Baguio gas retailers still selling at exorbitant rates
>> Friday, July 27, 2018
Despite DOE probe
By
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY – Despite a
probe on high fuel prices this summer capital, retailers are still selling
these at exorbitant rates prompting Dept. of Energy oil industry management
Director Rino Abad to urge setting up of more fuel retail stations in here to
drum up competition and lower pump prices.
Abad told
mayor Mauricio Domogan this could be one of investment opportunities in the
city after the later bared Baguio has the highest fuel retain prices
nationwide.
He said that
at present the City has only 12 gas retailing stations which is relatively low
when pitted with the area population.
“Density-wise
if we have a population of 791,000 in the whole of Benguet, then that number is
insufficient so we have to encourage more traders to go into this business,” he
said.
Abad said
that while the City has very low demand for oil considering that it is not an
industrialized economy, the demand in the oil retailing businesses remain high.
For instance,
the number of people lining up in one gas station in La Union annually is
P10,000 while in Baguio, it is 18,000.
Abad said
there is a weak demand in the Cordillera Administrative Region which he said is
only at two percent of the entire Northern Luzon.
Whereas
Region 1’s demand is at 14 million barrels, CAR’s is only 150,000 barrels.
But 90
percent of the total demand goes to retail.
The mayor is
expected to take-up Abad’s recommendations when he convenes the Baguio City
Investments and Incentives Board for its quarterly meeting next week.
The board is
also expected to firm up the investment areas and other provisions of the newly
approved implementing rules and regulations of the city investments code.
City
government officials and DOE’s Oil Industry Management agreed earlier to
jointly get to the bottom of the problem of the big disparity in the prices of
fuel in the city vis-à-vis the lowlands.
Local fuel
retailers denied having a hand in price discrepancies and denied allegations
they have engaged in price manipulation and profiteering.
The cost gaps
in the oil prices are about P10 in gasoline and P8 in diesel based on
comparative prices in this city and in La Union.
In a dialogue
called by the DOE, operators of Caltex, Petron and Shell retail stations said
their charges were based on suggested retail prices dictated by their mother
companies and that they do not have knowledge on the level of the “industry
take” or the mark-up they were supposed to be imposing on their products.
Abad cited
records that industry take figures in the city the last two-and-a-half years
were much higher than those in La Union and even Metro Manila, which he said is
“abnormal and astonishing.”
Baguio’s
industry take figures were P2.75 for gas and P1.55 for diesel whereas in La
Union it was only 96 centavos and 45 centavos, respectively; and in Manila even
decreased by 38 centavos for gas and 45 centavos in diesel.
He said the
P2.75 mark-up in gas was even higher by 10 centavos than the excise tax
imposed.
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