The Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) says petrol, diesel, and Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) prices will continue to decline nationwide.
NMDPRA’s chief executive, Saidu Mohammed, stated this on Sunday in Ogbele community, Ahoada East Local Government Area of Rivers, during an inspection of Aradel Holdings Plc facilities.
Mr Mohammed attributed the expected price reduction to rising supply, increased competition, and sustained private-sector investment in the oil and gas sector.
According to him, Nigerians are gradually moving towards affordable energy as improved supply continues to drive price stability.
“The more supply we have, the lower the price, and this is already evident as petrol has dropped from about N1,000 to N800 per litre due to competition,” he said.
Mr Mohammed explained that the removal of the fuel subsidy had allowed market forces to function properly, improving efficiency across the downstream sector.
“Sustained competition, rather than subsidies, will guarantee an adequate supply of petrol and gas at affordable prices for Nigerians,” he added.
He stressed the need for additional refineries with advanced conversion capacity to produce diesel, fuel oil, naphtha, LPG, and petrol.
The NMDPRA chief said Nigeria’s ambition extended beyond local consumption to the export of petroleum products to Africa, Europe, and the Americas.
“However, domestic demand must first be adequately met by local operators before large-scale exports can commence,” he said.
Mr Mohammed noted that President Bola Tinubu strongly supported a free-market economy, recalling that subsidy removal was the president’s first major policy decision.
According to him, the policy unlocked private-sector participation and stimulated investment across the oil and gas value chain.
On the state-owned refineries, Mr Mohammed said their operational conditions largely remained the responsibility of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL).
He said NMDPRA was engaging NNPCL to ensure the delivery of crude oil and petroleum products to the Port Harcourt and Warri refineries’ reserves.
“Delivery of products to the reserves and restoring loading activities at the refineries will boost local economies and revive product distribution within host communities.
“Once product loading resumes, Nigerians will begin to feel the economic impact, even before full refinery operations,” he said.
Mr Mohammed added that Nigeria’s economic growth depended heavily on the rapid expansion of locally owned midstream assets.
He said facilities inspected during his three-day operational tour across Rivers demonstrated that Nigerians had the capacity to design, finance, build, and sustainably operate world-class energy infrastructure.
The NMDPRA boss singled out Aradel Holdings, noting that the company had proven that Nigerians could efficiently operate a refinery sustainably without foreign operatorship.
“Aradel has supplied gas to Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) for about 13 years, alongside operating an 11,000-barrels-per-day refinery.
“The company also runs a virtual gas pipeline, producing compressed natural gas distributed across several parts of Nigeria,” he said.
He urged further investments in refining, noting that the Dangote Refinery alone could not meet domestic, continental, and global demand.
Mr Mohammed assured that the NMDPRA would continue to provide regulatory incentives to attract large-scale investments into the midstream sector.
Responding, the managing director of Aradel Holdings, Adegbite Falade, thanked NMDPRA for its regulatory support and confidence in operators.
Mr Falade said the company remained committed to expanding refining capacity, commercialising gas, and eliminating routine gas flaring.
NAN



































