Home Energy & Environment Nigeria considers ban on ownership of cooking gas cylinders

Nigeria considers ban on ownership of cooking gas cylinders

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The Federal Government’s plan to ban consumer ownership of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) cylinders is aimed at enhancing safety and deepening cooking gas penetration in the country, an official said on Tuesday.

Mr. Dayo Adeshina, Programme Manager, National LPG Expansion and Implementation Plan, spoke at the Nigeria LPG Summit 2019 on Tuesday in Lagos.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the summit was jointly organized by the Nigeria Liquefied Petroleum Gas Association (NLPGA) and Liquefied Petroleum Gas Summit, based in Singapore. Adeshina said that the government would also continue to support the LPG industry with fiscal policies and incentives to enable the actualization of its target of five million metric tonnes of LPG consumption by Nigerians in 2023.

 

The LPG Programme Manager, who represented Vice President Yemi Osinbajo but spoke in his personal capacity, said standardization of LPG cylinders and safe use in Nigerian homes could only be achieved when ownership rests strictly with dealers and distributors.

He explained that cooking cylinders ought to be recertified periodically, adding that the average life span of a cylinder was 15 years. Adeshina said two investors with the support of the Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) had indicated interest to establish recertification plants in the country.

“That is why we need to retrieve some of these cylinders still in circulation because we need to recertify them to ensure that they are safe for usage.

“The government’s focus is to create awareness through sensitization campaigns and cylinder injection program,” he said.

Adeshina said the government would continue to act as an enabler for the LPG industry to thrive and create a market viable for all the players in its value chain.

According to him, Nigeria has made a giant stride in the LPG market with about 70,000 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) in 2007 to 624, 000 MPTA as of September 2019.