Retailers sell contaminated diesel

via Retailers sell contaminated diesel – The Sunday Mail Jul 20, 2014 by Kudakwashe Mutandi

QUESTIONS remain on the quality of fuel sold to motorists amid indications that some retailers were recently prosecuted for selling diesel adulterated with paraffin, casting doubts on the Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority’s capacity to rein in the sector. Car dealers who sell top-end vehicles believe that most service stations do not have capacity to test fuel quality and sell sub-standard products as a result.

Recently, parliamentarians quizzed Energy and Power Development Deputy Minister Engineer Munacho Mutezo on how Government was protecting motorists from sub-standard fuel.

Zera is mandated to monitor the quality of imported petroleum products.
“Government’s policy is that every litre of fuel that comes into the country should be tested by Zera, and it is that arm of Government which needs to be approached by anyone with a specific issue.

“The Government policy is very clear, no sub-standard fuel should be allowed on the market, but on the issue that a car dealer is recommending a certain garage and not the other, I think it is a marketing strategy.

“The fuel in Zimbabwe is good for any other car. We believe that if a car engine has been damaged by using fuel which is not recommended, then one should seek legal recourse.

“The Government set down rules and regulations for Zera who had to set the specifications which are to be followed for all the fuels to be used by local cars in the country,” Eng Mutezo told legislators.

It is believed that some local car dealers are advising their clients to only use “reputable” retailers. Local quality regulator the Standards Association of Zimbabwe said they could not respond to inquiries on the matter from this newspaper as Zera had instructed them not to respond to such questions.

Zera chief executive officer Eng Gloria Magorimbo said the regulatory authority had acquired a mobile laboratory that will be commissioned “soon”, adding that routine checks had been able to identify some retailers who were selling contaminated fuel.

“Fuel quality tests are carried out at retail sites as Zera has purchased a mobile laboratory. A few retail sites have been found selling diesel adulterated with paraffin. These have been prosecuted through the magistrates’ courts; Zera cannot name the service stations as some cases are sub judice,” explained Eng Magorimbo.

She said 95 percent of all fuel used in Zimbabwe comes via pipeline and is collected at the National Oil Infrastructure Company depot in Msasa, Harare.

Zera derives its mandate from the Energy Regulatory Authority Act (Chapter 13:23) of 2011, read together with the Electricity Act No. 4 of 2002 (Chapter 13:19) and its subsequent amendments, and the Petroleum Act (Chapter 13:22) of 2006. Following the deregulation of the fuel industry in 2005, Zimbabwe has witnessed phenomenal growth in the sector with the coming in of more indigenous players. Currently, there are more than 30 fuel importers and 222 retailers.

Of late there have been questions over the suitability of blended fuel products on vehicle models. Local car assembly company Willowvale Mazda Motor Industries warned the public on use of the regulatory threshold of E15 (15 percent ethanol and 85 percent petrol) on its vehicles.

Last year, Nissan Zimbabwe expressed discomfort over the use of blended fuel beyond E10 levels. In a letter to Zera, Nissan Zimbabwe said their vehicles were designed to take a maximum 10 percent of ethanol-blended gasoline. It said if that percentage was to be exceeded, Nissan products would have fuel injection components changed and various rubber components installed into the fuel systems to cater for a higher ethanol blend.

However, other experts have pointed out that some countries, such as Brazil and the United States, have been using blends — sometimes of higher ethanol content — for years without experiencing the dire consequences being warned about.

Further, Zimbabwe used ethanol blends without incident up until the early 1980s. Government projects a significant saving on the fuel import bill from use of ethanol blends.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 4
  • comment-avatar
    Mixed Race 10 years ago

    The authorities are a bit confused on this blending issue.It is wrong to keep on mentioning Brazil because they have specially designed engines which use 100% ethanol not the vehicles from Japan and other countries.All the cars we have here will work fine with E10 but not more than that without complicated adjustments done to the fuel section of the car.
    It is very easy to check the percentage of ethanol in the fuel with a simple home-made test equipment at the garage.I normally buy about a litre in a metal can and do a quick test before filling my car tank to avoid what has been said in this article.If my test gives me more than 12% blending,I go to the next garage and do the same test.I have found a reliable garage which sells good fuel and I have told them that I monitor their fuel quality.At one stage some garages were selling E17 and above at the same cost as E10.
    This is a wake up call to the authorities in regards to fuel contamination,which they are trying to enforce to poor motorists with cheap petrol cars when they go beyond E10.When petrol is blended with more than 15% ethanol the effects to an ordinary engine designed for pure petrol is the same as for a diesel engine being fueled with diesel blended with paraffin.This of cause will affect the authorities who drive these high powered diesel engines,thus why its becoming a big issue.
    The writer of this article ends up saying blended fuel has been used before the year 1980,yes it is true but he/she does not mention that when they tried more than E15 some problems were experienced with some engines.This is a sensitive issue which affects us all,therefore let us be factual when dealing with this problem.

  • comment-avatar
    Ngoto Zimbwa 10 years ago

    Why would any normal person sell contaminated products?

    We got a government that’s cheating us out of our heritage, now retailers are joining the bandwagon?!!

    Good for you Mixed Race, you go testing before filling your tank but should we all be doing that?

  • comment-avatar
    Clive Sutherland 10 years ago

    Maybe if more people were self testing and making their results public it would be a good thing as this would give the motorist the option of which service station he will buy fuel from and as in any business the customer base will end up determining how well this business performs.

  • comment-avatar

    May Mixed Race tell us which service stations he prefers to buy his fuel from?
    I have my own preferences, but these are not based on testing; just a gut feeling.