Oil will
become faded product in 30 years, says Kachikwu
The
Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is planning to cap
Nigeria’s crude oil production at 1.8 million barrels per day (mbpd) as a way
to boost
prices in the market.
The Joint
OPEC-Non-OPEC Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC), which met in St.
Petersburg for its fourth meeting yesterday, also called on several members to
boost compliance with production cuts to help clear excessive global stocks and
support prices.
By the
OPEC’s decision, Nigeria, which pegged its crude oil production at 2.2 million
barrels per day to finance the 2017 budget, would have to struggle with a
shortfall of 400,000bpd.
At the
current market price of $47 per barrel, the country would be losing about $188
million (N57.528 billion) daily, which would have been part of the revenue
needed to finance the 2017 budget.
OPEC and 11
other producers, including Russia, had agreed in December to reduce their
combined output by almost 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) in the first half
of this year, to support prices and curb oversupply.
But Nigeria
and Libya were exempted from output freeze due to domestic challenges already
limiting the countries from producing to a maximum level.
The
committee, in a report obtained by The Guardian from OPEC website on Monday,
said that it would continue to monitor Nigeria’s production patterns in the
next weeks to determine when to implement the output.
The
ministerial committee of OPEC and non-OPEC, said at the meeting that it had
agreed Nigeria would join the deal by capping or even cutting its output once
it stabilises at that level from 1.8 million bpd.
Nigeria’s
current production output as at June 2017 stood at 1.733 million bpd, according
to the statistics from the OPEC monthly report.
The
committee met yesterday to review the June 2017 report as well as the first six
months of the Declaration of Cooperation, as submitted by the Joint OPEC-Non-OPEC
Technical Committee (JTC).
OPEC
explained that the JMMC further welcomed the flexibility of Nigeria in this
regard, which, despite its commitment to recover its pre-crisis production
level, voluntarily agreed to implement similar OPEC production adjustments as
soon as its recovery reaches a sustainable production volume of 1.8 mbpd.
At the
event, OPEC Secretary-General, Mohammad Barkindo, said Nigeria had no intention
of going beyond its oil production target of 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd)
until the end of March 2018.
The
Director-General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Muda Yusuf,
said the market had faced pressure in recent weeks due to weaker OPEC
compliance with cuts and rising production from Libya and Nigeria, which have
been exempted from the reductions.
On the
implication for Nigeria’s economy, Yusuf, said it would put more pressure on
domestic financial system. According to him, it would increase the country’s
debt service burden and capacity to fund budget. “There is a limit to what we
can actually borrow as a country, especially when our borrowing is almost
reaching a saturation point. It is going to impose a lot of strain on the
economy,” he said.
Yusuf urged
the Federal Government to build an economy that is not too reliant on oil. “We
can only do that by putting policy in place to attract investment. We should
concentrate on creating the right environment to boost investment in non-oil
sector. Apart from the output cut, we are also suffering from low oil prices.”
Though
Nigeria has been struggling to increase crude oil production, Head, Energy
Research Ecobank Group, Dolapo Oni, said technically, Nigeria could achieve the
1.8 mbpd level. “We can, what we’ll need to do is spend money on joint ventures
to achieve that,” he said.
Oni believes
the country’s production recovery is “sustainable” and that there is more
“flexibility in the system now.”
As crude
exports become increasingly unpredictable, other options may start to open up.
Professor of
Energy Economics, University of Ibadan, Adeola Adenikinju, stressed the need
for the country to focus on domestic use of its crude oil resources.
“Nigeria is
left with a sector that emphasizes revenue generation rather than economic
development. Hence, we have a sector that exports crude oil rather than
processing the crude for the use/need of the economy.
“We export
Liquefied Natural Gas (LPG) while we have no gas to fuel our electricity sector
to power our homes, industries and businesses and yet still import LPG for
domestic cooking.”
He said that
Nigeria’s public policy choices must prioritise investment over consumption,
“fuelling our economy first before producing oil and gas to grow other
economies.”
Meanwhile,
Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has raised the alarm that the oil proceeds not
accounted for are being used to fund terrorism activities across the world.
At the
opening of the extra-ordinary meeting of the Council of Ministers session of
the African Petroleum Producers Organization (APPO) in Abuja yesterday,
Osinbajo said concerted efforts must be made to account for all crude oil that
is produced so as to prevent the misuse of the funds.
“Around the
world today, we are increasingly seeing crude oil, often of untraceable origins,
funding the activities of terrorist groups and other purveyors of violence and
conflicts. Many of these groups constitute a threat or a potential threat to
the safety and security in our member states. APPO, therefore, needs to build
the capacity to maintain a reliable statistical database and to deploy
technology to track every molecule of crude oil extracted from our territories.
This is an important step, not only for global security, but also for fiscal
transparency, accountability and of course, the required levels of
international collaboration and cooperation that an organisation like APPO is
well-placed to muster,” he said.
Osinbajo
hinted that the fall in the prices of oil has forced many governments around
the world into rethinking the mode of inventing development models that do not
rely heavily on crude oil.
“The
volatility has triggered much soul-searching and governments are compelled to
ask themselves difficult but necessary questions about the present and the
future. Besides, the reality of the future, where demands for and revenues from
oil drop sharply is already upon us; and almost every major oil importing
country today has embarked on an aggressive non-fossil fuel alternative
programme. China, Japan and some Scandinavian states have already set dates
within the next 10 to 15 years, to produce and use only electric vehicles,” he
said.
Osinbajo
posited that for oil producing countries to exit recession and other economic
challenges foisted by drop in oil prices, they needed the whole range of the
petrochemical enterprise and other untapped options for growing industrial
opportunities, creating jobs and increasing chances of delivering on national
and continental commitment for inclusive growth.
The Minister
of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, warned that the world oil
community was nearing extinction. “With the current trends in technology and
environmental concerns, it is clear that over the next 20 to 30 years, oil
would become a fading, if not a faded, product. The thing is that most
countries that still harbour oil and are getting into oil exploration, have
only about a 30-year span to harness, explore, find, carry and enjoy the full
benefits of oil, because after that, most of the consumers of oil would have
moved on to a cleaner source of energy.”
The Group
Managing Director (GMD) of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC),
Dr Maikanti Baru, disclosed at the meeting yesterday that Nigeria had lost
150,000 barrels per day to the nefarious activities of vandals as attacks were
launched on the Trans Niger Pipeline in Ogoniland on Monday.
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