The Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) has stated that its four-point strategy helped to restore normalcy in the distribution of premium motor spirit (PMS), better known as petrol.
This was stated on Thursday by Roselyn Wilkie, zonal operations controller, NMDPRA during an interview with NAN on Thursday in Abuja.
Recall that the NMDPRA on February 8 confirmed that petrol with methanol quantities above Nigeria’s specification was discovered in the supply chain.
The development had caused scarcity of petrol and resulted in long queues in filling stations across Lagos and Abuja.
Listing the measures adopted by the agency, Wilkie said the NMDPRA ensured that there was no diversion of the product, no hoarding, no selling in jerry-cans and also discouraged hawking of the product.
She said the regulatory authority encouraged dispensing of petroleum products with maximum available pumps at fuel stations.
Wilkie said increase in product supply and distribution were also major factors that ensured that normalcy returned to the system.
On the activities of black marketers, she said NMDPRA was working tirelessly to ensure that all roadside sellers of PMS in jerry-cans are eradicated from the streets.
“Our major concern is safety of lives and property as we understand the volatile nature of petrol and its hazards,” Wilkie said.
Discussion about this post