.
On Monday, Festus Osifo, President of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), criticised fuel marketers for inflating prices despite global crude oil price drops.
“If you go online and check the PLAT cost per cubic metre of PMS, convert that to litres and then to our Naira, you will see that with crude at around $60 per barrel, petrol should be retailing between N700 and N750 per litre,”
he said.
Osifo argued that Nigerians should benefit from lower fuel prices when crude prices fall.
“If Nigerians bear the brunt of higher fuel costs, they should be allowed to enjoy the benefit of low pricing.”
The increase now appears to affirm Osifo’s warning, with many depot owners and distributors bracing for new pricing benchmarks. Sources indicate that fuel marketers have been on hold since Tuesday when Dangote paused sales and withheld new PFIs, triggering speculative pricing hikes.
As supply resumes at the new rate, downstream players anticipate widespread adjustments to retail pump prices, raising renewed concern over affordability and inflationary pressure.