SweetCrude Weekly Edition

Nigeria suffers 53.4% decline in monthly oil earnings to N252bn

- IKE AMOS

Dublin, Ireland -- Nigeria suffered a sharp decline in earnings from the petroleum industry in November 2022, as the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, disclosed that revenue from the sector dipped by 53.39 per cent to N251.86 billion in the month, as against

N540.31 billion recorded in the previous month.

The CBN, in its monthly economic report for November 2022 released recently, blamed the decline on lowerthan-expected earnings from petroleum profit tax and royalties.

It also attributed the sharp drop on the accounting effect of the treatment of crude oil and gas inflows as operationa­l components of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, NNPCL, under the Petroleum Industry Act, PIA, 2021.

The CBN noted that the November 2022 oil receipts were 7.6 per cent lower than the N234.07 billion recorded in the month in 2021.

Giving a breakdown of oil earnings in November 2022, the CBN stated that the country recorded zero earnings from crude oil and gas exports, same as in the previous months; while earnings from the petroleum profit tax, PPT, and royalties stood at N245.02 billion, compared with N535.5 billion recorded in October 2022 and N143.38 billion in November 2021.

The country, according to the bank, recorded zero earnings from domestic crude oil and gas sales in the month under review, same as in the previous month; while other oil revenue stood at N6.84 billion in the month under review, compared with N4.81 billion and N9.33 billion in October 2022 and November 2021 respective­ly.

The CBN also reported that the country recorded a trade deficit in November 2022 due to lower crude oil export receipts, following the decline in crude oil prices at the internatio­nal market.

It added that merchandis­e imports

also decreased, due to reduction in the importatio­n of petroleum products; while an improvemen­t was recorded in foreign capital inflow into the economy, driven by an improvemen­t in portfolio inflow, owing to competitiv­e yields on fixed income securities.

The CBN said: “Crude oil and gas export receipts declined, due to weaker demand, amid recessiona­ry fears in developed countries and COVID-19 restrictio­ns in China, leading to lower crude oil prices. Crude oil and gas export receipts declined to $3.90 billion from $4.30 billion in October. A breakdown reveals that crude oil export receipts fell by 9.0 per cent to $3.30 billion, from USS$3.65 billion in the preceding month.

“The decrease was driven by the fall in the price of Nigeria’s reference crude, the Bonny Light, by 3.3 per cent to an average of $93.36 per barrel, relative to $96.57 per barrel in October. Similarly, gas export receipts declined by 6.0 per cent to $0.60 billion, from $0.64 billion in October. In terms of share in total export, crude oil and gas accounted for 90.2 per cent. Of the total crude oil and gas export, oil constitute­s 84.6 per cent, while gas accounts for 15.4 per cent.”

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