NAIROBI, Kenya
Rubis Energy Kenya Managing Director and CEO, Jean-Christian Bergeron was Wednesday ordered to leave the country on claims of economic sabotage due to the ongoing fuel crisis in Kenya.
This was after the State
Directorate of Immigration revoked Bergeron’s work permit and ordered him to
leave the country following weeks of shortages that have caused a public
outcry.
Rubis is owned by Rubis Energie, a subsidiary of Rubis Group which is listed on the Paris Stock Exchange, following the full acquisition of both KenolKobil and Gulf Energy Holdings in 2019.
The deportation order that was
signed by Interior Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang’i followed revelations by the
Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (Epra) that the leading oil majors
increased their fuel exports to neighbouring countries leading to the ongoing
shortage that has persisted for three weeks.
And after a meeting with
President Uhuru Kenyatta, Energy Cabinet Secretary Monica Juma recommended
further sanctions against oil marketing companies that were complicit in
creating the fuel shortage in the country.
She was set to address a press
conference on Thursday on the issue.
There were efforts to overturn the deportation order. Senior government officials said the move was final and was meant to send signals to the oil firms hoarding the product.
Four oil marketing companies
are set to face punitive measures, including reducing the capacity that they
import into the country.
Further, the government is
said to have set plans in motion to strengthen the capacity of National Oil to
avert such a crisis in future, and also to have a bigger role in the fuel
retail business.
The dealers have linked the
shortages to a lack of clarity on the fuel subsidy that Kenya introduced last
April to stabilize prices.
Delays in the payment of
subsidies to the companies by the government have pushed up prices in the
wholesale market where oil majors resell fuel to the smaller independent fuel
retailers, who control 40 per cent of the market.
This has seen the small
retailers hesitate to buy the costly fuel, with the increased supply of oil
majors unable to plug the deficit.
The shortage has crippled some
transport firms and opened an avenue for some dealers to raise prices above the
caps set by the Epra.
In some areas, a litre of
petrol retailing at Sh200 or more.
Epra is set to release its
monthly prices on Thursday. – The Star
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