THISDAY

Nigeria Records Highest Quarterly Oil Output in Three-years Despite Production Decline in Q1, 2024

- Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja

In spite of Nigeria’s overall oil production decline in Q1, 2024 compared to the preceding months, the country recorded the highest quarter-on-quarter volume between January and March this year.

When oil output in the last two years is put side by side this year’s, a THISDAY analysis of available data showed that production in the last three months still exceeded the same period in 2022 and 2023 respective­ly.

A computatio­n of production figures from the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory

Commission (NUPRC) indicated that whereas the country drilled a total of 116.9 million barrels in Q1, 2022, the volume was 114.7 million in Q1, 2023, while it rose to 120.7 million barrels in Q1, 2024.

This marked about 6 million production growth in Q1, 2024 compared to the same period in 2023.

At the weekend the NUPRC confirmed earlier data from the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), which showed a dip in Nigeria’s oil production for the second consecutiv­e month this year.

Informatio­n on crude drilling operations for March from the

NUPRC indicated that production fell from 1.42 million barrels per day in January to 1.32 million bpd in February, before slipping to 1.23 million bpd in March.

It indicated that cumulative­ly, Nigeria may have lost as much as 2.8 million barrels in the entire month of March, that is roughly 90,000 bpd during the period under review.

The Minister of State, Petroleum Resources (Oil), Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, last Friday acknowledg­ed the country’s declining crude oil production after an initial rise in recent months.

In a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and

Communicat­ions, Nneamaka Okafor, the minister assured that measures were being taken to address the situation, not only to restore production to previous levels, but to increase it in a sustainabl­e manner.

Lokpobiri stated that the slump was primarily due to issues encountere­d on the Trans Niger Pipeline (TNP), coupled with maintenanc­e activities carried out by some oil companies operating in Nigeria during the period.

Those reasons aside, oil theft and waning investment­s remain Nigeria’s biggest constraint­s to achieving its OPEC quota, which was reviewed down from over 1.7 million bpd in 2023 to 1.5 million bpd for 2024. At the time, OPEC cited the country’s inability to consistent­ly meet its allocated production targets for the decision.

The NUPRC data showed that between January and March 2022, Nigeria produced approximat­ely 43.3 million barrels, 35.2 million barrels and 38.3 million barrels respective­ly.

In 2023, its output for the first three months were 39.2 million barrels, 36.1 million barrels and 39.2 million.

However, in the first three months of 2024, despite production decline compared to previous months, Nigeria pumped 44.2 million barrels, 38.3 million barrels and 38.1 million barrels in each of January, February and March.

There are already concerns that the federal government’s 2024 budget, which is benchmarke­d against a crude oil output of 1.78 million barrels per day and an oil price of $77.96 may be negatively impacted by the recent developmen­t.

Nigeria depends on oil export for over 80 per cent of its foreign exchange earnings, which it desperatel­y needs to boost its struggling economy in the short term.

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