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Home ECOWAS Nigeria

Fuel Price Hike: FCT residents abandon private cars for public transport

A public servant said she had stopped using her vehicle for months.

by Diplomatic Info
May 3, 2026
in Nigeria
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Fuel Price Hike: FCT residents abandon private cars for public transport
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Many car owners in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) now prefer commuting in public vehicles to using their cars due to a hike in the pump price of petrol.

Also, low-income earners who cannot afford the high cost of transportation walk trekkable distances to work in order to survive the hardship.

The ever-busy Kubwa Expressway, Suleja to Mandalla axis, is experiencing low vehicular movement, particularly on weekdays, because many car owners can no longer afford to fuel their cars.

Checks also revealed that other major routes in the FCT are experiencing fewer vehicular movements.

Before the increase in the pump price of petrol, there used to be heavy traffic jams on these routes, resulting in slower speeds and longer travel times.

Sholape Kolawole, a public servant and resident of Dutse Alhaji, in an interview with journalists  on Sunday in Abuja, said she had stopped using her vehicle for months.

She said: “It has been stressful using commercial vehicles, I have no choice since I cannot afford to fuel my car, and my salary is not enough to buy fuel everyday to work.

“To cut cost, I just stopped using the car for now and resolved to taking commercial vehicles to the office and back, which is also expensive but not as much as using my car,” she said.

Another car owner, James Obasi, a commercial transporter in Kubwa village, said the situation had been so discouraging that some of his colleagues could not do business for weeks.

Mr Obasi said the fuel situation had increased unexpectedly, thereby impacting many small businesses negatively.

He called on the federal government to take deliberate policy action to end the recurring situation.

Another car owner, Emmanuel Ajayi, said he had not been able to buy petrol for his car for months, noting that the situation was really telling on his health because of the stress of “jumping” from one public transport to another just to make ends meet.

Mr Ajayi called on the government to act swiftly, bring a lasting solution to the hike in fuel prices, save Nigerians from the stress, and make the situation beneficial to everybody.

Aliyu Ilias, a development expert and customer experience management specialist, said the hardship Nigerians were experiencing was deeply troubling.

Mr Ilias said Nigerians were forced to stay at home for several days a week because they could no longer afford transportation to work.

He said the challenge was due to global oil market disruptions caused by geopolitical tensions and conflict.

He further said that as an oil-producing nation, Nigeria should ordinarily benefit from rising crude prices.

According to him, reports indicate that oil prices have surged significantly, meaning the government is earning more revenue, yet ordinary citizens are not feeling the impact of this windfall.

He said since the government was benefiting from increased oil revenues, it should channel part of that windfall into easing the burden on citizens.

“One practical solution will be for the Federal Government to provide crude oil to local refineries at reduced rates, enabling them to refine and sell petrol at more affordable prices.

“Such a strategy can help stabilise fuel prices and reduce the pressure on transportation and living costs.

“The economic consequences are severe. Purchasing power has declined sharply, and disposable income has almost disappeared for many households,” he said.

Emmanuel Onwubikor, the national coordinator of the Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA), said the hike in petrol prices represented nothing short of an economic ambush on Nigerians.

Mr Onwubikor warned that millions of small businesses, the backbone of Nigeria’s informal economy, were on the brink of extinction.

“Barbing salons, welding workshops, small-scale manufacturers, transport operators, and countless petty traders who depend on petrol for daily operations will be forced to shut down.

“This will trigger a dangerous surge in unemployment, particularly among youths and women, thereby worsening social instability and insecurity.

“We therefore demand immediate and decisive intervention by President Bola Tinubu to halt this reckless escalation of petrol prices.

“The government must implement price stabilisation mechanisms, enforce strict regulatory oversight, and ensure that no private entity is allowed to exploit Nigerians under the guise of market forces,” he said.

(NAN)

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