President Tinubu Approves 15% Fuel, Diesel Import Tariff

October 30, 2025

FG Declares June 6 and 9 Public Holidays for Eid-ul-Adha Celebrations 

In a move expected to protect domestic refineries and promote stability in the downstream oil sector, President Bola Tinubu, has approved the implementation of a 15 per cent ad-valorem import duty on petrol and diesel brought into Nigeria.

Tinubu ordered the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) in a directive dated October 21, 2025 and made public on Wednesday, to immediately begin enforcing the tariff.

The decision, according to the government, forms part of a new “market-responsive import tariff framework.”

The president’s private secretary, Damilotun Aderemi, had in a personally signed letter confirmed Tinubu’s approval of a proposal submitted by FIRS Chairman Zacch Adedeji.

READ MORE; FIRS Issues New Directive Imposing 10% Withholding Tax On Short-Term Investment Interest. 

The FIRS boss plan, recommended a 15 per cent duty on the cost, insurance, and freight value of imported petrol and diesel to reflect true market conditions and encourage local production.

Adedeji explained in his memo that the initiative was designed to support Nigeria’s energy security and economic stability.

“The core objective of this initiative is to operationalise crude transactions in local currency, strengthen local refining capacity, and ensure a stable, affordable supply of petroleum products across Nigeria.”

He explained that the disparity between locally refined fuel prices and import parity benchmarks has fueled market volatility.

“While domestic refining of petrol has begun to increase and diesel sufficiency has been achieved, price instability persists, partly due to the misalignment between local refiners and marketers.”

Adedeji pointed out that import parity pricing often falls below cost recovery levels for domestic refiners, especially amid foreign exchange and freight fluctuations a situation that threatens the viability of emerging local producers.

READ MORE; FG New Tax Law Protects Low-Income Earners …. Oyedele

He added that the government now faces a “twofold” responsibility “to protect consumers and domestic producers from unfair pricing practices and collusion, while ensuring a level playing field for refiners to recover costs and attract investments.”

According to him, the new tariff system will prevent duty-free fuel imports from undermining local refineries and promote a fair, competitive downstream sector.

Projections included in the presidential approval note indicate that the 15 per cent import duty could raise the landing cost of petrol by about ₦99.72 per litre.

“At current cost, insurance, and freight levels, this represents an increment of approximately 99.72 per litre, which nudges imported landed costs toward local cost-recovery without choking supply or inflating consumer prices beyond sustainable thresholds.

Even with this adjustment, estimated Lagos pump prices would remain in the range of N964.72 per litre ($0.62), still significantly below regional averages such as Senegal ($1.76 per litre), Cote d’Ivoire ($1.52 per litre), and Ghana ($1.37 per litre),” the letter read.

READ MORE; Brewers Warn Of Inflationary Impact As Govt Plan Tax Stamps Rollout,

The decision aligns with Nigeria’s broader efforts to cut reliance on imported petroleum products and increase domestic refining output.

The 650,000-barrels-per-day Dangote Refinery in Lagos has begun producing diesel and aviation fuel, while modular refineries in Edo, Rivers, and Imo states are conducting small-scale petrol refining.

Unfortunately, despite these developments, about 67 per cent of Nigeria’s total petrol consumption is imported.

Idris Buba
Idris Buba
Correspondent

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