Crack down on rogue LPG traders, state told

The National Oil gas refilling plant launched on November 8,2014. Photo/file
The National Oil gas refilling plant launched on November 8,2014. Photo/file

Players in the oil industry have asked

the government to crack down on

rogue cooking gas businesses to safeguard

the market and ensure safety of

Kenyans.

The Petroleum Institute of East Africa

on Wednesday said illicit refilling

of Liquefied Petroleum Gas is still

rampant, exposing Kenyans to danger

while denying genuine players revenues.

“People go stealing cylinders from

formal players, refill them illegally

without paying taxes, then sell at a

lower price to the consumer. The process

is not properly done, so the cylinders

have the chances of exploding

and causing accidents,” PIEA chairman

Powell Maimba said.

The institute has named Nairobi as

the most notorious in the business followed

by Kiambu. Other major towns

are Nakuru, Eldoret and Busia.

Maimba said though the government

has stepped up the war against

the illegal gas business, it is still thriving.

“Some of these individuals are

known but they shift. They are like a

virus. You find them today, they close,

and re-invent into mobile refilling,” he

said. Oil marketers presented a report

and a list of illegal gas dens to the Energy

Regulatory Commission in October,

indicating 70 per cent of the LPG market

“has gone rogue”.

The companies, which sell their

products mainly at petrol stations,

have accused the police and the judiciary

of letting culprits go scot-free.

MPs and top government officials

are among those said to be behind the

lucrative business.

“It may take time, but as an industry

we will continue putting pressure on

the government and enforcing agencies,”

Maimba said.

Rogue businessmen

refill branded gas cylinders from

major companies.

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