The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) said it has reduced the number of trips on the Lagos-Ibadan train service due to the hike in the price of automotive gas oil, better known as diesel.
It was understood that the development would affect the revenue drive of the sector as rail transport contributed N6 billion last year.
NRC Managing Director, Fidet Okhiria, said the corporation has cut down the number of return trips on the route from six to two every day.
Diesel is currently sold at N800 per liter, a 28 percent increase from the previous 625/liter in March.
“The Lagos-Ibadan train service is running, but we have reduced the number of trips on that route because of the diesel problem. We reduced the number of trips we are running because of the hike in diesel price,” Okhiria said in an interview.
“We are now doing two return trips as against six, which by now should have gone to 10. So we run just two trips now due to the diesel problem.”
Okhiria noted it was outside the corporation’s powers to hike fares, despite the rising cost of operations but had to review the prices due to economic realities.
He said NRC sought the consent of the federal ministry of transportation for an adjustment in the train fare.
“We just can’t increase it by ourselves. The government has to do that. We have made some recommendations. But even with the recommendations we made, the new price of diesel has overshot our workings as contained in the recommendations.
“However, we don’t want to price ourselves out of the market too, because the price of petrol is not increasing as such, rather the increase is little when compared to diesel price. And you know we are competing with transporters on roads,” Okhiria said.
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