Nigeria Complied With OPEC Cut Deal In February —Kachikwu

Nigeria Complied With OPEC Cut Deal In February —Kachikwu
Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, Minister of State for Petroleum

The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, has said Nigeria implemented its portion of the production deal by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries in February, a move that enhances the impact of supply cuts that have already boosted crude prices.

“We’re basically complying, effective February” with the country’s pledged 53,000 barrel-per-day reduction, Bloomberg quoted Kachikwu as saying in an interview on Thursday last week.

“The price fluctuations mean OPEC needs to be a bit more together, a bit more determined to try to defend the market,” he added.

OPEC and its allies agreed to reduce output by 1.2 million bpd in the first half of 2019 in order to prevent a supply glut.

While the deal has contributed to a jump in crude prices of more than 20 per cent so far this year, implementation has been uneven, with Saudi Arabia cutting deeper and faster than promised and other nations including Russia going slow.

Nigeria actually boosted crude production by 52,000 bpd to 1.792 million in January, according to third-party estimates compiled by OPEC’s secretariat.

In February, the country was compliant with its agreed 1.685 million bpd limit, Kachikwu said.

The producers’ group will meet again in April to discuss whether to continue the supply reductions in the second half.

Nigeria would have a hard time making deeper cuts, the minister said.

“If more cuts need to come, there will be major challenges because between December and now, we’ve had the Egina field come online,” Kachikwu said.

He said the offshore field, operated by French energy giant Total, had not yet reached its maximum production level of about 200,000 bpd, but might do so in March.

Some of that output is light oil called condensate, which isn’t counted in the OPEC+ deal, and some is crude, according to him.

“The more we go outside the parameters of what we’ve agreed upon, the more we will struggle. We need all the money we can get for the country,” Kachikwu said.

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