Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigeria’s rig count surges 25%, highest among OPEC members

- DIPO OLADEHINDE

Despitethe­scourge of coronaviru­s raving activities in offshore oil fields, Nigeria has the most impressive rig count among some of the biggest oil-producing countries in the world with a 25-percent increase, a developmen­t indicating an increase in the level of oil production activities.

Active oil exploratio­n brings about a billion investment­s in the country’s economy as well as the developmen­t of related sectors, and infrastruc­ture. It also supplies new jobs for Nigerian citizens and improvemen­t of social and living standards in general, while absent of oil exploratio­n implies the reverse of increased economic growth.

Data obtained from Baker Hughes Incorporat­ed and Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) show Africa biggest oil-producing country recorded 10 oil rigs in September, which was a 25-percent increase compared to the month of August, an indication of increasing exploratio­n activities.

Rig count is largely a reflection of the level of exploratio­n, developmen­t and production activities occurring in the oil and gas sector.

“Most of the oil rigs affected by coronaviru­s pandemic are beginning to come back to operations, which will translate to higher production,” Niyi Awodeyi, CEO at Subterra Energy Resources Limited, said.

Offshore production accounts for more than 60 percent of Nigeria’s 2.10 million to 2.20 million bpd crude and condensate output.

“The logic is straightfo­rward. When the number of oil rigs rises, it means more people can be employed, when it drops, it means loss of employment opportunit­ies,” Awodeyi said.

Nigeria’s increase in rig count came at a time the OPEC recorded a 14 -percent decline in rig count to 363 in September compared to 377 recorded the previous months, according to the latest OPEC monthly oil market report.

Among the ope cm embers, Nigeria had the most inspiring rig count of plus 2, followed by Saudi arabia, which also recorded two addition rig count. Angola added just one additional rig counts while other members suffered either reductions in rig counts or zero rig counts.

For nigeria, an increase in rig count comes at a time when Nigeria is toiling hard to ensure full compliance to the OPEC+ deal, which hangs on a key oil grade being treated as a condensate, a developmen­t needed to save battered oil price.

Ever since OPEC+ allowed ultra-light oil to be exempt from its production cut deal, the West African nation’s Agbami has been a bone of contention.

Nigeria’s oil ministry officials are asking internatio­nal oil companies like Chevron and Equinor to reclassify Agbami as a condensate rather than a crude, but the field’s partners are not on the same page.

Chevron, which operates the Agbami field and FPSO, has always listed the grade as a crude on their website, and markets it as light, sweet crude oil to its customers.

Similarly, equity partner Equinor also classifies the grade as a light, sweet crude, according to its website.

Trading sources have told S&P Global Platts that the grade is marketed as a light, sweet crude, as it is not derived from a gas condensate field.

 ??  ?? #ENDSARS protest group blocked all sides of Okota Roundabout in Lagos, yesterday, causing serious gridlock in the area. Pic by Pius Okeosisi
#ENDSARS protest group blocked all sides of Okota Roundabout in Lagos, yesterday, causing serious gridlock in the area. Pic by Pius Okeosisi
 ??  ?? #ENDSARS protest continues in Ibadan, Oyo State.
#ENDSARS protest continues in Ibadan, Oyo State.

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