Inflation: Nigeria's petrol consumption down 28pc after subsidy scrapped, regulator says

Inflation: Nigeria's petrol consumption down 28pc after subsidy scrapped, regulator says

Business

Govt spent $10bn last year leading to wider deficit and increase in debt

ABUJA (Reuters) – Nigeria's average daily petrol consumption has fallen by 28 per cent since President Bola Tinubu scrapped a popular but costly subsidy on the fuel at the end of May, data from the industry regulator shows.

Average daily petrol consumption fell to 48.43 million litres in June, down from the previous average of 66.9m, according to figures released to Reuters by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA).

A subsidy had kept prices cheap for decades in Africa's biggest economy but it became increasingly expensive for the country – the government spent $10 billion last year – leading to wider deficits and driving up government debt.

Since the subsidy was ended, a black market in neighbouring Cameroon, Benin and Togo that relied on petrol smuggled from Nigeria has collapsed.

Despite having spent $2.41bn on the subsidy in the first five months, Nigeria could save up to $5.10bn this year from scrapping the petrol subsidy and from FX reforms, the World Bank said on June 27.