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    Home » NMDPRA Reports Fuel Imports Rose by 207% in June
    Oil & Gas

    NMDPRA Reports Fuel Imports Rose by 207% in June

    Ifetayo AdeniyiBy Ifetayo AdeniyiJuly 18, 20268 Mins Read
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    Nigeria’s petrol importation surged by 207 per cent in June 2026, even as domestic Premium Motor Spirit supply fell by 22 per cent, according to the latest data released by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority.

    The development marked a sharp reversal from the pattern recorded at the beginning of the year when domestic refining was supplying the bulk of the country’s petrol requirements.

    The NMDPRA’s June 2026 Fact Sheet, obtained by our correspondent on Saturday, showed that average daily PMS imports rose from 5.9 million litres in May to 18.1 million litres in June.

    The 12.2 million-litre daily increase represented a 206.8 per cent month-on-month rise.

    In contrast, domestic PMS receipts fell from 41.5 million litres per day in May to 32.5 million litres per day in June, representing a decline of 9 million litres or 21.7 per cent.

    Despite the sharp drop in domestic supply, total PMS receipts rose from 47.4 million litres per day in May to 50.6 million litres per day in June. This represented an increase of 3.2 million litres per day or 6.8 per cent.

    The report read, “Total PMS receipts rose by seven per cent from 47.4 million litres per day in May to 50.6 million litres in June, driven by a 207 per cent surge in imports to 18.1 million litres, even as domestic supply fell by 22 per cent to 32.5 million litres per day.

    “Domestic daily receipts include DPRP gantry and all coastal evacuation receipts. Consumption data is based on volumes trucked out from all facilities into the domestic market.”

    The figures suggest that the increase in imports more than compensated for the decline in domestic supply during the month.

    The development is significant because Nigeria entered 2026 with a much stronger domestic supply position. In January, domestic PMS supply was reported at 40.1 million litres per day, accounting for about 61.8 per cent of the country’s petrol supply, while imports averaged 24.8 million litres per day.

    However, imports fell sharply to 3.0 million litres per day in February before rising to 5.9 million litres per day in March. The country’s dependence on imports then remained relatively low through the following months before the sharp increase recorded in June.

    Compared with January, June’s domestic PMS receipts of 32.5 million litres per day were 7.6 million litres, or 19 per cent, lower than the 40.1 million litres recorded at the beginning of the year.

    Conversely, June’s import volume of 18.1 million litres per day was 6.7 million litres, or 27 per cent, below January’s 24.8 million litres per day.

    However, the composition of supply changed considerably. While domestic supply accounted for the larger share of the market in January, the June figures showed a much greater reliance on imports to supplement local production.

    The June data also showed that the country’s crude oil receipts by domestic refineries improved during the month.

    Crude oil receipt by domestic refineries rose from 0.578 million barrels per day in May to 0.632 million barrels per day in June, an increase of 0.054 million barrels per day, or 9.3 per cent.

    The NMDPRA rounded the increase to 10 per cent in its fact sheet.

    The rise in crude receipts occurred at a time when domestic PMS supply decreased, indicating that higher crude deliveries alone did not immediately translate into higher petrol receipts in the domestic market.

    The figures could also reflect changes in refinery operations, product yields, maintenance activities, evacuation arrangements and the balance between domestic production and imported products.

    The June fact sheet further showed that average daily PMS consumption increased marginally from 46.3 million litres in May to 47.4 million litres in June.

    The 1.1 million-litre increase represented a 2.4 per cent rise.

    The increase in consumption, however, was far smaller than the 207 per cent jump in petrol imports.

    As a result, the country’s petrol stock position improved during the month. PMS stock sufficiency rose from 16.2 days in May to 19.7 days in June.

    This represented an increase of 3.5 days, or 21.6 per cent.

    The improvement means that the country entered July with almost 20 days of petrol stock sufficiency, despite the increased reliance on imports.

    The increase in petrol stocks is significant against the background of the supply disruptions and price volatility that have characterised the downstream petroleum market since the removal of petrol subsidy.

    At the beginning of 2026, the NMDPRA reported that PMS stock sufficiency had risen to 33 days in January, compared with 29.2 days in December 2025. However, the stock position subsequently declined before recovering to 19.7 days in June.

    The June data also showed a dramatic increase in imported Liquefied Petroleum Gas, popularly known as cooking gas.

    Total LPG receipts rose from 4.1 kilotonnes per day in May to 5.1KT per day in June, representing a 24.4 per cent increase.

    Domestic LPG receipts, however, fell from 4.0KT per day to 3.6KT per day, a decline of 0.4KT per day or 10 per cent.

    Imports rose from 0.1KT per day in May to 1.5KT per day in June.

    That represented an increase of 1.4KT per day, or 1,400 per cent.

    The sharp increase in LPG imports helped push total receipts higher, even as domestic supply declined.

    However, LPG consumption fell from 4.5KT per day in May to 4.1KT per day in June, a decline of 0.4KT per day or 8.9 per cent.

    The figures indicate that LPG supply exceeded consumption during the month, potentially supporting inventory replenishment.

    The supply of Automotive Gas Oil, commonly known as diesel, declined by 14 per cent in June.

    AGO receipts fell from 18.8 million litres per day in May to 16.2 million litres per day in June, a decline of 2.6 million litres or 13.8 per cent.

    The decline was entirely recorded in domestic receipts as the country recorded no AGO imports in either May or June.

    The NMDPRA data showed that diesel consumption remained unchanged at 16 million litres per day in both months.

    Consequently, June’s total AGO receipts of 16.2 million litres per day were only marginally above consumption.

    Despite the lower supply, AGO stock sufficiency improved from 31 days in May to 37.1 days in June.

    That represented an increase of 6.1 days or 19.7 per cent.

    The rise in stock sufficiency, despite lower daily receipts, suggests that existing inventories continued to provide a substantial buffer for the diesel market.

    The supply of Aviation Turbine Kerosene also fell during the month.

    ATK receipts declined from 3.6 million litres per day in May to 2.5 million litres per day in June.

    The 1.1 million-litre decline represented a fall of 30.6 per cent.

    ATK consumption also fell from 3.1 million litres per day to 2.9 million litres per day, representing a 6.5 per cent decline.

    The drop in consumption was, however, significantly smaller than the decline in receipts.

    Domestic gas supply rose marginally during the period under review.

    The NMDPRA reported that domestic gas supply increased from 4.984 billion standard cubic feet per day in May to 5.116Bscf/d in June.

    The increase of 0.132Bscf/d represented a 2.65 per cent rise.

    The authority said its domestic gas supply figure includes volumes supplied to the Nigeria LNG Limited.

    The modest improvement came as the Federal Government and industry stakeholders continued to focus on increasing gas availability for power generation, industrial production and other domestic uses.

    The January-to-June 2026 trend points to a petroleum market that has remained heavily influenced by the changing balance between domestic refining and imports.

    Nigeria began the year with domestic PMS supply accounting for the majority of total supply. January’s 40.1 million litres per day from domestic sources compared with 24.8 million litres per day from imports.

    By June, however, domestic supply had fallen to 32.5 million litres per day, while imports stood at 18.1 million litres per day.

    Although the absolute volume of imports in June remained lower than January’s figure, the sharp increase from the May level showed how quickly the market could turn to imported products when domestic supply weakened.

    The trend also highlights the continuing importance of domestic refining capacity to Nigeria’s fuel security.

    In May, the Dangote Petroleum Refinery supplied an average of 41.5 million litres of petrol daily, according to reports based on the NMDPRA’s monthly data. The figure was significantly higher than the 40.1 million litres per day recorded in January. However, June’s domestic PMS receipt fell to 32.5 million litres per day.

    The development comes amid the gradual transformation of Nigeria’s downstream petroleum sector, with the Dangote refinery increasingly supplying the domestic market while imports continue to act as a balancing source.

    The figures also demonstrate that increased refinery crude supply does not automatically guarantee a corresponding increase in domestic petrol receipts. In June, crude receipts rose by about 9.3 per cent, while domestic PMS receipts fell by 21.7 per cent.

    For consumers, the most immediate implication is that the country’s petrol supply system remains dependent on a combination of local refining and imports.

    The June data therefore presents a mixed picture: domestic refining received more crude, total petrol supply increased and stock levels improved, but local PMS receipts fell sharply while imports surged.

    In the wider downstream sector, diesel supply remained entirely domestic, LPG imports increased dramatically to supplement weaker local receipts, aviation fuel supply declined and gas availability recorded modest growth.

    The data underscores the continuing transition of Nigeria’s petroleum market from an import-dependent system to a mixed supply structure in which domestic refineries are expected to provide the bulk of demand while imports fill supply gaps.

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    Adeniyi Ifetayo Moses is an Entrepreneur, Award winning Celebrity journalist, Luxury and Lifestyle Reporter with Ben tv London and Publisher, Megastar Magazine. He has carved a niche for himself with over 15 years of experience in celebrity Journalism and Media PR.

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