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Airlines Warn of Nationwide Flight Suspension Amid Fuel Price Surge

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By Sam Agogo

For years, Nigeria’s aviation industry has been teetering on the edge of collapse, battered by crippling operational costs, dilapidated infrastructure, and a volatile currency that makes every imported spare part and litre of fuel a financial nightmare. Airlines have repeatedly sounded the alarm, warning that without decisive government intervention, the sector would implode under the weight of inefficiency, corruption, and market manipulation.

Those warnings have now exploded into reality. The brutal surge in jet fuel prices has pushed the industry into a full-blown emergency, threatening to ground planes, strand passengers, and choke the arteries of commerce across the nation.

From ₦900 per litre in late February 2026, the price of jet fuel has catapulted to an outrageous ₦3,300 per litre by mid-April 2026. This is not a gradual rise—it is a devastating spike that has blindsided airlines and passengers alike. Operators are now warning that by Monday, April 20, 2026, flights across Nigeria may be suspended entirely. The implications are catastrophic. This is not merely an aviation problem; it is a national crisis with the potential to paralyze the economy, destabilize businesses, and endanger lives.

Airline Operators of Nigeria have condemned the surge as artificial, a grotesque distortion of market forces. While global crude oil prices have climbed by about thirty percent, Nigeria’s jet fuel costs have exploded by more than three hundred percent in just weeks. This staggering discrepancy reeks of manipulation and exposes the rot in the local supply chain. Fuel, which already consumes nearly forty percent of airline operating expenses, has now become an unbearable burden. Profitability is impossible. Airlines are staring down the barrel of bankruptcy, and ticket prices are set to soar beyond the reach of ordinary Nigerians.

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The fallout will be merciless. Businesses that depend on air transport for logistics, trade, and critical meetings will be crippled. With Nigeria’s highways plagued by banditry, kidnappings, and violent attacks, air travel has become the only safe option for many. If flights are suspended, travelers will be forced into perilous road journeys or priced out of the skies altogether. Professionals rushing to close deals, patients seeking urgent medical care, and families trying to reunite will all be trapped in a nightmare of delays, danger, and despair.

The economic shockwaves will reverberate far beyond the airports. Tourism will collapse as both domestic and international visitors abandon Nigeria. Airlines, travel agencies, and hotels will bleed jobs, leaving thousands unemployed. Companies may relocate operations abroad, unwilling to gamble on a country where transport is unreliable and insecurity is rampant. Supply chains will fracture, strangling the movement of goods and driving up costs for consumers. Agriculture, manufacturing, and services will all suffer as mobility grinds to a halt.

If this crisis drags on, the consequences will be devastating. The aviation sector could disintegrate entirely, leaving Nigeria without a functioning air transport system. Businesses dependent on air cargo will be crippled, leading to shortages and skyrocketing prices. Commerce will stagnate, investment will dry up, and productivity will collapse. The economy will be throttled, and ordinary Nigerians will bear the brunt of the suffering.

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The government cannot afford to sit idle. It must act with urgency and force. Subsidies must be introduced immediately to stabilize jet fuel prices. Allegations of market manipulation must be investigated and punished. Local refining capacity must be expanded to reduce dependence on imports. Transparency and accountability must be enforced across the supply chain. Anything less will be a betrayal of the nation.

The soaring price of jet fuel is not just an aviation issue—it is a national emergency. Without immediate and decisive intervention, Nigeria risks grounding its airlines, crippling its businesses, endangering its citizens, and plunging its economy into chaos. The time for half-measures is over. The government must act now, with strength and clarity, before the aviation industry collapses and drags the entire nation down with it.

For comments, reflections, and further conversation:
Email: samuelagogo4one@yahoo.com
Phone: +2348055847364

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