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Fuel Crisis Hits Abuja as Long Queues Emerge at Filling Stations
Fresh queues have emerged in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), causing motorists to spend hours waiting to purchase Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), commonly known as petrol. The situation has worsened due to the closure of many filling stations operated by independent marketers.
Reports on Tuesday evening indicated that numerous filling stations in Abuja remained closed, while the few that dispensed fuel, primarily those run by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) and some major oil marketers, were inundated with long lines of waiting vehicles.
Notable locations experiencing heavy traffic included the NNPC mega station on the Katampe axis of the Zuba-Kubwa Expressway, the AP station on Aguiyi Ironsi Street in the city center, and the NIPCO filling station along the Zuba-Kubwa expressway.
As a result of the fuel scarcity, many residents found themselves stranded at various bus stops, while the crisis has inadvertently created a lucrative market for black marketers, who are taking advantage of the situation to charge exorbitant prices for petrol.
According to sources, members of the Major Energies Marketers Association of Nigeria (MEMAN) have lifted over 50 million liters of PMS from the Dangote Refinery in the past week. During a webinar on Tuesday, Huub Stokman, Chairman of MEMAN, confirmed that major marketers have commenced loading the product from the refinery.
However, he did not disclose whether the marketers were sourcing directly from Dangote or from supplies acquired by the NNPCL.
Stokman stated, “I can tell you that we have started loading PMS from Dangote refinery. Our members have lifted millions of liters from Dangote,” highlighting the ongoing efforts to alleviate the fuel supply crisis in the region.
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Irish regulator slaps Meta €91m fine for security lapse
By Francesca Hangeior
An Irish regulator helping police European Union data privacy said Friday it had fined Facebook-owner Meta 91 million euros ($102 million) for password-security breaches.
The Data Protection Commission criticised Meta for failing to put in place appropriate security measures to protect users’ password data and for taking too long to alert the regulator over the issue.
An inquiry was launched in April 2019 after Meta Ireland informed the regulator that it had “inadvertently stored certain passwords of social media users” in a readable format on its internal system, the DPC said in a statement.
“It is widely accepted that user passwords should not be stored in plaintext, considering the risks of abuse that arise from persons accessing such data,” said Graham Doyle, the regulator’s head of communications.
Doyle told journalists that the breach, which took place in January 2019, affected 36 million Facebook and Instagram users across the European Economic Area, which comprises the EU plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway.
The regulator criticised Meta for not alerting the DPC of the problem until March 2019.
In a statement, Meta acknowledged that some Facebook users’ passwords were “temporarily stored in a readable format in our internal data systems.
“We took immediate action to fix this error, and there is no evidence that these passwords were abused or accessed improperly.
“We proactively flagged this issue to our lead regulator, the Irish Data Protection Commission, and have engaged constructively with them throughout this inquiry”, a Meta spokesperson added.
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Presidency affirms Lokpobiri’s stand on petrol price
By Francesca Hangeior
The Presidency has explained why government agencies cannot engage in the ongoing price dispute between Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited and Dangote Refinery, citing the fact that both enterprises are private.
In a statement on Friday, by the Special Assistant to the Honourable Minister for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, on media, Nnaamaka Okafor, the Presidency corroborated the minister’s stand on the pricing feud between the NNPCL and Dangote Petroleum Refinery.
Recall that Lokpobiri had stated shortly after a brief meeting he had earlier this month with the Vice President, Kashim Shettima, that the price of petrol in the country could differ in various locations, but by the time there is the availability of products across the country, the price will be stabilised.
The minister further stated that the sector is deregulated and therefore the government is not responsible for fixing prices.
The minister had said, “What is important is that the government is not fixing prices. This sector is deregulated. And we believe that with the availability of products, the price will find its level. And this is important for Nigerians to know.
“There is enough product in the country to be able to meet the demands of Nigerians, there should be no panic buying. And we also believe that Nigerians need to know that the government is not fixing prices.
That is what I want to convey to Nigerians.”
However, Okafor in the statement on Friday, noted that while corroborating this during a press briefing, the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Mr.
Bayo Onanuga, also emphasised what Lokpobiri had said earlier that both entities operate independently in a deregulated market.
He said under the Petroleum Industry Act, NNPCL functions autonomously despite government ownership.
“The PMS (Premium Motor Spirit) field, the PMS regime, has been deregulated. Dangote is a private company. NNPCL should not forget it’s a limited liability company. Whatever controversy both of them are having is their own problem.
“They are operating, even if you go by the terms of petroleum industry act NNPCL is on its own, even though it’s owned by the federal government, the state government and local councils and everything, but it’s operating as a limited liability company.
“You can see what the private market has said that I think they find the NNPC or Dangote price too much for them. They will resolve to import fuel because they clear the market at the end of the day. It’s the consumer who benefits if a price war starts, if NNPC fuel is too much, the public market can go to the market and bring in their fuel and sell at the price that they think is very reasonable and profitable for them.
“So my answer is that, as far as this is concerned, the government is not dabbling into this controversy. Dangote as a private company is working on his own. NNPC is a limited liability company, and it has the right to fix the price of its own and so on,” the statement quoted Onanuga to have said.
Onanuga added that instead of intervening, the government plans to promote alternative energy solutions like Compressed Natural Gas, and CNG, offering a cheaper option for consumers and subsidizing conversion costs for vehicles.
He noted that the price difference is significant, with CNG costing about N230 per litre equivalent compared to PMS at about N850 per litre.
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