Business
NNPCL Announces New Petrol Price Nationwide
The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has announced a reduction in its petrol pump price for the second time within four days.
Recent market surveys conducted by Daily Post indicate that NNPCL retail outlets near Airport Junction, Wuse Zone 6, and Berger in Abuja have decreased the price of petrol from ₦1,260 per litre to ₦1,210 per litre. This adjustment represents a ₦50 per litre reduction.
This move follows a similar cut by the Dangote Refinery, which recently lowered its petrol gantry price by ₦50 to ₦1,125 per litre. Additionally, just four days prior, NNPCL had already reduced its fuel pump price by ₦75 per litre, bringing it down to ₦1,260 per litre.
As a result of these recent adjustments, petrol prices in Abuja and surrounding areas now range between ₦1,210 and ₦1,305 per litre.
The reduction in domestic petrol prices came amid a drop in global crude oil prices.
West Texas Intermediate crude traded around $69 per barrel, while Brent crude stood at about $71 per barrel, following the easing of conflict in the Middle East.
The decline in crude oil prices has continued to fuel public expectations that domestic petrol pump prices should also drop significantly.
Naija News recalls that the Dangote Petroleum Refinery recently reduced the prices of diesel and aviation fuel at its loading gantry, days after lowering the price of petrol.
The refinery cut the price of Automotive Gas Oil, popularly known as diesel, by ₦100 per litre.
According to Punch, the product, which previously sold at ₦1,700 per litre, now costs ₦1,600 per litre.
Aviation Turbine Kerosene, also known as jet fuel, also recorded a ₦100 reduction, dropping from ₦1,550 per litre to ₦1,450 per litre.
The latest adjustment came shortly after the refinery announced a ₦75 reduction in the gantry price of Premium Motor Spirit, commonly called petrol.
Petrol was reduced from ₦1,250 per litre to ₦1,175 per litre.
The price cuts have been linked to the recent decline in global crude oil prices following easing tensions in the Middle East.
Business
FG Speaks on Increasing Taxes, Gives Fresh Update
The Federal Government has clarified that it is not increasing taxes, noting that Nigeria only needs more taxpayers.
The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Taiwo Oyedele, made this remark on Thursday while receiving a delegation from the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria, CITN, at his office in Abuja.
Oyedele hailed the institute for introducing a National Tax Awareness Day and for supporting the current tax reforms of the Federal Government.
The minister charged the institute to double its effort in public enlightenment, stressing that many Nigerians still view taxation as a means for the government to take money from citizens.
He reiterated that the priority of the government is not to increase tax rates but to broaden the tax base by ensuring that all eligible taxpayers meet their obligations.
“We are still not getting enough revenue from taxes.
“It is not about increasing taxes but making sure that those who are supposed to pay tax pay. We want to promote fairness in tax administration,” he said.
Source: Daily post
Business
Full List: FG Finally Names Identities of 9 Persons Allegedly Financing Terrorism
The Nigerian government has released a list of six persons and three entities sanctioned for terrorism financing.
In a statement on Tuesday, Secretary of the Nigerian Sanctions Committee, Beatrice Jedy-Agba, said the list was approved and published on 18 June.
This comes a day after the United States Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) announced the sanctions on Mukhtar Adamu, and three bureau de change companies over their alleged involvement in financing the terrorist group Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP).
OFAC, in its announcement on Tuesday, accused Mr Adamu, a Lagos-based bureau de change operator, of facilitating financial transactions and money transfers on behalf of ISWAP.
On Wednesday, the Nigerian Sanctions Committee, released a broader list of six persons and three entities similarly sanctioned in Nigeria for terrorism financing activities.
The list includes Mr Adamu and two companies – Nine to Nine BDC and Generation BDC Limited – named in the US sanctions on Monday.
Mrs Jedy-Agba, who doubles as the Solicitor-General of the Federation and Permanent Secretary, Federal Minister of Justice, said the US sanctions followed “the inclusion of Adamu and his companies as part of a broader update to the Nigeria Sanctions List approved and published on 18th June 2026.”
She welcomed the inclusion of Mr Adamu and the two firms in the US designations.
The fresh list of designations by the Nigerian government, including Mr Adamu and the two firms linked to him, is as follows:
1. Ibrahim Yakubu Ogirima (NLISWi.19)
2. Muktar Muhammad Adamu (NLISWi.20)
3. Adamu Chiroma (NLISWi.21)
4. Ibrahim Abubakar (NLISWi.22)
5. Abdullahi Umar Usman (NLISWi.23)
6. Babangida Muhammed Adamu Hammajam (NLISWi.24)
7. Abbal Bako & Sons Bureau De Change Limited (NLISWe.25)
8. Generation Currency BDC Limited (NLISWe.26)
9. Nine to Nine BDC Limited (NLISWe.27)
Mrs Jedy-Agba asked banks and designated non-financial businesses and professions, including lawyers, accountants and others, in Nigeria to immediately give effect to the designation of the six persons and three entities by freezing their assets and reporting them, any matches and their transactions to the appropriate authorities.
“The Federal Government reiterates its directive to all financial institutions and designated non-financial businesses and professions to continue to comply with all sanctions’ obligations, including asset-freezing requirements, the filing of Suspicious Transaction Reports and the reporting of all relevant matches to the appropriate authorities,” the statement said.
The US sanctions also mean that all property and interests in property belonging to the designated individuals and entities that are within the United States or under the control of US persons are blocked. Also, US citizens and businesses are also generally prohibited from conducting transactions with them unless authorised by OFAC.
OFAC further warned that foreign financial institutions and other persons that knowingly facilitate significant transactions or provide material support to the sanctioned individuals or entities could themselves face US sanctions.
The US Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) had said in a statement on Monday that Mr Muhammad, also known as “Mukhtar Adamu Muhammad”, of facilitating financial transactions and money transfers on behalf of ISIS-West Africa, popularly known as Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP).
Sanctioned by OFAC along with Mr Muhammad are Nine To Nine Exchange Bureau De Change Limited, Generation Currency Bureau De Change Limited, and Manhattan Bureau De Change Limited, which OFAC alleged are owned, controlled or directed by Mr Muhammad and were used to move funds for the terrorist organisation.
PREMIUM TIMES reported that ISWAP, a second breakaway faction of Boko Haram, has been responsible for years of deadly attacks across Nigeria’s North-east and the Lake Chad region.
Business
Petrol Prices Drop at Filling Stations Nationwide
Pump prices of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) have begun to drop at filling stations in some parts of Lagos and Ogun states following the recent reduction in the gantry price of petrol by the Dangote Petroleum Refinery. This price adjustment responds to the reduction in global crude oil prices as Iran and the United States reached an agreement.
Punch reports that at the SGR filling station in Mowe, Ogun state, a litre of petrol sells for N1,199, the lowest price encountered at the stops we visited. NIPCO, SAO, AP and MRS filling stations dispense a litre of fuel at N1,205 per litre, while Mobil petrol stations sell at N1,220 per litre.
A litre at Heyden’s station in Iperu went for N1,285 per litre. Other filling stations selling petrol at N1,245 per litre include NNPC Retail outlets in Ogun state.
Chinedu Ukadike, the Public Relations Officer of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), told Legit. during an interview that many filling stations are yet to reduce prices below N1,300 per litre because they are still managing old stock purchased at higher rates.
He explained that immediate price cuts could lead to losses for marketers still holding expensive inventory.
Ukadike said: “This announcement is enabling people who have old stocks to clear out their stocks, not only clearing out their stocks but also enabling them to prepare to take the fresh stocks.”
“Once the Dangote refinery announces a new price, there is a serious pause in loading. It will enable people who just bought new products to see how they can clear the old stocks within a window of a day or two.” He said once new products enter circulation, pricing adjustments will naturally follow.
Ukadike identified the cost of funds as another key factor affecting petrol pump prices, noting that financing expenses influence how quickly marketers adjust prices.
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