This article is an eye opener.
Written by Tunde AJAJA of Punch, the write up exposes how fuel attendants in Nigeria extort customers. Read below:
Mrs. Bisola Ayeni, a businesswoman in her early 40s confidently left her house at Egbeda (Lagos) with an almost empty tank heading for Ikeja. The red light of the fuel indicator was blinking nonstop but Ayeni knew the quantity of fuel in her tank would take her to the next available filling station where she had hoped to fill up her tank.
Indeed, as she got to the Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway, Ayeni drove into the filling station and told the attendant to fill her car with N5,000 worth of fuel while she rummaged her handbag to bring out the money as well as pick a call. That was her undoing.
Ayeni would tell our correspondent that she didn’t bother to look at the
pump while the sale was on because she didn’t envisage any foul act,
besides she knew the level a N5,000 worth of fuel would rise to on her
fuel gauge. Ayeni only managed a quick glance at the meter and when she
saw that it was reading, she relaxed and enjoyed her discussion on the
phone.
She said, “When I finished, I looked at the pump and I saw N5,000 on the
price column, I paid him and drove away. I expected the light
indicating low fuel to go off and the indicator to rise, but it didn’t
happen.
“Even if the rise in the fuel indicator would be gradual, I expected a
major shift. Lo and behold, the light never went off and the indicator
never rose.
“Oh my God, I was confused and very angry, so I turned back, while
praying that the car wouldn’t run out of fuel. By the time I got to the
petrol station, I was fuming.”
Ayeni said she had almost slapped the attendant who attended to her having shouted on him when the station manager came out.
“On hearing what happened, the manager gave the sales boy a resounding
slap, apologised to me and ordered him to sell the fuel again, and I
heard him saying the N5,000 would be deducted from his salary. We both
stood by him while he sold the fuel, the gauge rose even before I left
the station, which means he cheated me earlier. I still wouldn’t know
how he did it,” she said.
Ayeni’s experience is common among vehicle owners, who had at one time
or the other thought they had bought fuel but later found out they
either bought nothing or were short-changed in terms of the quantity. A
cross section of vehicle owners who spoke to our correspondent alleged
that they had noticed same at one time or the other but said that there
was nothing they could do since they really could not establish any foul
play.
In case you once bought fuel from a filling station and it seemed like
nothing was added to your fuel tank after you have left, or you felt
what was sold to you wasn’t commensurate with what you paid for or
expected, you may have been cheated under your close watch even with
your eyes wide open.
Saturday PUNCH had a revealing chat with fuel attendants of some popular
filling stations in Lagos and they explained how they make quick but
huge cash from unsuspecting customers.
One of them who identified himself simply as Owolabi John, said there
are many ways fuel attendants cheat customers who have come to buy fuel,
which many people are not aware of.
Devouring a massive plate of hot and spicy pepper soup and a bottle of
chilled beer our correspondent bought for him, John readily exposed all
the tricks on how they make money.
By the way, John earns N10,000 as a fuel attendant. He wants to pursue a
university education. There is no other help from anywhere else, as
such John admitted leaving no stone unturned to take advantage of
gullible customers to make some money from what he described as “the
customers’ carelessness.”
“Ideally, when we resume, we take the reading on the meter on the fuel
dispenser, which we call the opening meter, and when we close, we take
the reading, which we also call the closing meter. Then, we multiply the
difference in the readings by the cost per litre, which is the amount
we deliver to the manager. If there is any surplus, it belongs to the
attendant, and if there is loss, the attendant will look for money to
make it up. If the shortage is a lot of money, the manager may allow
that the money be deducted from the person’s salary if the person is not
sacked,” he explained.
However, that surplus money may not have been a miracle or manna from
heaven; it could simply be a product of manipulation by the attendants.
According to John, there are different types of fuel dispensers, such as
Marathon, Sanki, Eagle Star, etc, and each machine has its peculiar way
of being adjusted. “On the keyboard of some of them, where we enter the
number of litres or amount, which is either in front or on the side,
there is usually a button labelled ‘Recall, TIM/CAL’ or any other label,
depending on the machine. The essence of the button is to enable the
attendant to see the past sales. If you want to see your last ten sales,
you just press Recall, then the number you want to see etc, depending
on the number you want, and it shows you the amount. Beyond seeing our
past sales, we use it to make money.
“If I sell N2,000 worth of fuel to a customer, and the next customer
also wants to buy N2,000. If I observe that the second customer Isn’t
paying attention, I will sell some quantity, maybe N1,500 and press Stop
or Cancel, depending on the machine press Recall, 1, then press Ok.
With that, N2,000 will appear on the screen and that is what the
customer will see on the meter, believing the sale is complete. This can
be done in less than one second. That is one of the ways, and at the
close of business I remove mine which is the excess of the actual litre
sales.
“Imagine if I do that for about ten customers in a day, with varying
gain from each case, which depends largely on the amount of fuel the
customer is buying and how sensitive the person is. I could make up to
N10, 000 in one day,” he explained.
According to him, attendants could go to the extent of writing out some
past sales on a paper where they can easily have a glance to know which
number to recall when a customer is distracted or looks away, since many
people prefer to buy based on price and not litre.
“When customers come, we observe them and see if they are tired or we
try to distract them, sometimes with the help of our colleagues by
engaging them in a chat or doing things that could easily distract them.
As soon as they look away, if the seller has made an appreciable sale,
he/she would have mastered or checked his paper to see the last time he
sold that particular amount, as soon as it is possible, he will press
it, and press OK. Before the customer looks back, the sale will appear
complete,” John explained.
John’s revelation explained one of the ways Ayeni might have been
cheated. Another fuel attendant, who simply identified himself as Owode
Kabir, told our correspondent that the use of Recall or TIM button is
the easiest way to make quick money because the customers would think
the machine was fast, so they wouldn’t always suspect anything, even
though some come back to complain.
However, Kabir stressed that not all attendants are involved in the act,
but that many of them do it as long as there is opportunity and that in
some cases, they settle the station manager at the close of work if
they are able to make some money, which they do everyday anyway.
But ‘Recall or TIM/CAL’ button is not the only way to make money from
customers, Kabir would tell our correspondent. There is yet another way!
Even though many people know that when the nozzle is hanged on the pump,
the readings revert to zero, he said they (fuel attendants) have also
found a way to manoeuvre it to make some money.
“What we do is to gently place the nozzle, such that it won’t click to
rub off the old sales and revert to zero, so, we fake it, which means
the dispenser is still running, so if anyone comes, we simply continue
from where we stop and that is why sometimes it seems like we are
rushing the customers. It is easier when the last sale is a small
quantity.
“Even though the use of the Recall or TIM/CAL’ button on some of these
machines is the easiest method, faking the nozzle is another viable way
to make money.
“If the previous sale is about N200 maybe by a Keke NAPEP and Okada
rider, or even commercial buses (danfo) drivers, because they are the
ones who buy fuel in bits, we will gently place the nozzle, and
naturally, when you see that we remove the nozzle from the hanger, that
is, from the engine, you believe that it started from zero. However, it
is not always the case,” he said.
Kabir was quick to add that some station managers or managements know
about their tricks but that once they are caught or reported by a
customer, such person could be sacked. He added that attendants usually
sell in all cases but such sales might not start from zero or could be
recalled to a previous sale that had the same amount, which would be an
incomplete sale for the customer.
“Sometimes we could gain up to N1,000 from one sale, it depends on the
quantity that the consumer wants, and those that are caught are usually
the greedy ones,” he noted.
He added that in filling stations where their dispensers do not have
Recall or TIM/CAL only the last sale could be recalled, hence, once the
last sale is not the same with the current sale, faking the hanging of
the nozzle might be the only way to make money through such pump.
Station owners and managers also dupe customers
A female attendant with a major oil marketer company in Lagos Island,
Seun Jegede, told our correspondent how station managers and filling
station owners also cheat their customers.
She alleged that most filling stations alter their meters to
under-dispense fuel at the detriment of customers, which is a known
phenomenon among consumers. Even though this could be a product of greed
and inadequate regulation, she said they also do that to make up for
some loss they might have incurred during sales.
“Based on experience, I can tell you that almost all filling stations,
including the ones being run by government, adjust their meters and what
they do is to settle the officials from the Department of Petroleum
Resources if or when they come for inspection.
“No attendant can alter the meter on his own, except the manager
sanctions it because it involves the engineer changing the panel and
doing some mechanical readjustment. That is why many filling stations
that alter their meters have to bribe their way through because the
engineers are not always there, except the manager recommends a trusted
attendant to be trained so as to put the pumps back to normal if DPR
comes.
“The adjustment is easier with the marathon machine because it has a key
in front of the meter. This allows for quick readjustment of the meter
so as to scale through the due diligence check by the DPR, which could
be once in six months,” Jegede explained.
She added that the decision to alter the meter could either come from
the owner of the station or the station manager in connivance with the
engineer, adding that whoever orders the adjustment takes the money made
from the unsold quantity.
Station attendants also cheat their employers
According to John, not only customers are open to this fraud, even the
management that the attendants work for are not immune to their
fraudulent acts, through what he called ‘no reading’. In this case only
the price meter reads while the litre reading does not move. He said
this could be a product of frequent repairs of the pump or any other
mechanical fault, which could make it malfunction.
“When there is ‘no reading’ on the litre menu, and the management is not
aware, there is no way the management will know the actual number of
litres that have been sold.
“What we do in such cases is to sell on the basis of amount only and we
sometimes negotiate with the customer for settlement because we can sell
more to make money. I can even call someone from home to come and buy
and keep for me, before the management finds out that the litre is not
reading.
“Even though the ‘no reading’ issue rarely happens, it becomes a free
for all if it happens to the diesel or kerosene pump that usually has no
attendant attached to it. With that, tracing who sells what quantity
may be difficult, even though an attendant must be smart to avoid being
penalised.
“Another form of ‘no reading’ is when some attendants, especially those
attached to diesel or kerosene that have lesser patronage compared to
petrol, gently press the nozzle (just like a one-touch press) that may
not read on the meter whereas some fuel will still come out. It can also
happen when they finish selling and instead of hanging the nozzle, they
place it inside the keg for the little quantity to drip into their
kegs. It may appear little, but over a long time, the gentle one-touch
press and the leftovers become a large quantity. That is why you see
some attendants having kegs beside them,” John explained.
The attendants further explained that they make more money when there is
epileptic power supply which force people to buy fuel in kegs. “When
there is no power supply and people struggle or force your nozzle in
their kegs, many of them don’t care about starting from zero, which is a
plus for us,” he said.
They however said station attendants find it difficult to cheat if the
customer comes out of the vehicle to stay with them, adding that those
who sit in their vehicles can easily be distracted or shortchanged.
A Director in DPR, Mr. George Osahon, had strongly advised in a
television programme recently that it was better for vehicle owners to
buy specific amount of fuel rather than using number of litres as a
yardstick.
“When you go to a modern filling station and you ask for N5,000 worth of
fuel, they simply punch a pad and when it’s complete it stops by
itself, and it is better to stand by the seller or keep a close watch
from your car if you choose to sit in the car.
“The reason the same worth of fuel would vary in quantity at different
filling stations is because some under-dispense. Nobody will ever
over-dispense, people will either dispense normally or under-dispense,
so if you see such differential, it is very necessary for you to call
the attention of the DPR to it,” he had said.
Osahon had also said people should stop using statements like ‘fill-up
the tank’ not minding how much fuel was inside their tank or the
quantity coming into it, saying there is a lot of wastage in that, which
is not necessary.
However, while some filling station attendants who spoke to our
correspondent denied the fraud allegations, a few others admitted that
some attendants do it and that it depends on the circumstance and the
type of pump, as pointed out by John.
A cross section of station managers who spoke to our correspondent also
dissociated their filling stations from those who cheat their customers,
adding that none of their staff would survive such an attempt.
Mr. Adebola Durojaiye, who is a manager of a filling station in Ikeja,
said, “People say all filling stations under-dispense but that is not
true. One good way to identify those who do it is that they don’t have
good patronage because whether we like it or not, customers know the
good and bad stations, so, the generalisation is wrong.”
The Chairman of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of
Nigeria, Ejigbo Satellite, Mr. Ajayi Adebayo, said recently that any
member of the association found indulging in sharp practices would have
his/her office sealed off alongside other sanctions, while urging
members to be transparent and objective in their business transactions.
In a telephone conversation with our correspondent, the Executive
Secretary, Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria, Mr. Obafemi
Olawore, said no member of the association could be involved in
under-dispensing or fiddling with the pump, adding that anyone with
proof of such malpractice against any MOMAN member should feel free to
contact the association to complain.
“I am not aware that any MOMAN member engages in under-dispensing.
However, I cannot swear an oath or beat my chest and say there is no
such thing by those that we contracted to run the stations, that is, the
dealers. I am not saying they do it, but anyone with proof that it
happens should contact us and we will take immediate action,” Olawore
added.
DPR Spokesperson, Ms. Dorothy Bassey, said the agency was doing its best
to check the fraudulent practices by some filling stations through its
random inspection, while describing the bribe allegations against DPR
officials as untrue.
“I am confirming to you that it is not true that officials of DPR
collect bribe, what kind of money are they going to pay DPR staff? That
is why we shut down stations once we have any indication that they carry
out any malpractice.
“It happens but not as rampant as people make it look because nobody is a
fool or wants to be cheated. That is why we do a lot of public
engagement for people to watch out.
“We may not be 100 per cent, but certainly, we are working to ensure
that everybody is happy. We have operation offices nationwide where
people can go to complain,” Bassey said.
Meanwhile, a report culled from dailyfinance.com says filling up the
tank may be another way to lose money and fuel, because when the pump
clicks off automatically, no additional fuel enters the tank. “Instead,
fuel is likely being diverted through the pump’s vapour recovery system
and back into the station’s tank, which means you are paying for gas
that you are not getting.
“More importantly, the car needs space in its tank for fuel vapours to
expand. Overfilling can force gas into the car’s carbon filter, leading
to poor performance, reduced mileage or costly repairs. So, the next
time you want to buy fuel, don’t top off your tank, it’s good for your
car and even better for your wallet,” the report said
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