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Energy Crisis: World Bank’s fuel import advice retrogressive, anti-PIA, says energy expert

Alhaji Aliko Dangote, President/Chief Executive of Dangote Group

*Prof. Ken Ife, an energy economist, criticises the World Bank for its recent advice to Nigeria on deepening fuel importation by fully liberalising the country’s downstream petroleum sector, describing the global lender’s advice as ‘ill-timed, backward and inconsistent with Nigeria’s own laws’

Isola Moses | ConsumerConnect

Prof. Ken Ife, an energy economist, has strongly criticised recent recommendations on fuel importation by the World Bank.

The World Bank recently urged Nigeria to deepen fuel importation, and fully liberalise its downstream petroleum sector.

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Ife, however, described the advice as “ill-timed, backward and inconsistent with Nigeria’s own laws.”

Speaking during a televised interview on Nigeria’s economic outlook, Ife argued that while parts of the World Bank’s latest Nigeria Development Update were analytically sound, its position on fuel importation undermines the country’s push for energy independence and local refining capacity.

The expert stated: “You cannot come to a country that is struggling and has suddenly developed a vision of becoming economically independent, and then advise it to reverse course and start importing again.”

According to him, such recommendations run contrary to the provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), which prioritises domestic crude supply for local refiners under the Domestic Crude Obligation framework.

He said: “The law is very clear; priority must be given to local refining capacity. Advising Nigeria to abandon that and return to import dependence is not only against government policy but against the PIA law itself.”

Prof. Ife warned that increased importation would expose Nigeria to global supply shocks, drain Foreign Exchange (Forex) reserves and weaken ongoing investments in domestic refining, particularly at a time when private sector players are scaling up capacity.

He further said: “We are building refining capacity that will exceed local demand and position Nigeria as an energy exporter.

“How can anyone recommend that we abandon this and return to reckless importation?”

The economist further described the recommendation as lacking empirical grounding.

He also noted: “This conclusion was parachuted into an otherwise strong report. “There is no evidence to support telling Nigeria to depend on imports when major refining countries are restricting exports.”

While acknowledging the World Bank’s accurate assessment of Nigeria’s macroeconomic trends such as GDP growth projections and sectoral performance.

Ife maintained that its stance on fuel policy could worsen economic conditions.

On inflation and cost of living, he argued that Nigeria’s challenges are not due to a lack of resources but policy inconsistencies in implementing domestic supply frameworks.

“Fuel price pressures in Nigeria are largely contrived. If local refiners are given crude at the terms stipulated by law, they will stabilise prices and reduce volatility,” he explained.

Ife as well took issue with the Bank’s push for expanded social safety nets funded through borrowing, warning that such measures contradict Nigeria’s fiscal laws.

The energy expert cautioned: “Social safety nets are necessary, but you don’t borrow to share money.

“The law allows borrowing for capital projects and human development, not consumption. If support is needed, let it come as grants, not loans.”

Prof. Ife concluded that Nigeria’s long-term economic stability lies in reducing import dependence and strengthening local value addition across sectors.

The expert averred: “The sustainable path is clear; develop local refining, expand processing capacity and build economic sovereignty. Exporting raw materials and importing finished products only exports jobs and imports poverty.”

It should be recalled that the World Bank’s recommendations have sparked renewed debate over Nigeria’s fuel policy, with critics warning that increased importation could undermine recent gains in local refining and expose the economy to external shocks.

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