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FCCPC threatens sanctions, warns marketers over petrol price cuts

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The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) has expressed concern that consumers have yet to benefit fully from the recent decline in global crude oil prices, warning that it will sanction businesses found to be exploiting buyers in the downstream petroleum sector.

The commission states that findings from its ongoing surveillance of the downstream petroleum market show that price reductions by local refiners, marketers, depot operators, and retail outlets have not been commensurate with the sharp drop in global crude oil prices.

Tunji Bello, the Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the FCCPC, disclosed this in a statement issued on Sunday. Mr Bello clarified that while the commission does not regulate or approve petroleum prices in Nigeria’s deregulated downstream market, it is mandated under the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act (FCCPA) 2018 to promote competition, prevent anti-competitive conduct, and protect consumers from unfair, deceptive, and exploitative business practices.

“To be clear, the commission does not regulate or approve petroleum prices in a deregulated downstream market,” he stated. “Our responsibility under the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act 2018 is to promote competitive markets, prevent anti-competitive conduct, and protect consumers from unfair, deceptive, and exploitative business practices.”

Mr Bello noted that the commission is concerned that while marketers often increase pump prices immediately in response to rising crude oil prices, there is a significant delay in consumers benefiting when prices decline. “We are concerned that while dealers often respond swiftly by hiking pump prices whenever crude prices rise, it is curious that it takes so long for consumers to benefit significantly when crude prices fall. Competitive markets must work fairly in both directions,” Mr Bello added.

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According to the commission, crude oil prices have fallen to approximately $73 per barrel, following the ceasefire between the United States and Iran and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz—down from a peak of $120 per barrel in April. It added that global crude prices have since returned to February levels.

The FCCPC noted that the earlier spike in crude prices prompted local refiners and marketers to increase petrol prices nationwide to between ₦1,350 and ₦1,500 per litre, while diesel sold for approximately ₦2,000 per litre during hostilities between April and May.

READ ALSO: FCCPC, NTDA to bolster consumer protection, tourism standards

It reported that petrol sold for between ₦800 and ₦900 per litre in February but currently averages about ₦1,200 per litre nationwide, although some local refiners have reduced their ex-depot prices to between ₦1,025 and ₦1,075 per litre.

While acknowledging that domestic fuel prices are influenced by factors such as refining costs, foreign exchange movements, logistics, financing, and distribution expenses, the commission stated that competitive market dynamics should have enabled consumers to benefit more quickly from the decline in global crude prices.

Mr Bello warned that market liberalisation does not diminish the obligation of businesses to compete fairly or the right of consumers to fair treatment. “Where credible evidence indicates conduct that undermines competition, exploits consumers, or otherwise contravenes the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act, the commission will investigate and take appropriate enforcement action,” he noted.

He urged consumers to continue reporting suspected anti-competitive conduct, misleading pricing practices, and other forms of unfair market behaviour via the commission’s established complaint channels.


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NCC Pushes for Presidential incentives to attract smartphone manufacturing to Nigeria

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The Chairman of the Governing Board of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Idris Olorunnimbe, says he will seek presidential incentives to encourage global smartphone manufacturers to establish production facilities in Nigeria.

Speaking after the Digital Africa Summit Roundtable in Shanghai, China, Olorunnimbe said investors that begin factory construction before November would receive government backing, with the NCC helping to facilitate the necessary policy and regulatory support.

He said domestic smartphone production would reduce dependence on imported devices, create employment opportunities and strengthen Nigeria’s manufacturing sector while making smartphones more affordable.

According to him, producing devices locally would also reduce the impact of foreign exchange volatility on handset prices, improving access to smartphones for millions of Nigerians.

Olorunnimbe stressed that locally made phones must match international standards in quality and remain competitively priced to gain consumer confidence and compete with imported brands.

He added that stronger device regulation and expanded instalment payment options would protect consumers, improve smartphone ownership and support the country’s digital economy growth.

The post NCC Pushes for Presidential incentives to attract smartphone manufacturing to Nigeria appeared first on Business Today NG.

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CPPE Warns Against Textile Import Ban, Calls for Reforms

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The Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE) has cautioned against the Senate’s resolution calling for a ban on textile fabric imports, warning that the proposed restriction could hurt the Nigerian economy, disrupt supply chains, and threaten millions of jobs.

In a statement signed by the CPPE’s Chief Executive Officer, Muda Yusuf, on Sunday, the think tank stated that although reviving Nigeria’s textile industry is a legitimate objective, banning textile imports would not address the sector’s underlying problems.

On 9 June, the Senate called for a total ban on the importation of textile products into the country as part of efforts to revive the struggling textile industry and create jobs. The lawmakers argued that a complete ban on textile imports is necessary to protect local manufacturers and revive cotton production.

However, the CPPE said the proposed ban would impose substantial collateral costs on downstream industries rather than revitalise the textile sector.

“The proposed measure is unlikely to achieve its intended objectives and could have significant adverse consequences for the Nigerian economy. While the objective of reviving Nigeria’s textile industry is legitimate and commendable, an outright import prohibition is unlikely to achieve that objective.”

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“Rather than revitalising the textile industry, the proposed ban could impose substantial collateral costs on downstream industries, disrupt critical supply chains and jeopardise millions of jobs and livelihoods,” the CPPE said. Narrow view

The think tank argued that the proposal reflects “a narrow view” of the industry’s challenges by overlooking the extensive linkages between textile manufacturing and Nigeria’s garment, fashion, furniture, and creative economy value chains.

According to the CPPE, Nigeria’s fashion, garment-making, and tailoring industry, estimated at N10 trillion, provides livelihoods for around 10 million Nigerians and relies heavily on imported textile fabrics as inputs.

It warned that restricting textile imports would disrupt production, raise costs, reduce consumer choice, and threaten thousands of micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises operating within the fashion and garment industry.

The group added that the garment industry generates significant domestic value through design, tailoring, branding, embroidery, merchandising, and retailing, often creating more local value than the textile inputs themselves.

The CPPE also stated that textile fabrics are critical inputs for Nigeria’s furniture and interior design industry, estimated at ₦7 trillion, noting that any disruption in fabric supply would increase production costs and weaken the sector’s competitiveness.

The organisation maintained that the decline of Nigeria’s textile industry was driven mainly by structural constraints rather than import competition.

“The decline of Nigeria’s textile industry is primarily the consequence of long-standing structural constraints rather than import competition.”

“These include high energy costs, expensive credit, poor infrastructure, logistics bottlenecks, obsolete technology, smuggling, weak access to long-term finance, and policy inconsistency,” the CPPE said.

Failed tariffs

The group noted that imported textile fabrics already attract a combined Import Duty and Import Adjustment Tax (IAT) of between 35 and 45 per cent. Still, it said the tariff protections have failed to revive the industry because the major challenge remains the high cost of production.

“It is noteworthy that imported textile fabrics already attract a combined Import Duty and Import Adjustment Tax (IAT) of between 35 and 45 per cent.”

“Yet these tariff protections have not restored the industry’s competitiveness because the core problem lies in production economics rather than import penetration,” it said.

The CPPE further argued that domestic textile manufacturers currently lack the capacity to meet the quantity, quality, and variety of fabrics required by the country’s fashion, garment, furniture, and interior design industries.

“An outright import ban would therefore create supply shortages, increase production costs, and weaken downstream industries that generate significantly more employment than textile manufacturing itself,” it said.

Value-chain strategy

Instead of imposing import restrictions, the CPPE called for a comprehensive value-chain strategy to revive the textile sector.

The CPPE recommended a comprehensive strategy to revive the textile industry, beginning with strategic government procurement that would require the military, paramilitary agencies, schools, and other public institutions to prioritise locally produced textiles and garments for uniforms.

It also proposed establishing a Textile Competitiveness Fund, financed with a portion of textile-related import tax revenues, to provide single-digit financing for technology upgrades and industry modernisation.

The organisation also called for the revival of domestic cotton production through improved seedlings, mechanisation, extension services, enhanced security, and guaranteed off-take arrangements for farmers.

READ ALSO: Tinubu urges African countries to end raw mineral exports, deepen value addition

It urged stronger border enforcement to curb smuggling and improve the effectiveness of existing tariffs, alongside reforms to reduce energy costs, improve infrastructure, lower financing costs, and create a more competitive environment for manufacturers.

The think tank concluded that improving competitiveness, rather than banning imports, offers a more sustainable pathway to revitalising Nigeria’s textile industry.

“The challenge confronting Nigeria’s textile industry is fundamentally one of competitiveness rather than import penetration. Sustainable revival will require structural reforms that improve productivity, reduce production costs, revive cotton production, expand access to affordable finance, and leverage government procurement to stimulate domestic demand,” the CPPE said.


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