Crude oil
production freeze is now imminent for Nigeria, as the country’s oil
production
increased by 138,300 barrels per day (bpd) from the 1.723 million (bpd in July
to 1.861million bpd, according to the latest report from the Organisation of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).
This has made
the country to exceed its allocated crude oil production level by the Joint
Organisation of OPEC-Non-OPEC Technical Committee (JTC), which would
necessitate a cap in crude oil output.
The Joint
Organisation of OPEC-Non-OPEC Technical Committee (JTC), had welcomed the
flexibility of Nigeria in freezing crude oil output, 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.
According to
OPEC report, which was released on Wednesday, Nigeria’s crude oil production
has consistently increased from the 1.511 million bpd in first quarter of this
year; 1.616 million bpd in second quarter to 1.710 mpbd in June and 1.723mbpd
in July.
But the
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, had said that
though Nigeria is recovering its oil production, the recovery is still not at
the level it can tolerate reduction in the 1.8 million barrels per day granted
by OPEC.
OPEC
explained that total its total crude oil production averaged 32.76 mbpd in
August, a decrease of 79,000 bpd over the previous month. It noted that crude
oil output increased in Nigeria, while production showed declines in Libya,
Gabon,Venezuela and Iraq.
OPEC added:
“Booming refinery profits are helping West African oil producers to sell
cargoes at higher prices, aided by a shortage in certain types of crude amid
OPEC production adjustments and geopolitical turbulence.
“Continuing
improvements in price differentials, coupled with an uplift in crude benchmark
Brent outright prices, supported light sweet crude Basket components from West
and North Africa to prices above $50/b. Saharan Blend, Es Sider, Girassol,
Bonny Light, Equatorial Guinea’s Zafiro and Gabon’s Rabi values increased by
$3.32 per barrel on average, or 6.9 per cent, to $51.33 per barrel. Physical
crude differentials for these grades improved on higher demand from Asia,
particularly China and India.”
World oil
demand growth in 2017 is expected to rise by 1.42 mbpd after an upward revision
of around 50 tbpd. In 2018, world oil demand is anticipated to grow by 1.35
mbpd, an increase of 70 tbpd from the previous report.
OPEC said
that refinery margins in the Atlantic Basin strengthened in August. “In the US,
margins rose amid expectations for a product supply shortfall in the wake of
Hurricane Harvey, coupled with already firm domestic demand, which supported
product crack spreads. In Europe and Asia, product markets were supported by
supply outages in the US, which encouraged higher arbitrage volumes, as well as
healthy seasonal demand, which helped lift refinery margins,” it added.
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