Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has described the continuous rise of diesel price in Nigeria as alarming, saying that the situation is already affecting the users of the product in the country adversely.
He stated this during a meeting of South-West Fish Farmers’ Congress on Tuesday at the presidential library (OOPL) in Ogun State, Obasanjo said the high diesel price may turn fish farmers into bankruptcy.
Decrying N800 current price of diesel per litre, Obasanjo lamented that the development has adversely affected his fish business, adding that the production of a kilogram of fish is now N1,400.
A statement by his media aide, Kehinde Akinyemi, quoted the former president saying, “I am already sweating and if the situation does not go down, anybody that is using diesel, I don’t know your calculation, my calculation is that I cannot produce a kilo of fish with less than N1400. That’s about what it cost as of today. So, if I sell my fish for around N1,400 I cannot make a profit.”
He urged farmers not to sell less than N1,500 as anything short of that would lead to “outright loss”.
He said, “If we don’t come together as an association, nationally, we will sink individually. If we come together, we will swim and survive together.
“And while we are working on coming together, I thought that the situation has arisen whereby we have to do something urgently.
“The price of diesel has gone sky high because the management of this country is not what it should be. And it is as simple as that.
“Then, what will happen is that particularly those of us who have to use a bit of diesel in producing fish, we will completely go bankrupt, and when that happens, Nigerians will still have to eat fish.
“And you will go jobless, poor, and indigent. So, what do we have to do? To come together… We want to sustain fish production, and we must be able to take care of those who are going to eat and those of us who are producing.”
He said if fish producers failed to find solution to the situation that fish production would be out of reach in Nigeria and “then people will be producing fish outside Nigeria and dumpling it here”.