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Tuesday, 14 October 2014

Nigeria’ll lose Africa’s top oil producer status – IEA

Nigeria will be overtaken as Africa’s largest crude oil producer by Angola from around 2016 to the early 2020s, as crude theft and regulatory uncertainties persist in the Nigerian oil industry, the International Energy Agency says in a new report published on Monday.
The report entitled: ‘Africa Energy Outlook’, a special package in the 2014 World Energy Outlook series, stated that during the period, Angola was also likely to be Africa’s largest crude oil exporter.
It noted that Angola had a taste of the position in May 2014 when monthly exports from Nigeria dipped below hers due largely to theft and sabotage-related outages
“Signs of this role reversal between Nigeria and Angola have been present for a while. Upstream investments have been flowing more readily to Angola in recent years,” the IEA said, adding that a telling comparison was the extent of the “pipeline” of major offshore projects in the two countries.
Although Angola has seen some slowing of commitments to new projects since a tightening of fiscal terms in 2006, more than 1.3 million barrels per day of nameplate capacity is due to come into operation between 2014 and 2020, compared with 0.9 million bpd in Nigeria, according to the report.
“More telling still is that only 40 per cent of the planned capacity in Nigeria has passed the final investment decision, whereas 70 per cent of the planned capacity in Angola has already passed this milestone,” the Chief Economist of the IEA, Fatih Birol, stated in the report.
The report noted that only Total had taken a final investment decision in Nigeria on the Egina project in the last year, adding that a key obstacle in the country was uncertainty over regulatory provisions, with the much-delayed passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill.
The IEA said that a Senate committee had estimated that $28bn of upstream investment was dependent on the passage of the legislation.
“Until commercial decision makers are in a position to evaluate their projects against a more-or-less well-defined set of fiscal and regulatory conditions, continued project delays are inevitable,” it further said. Culled from Punch Newspaper
Nigeria has not held a licensing round for new exploration acreages since 2007 (a promised round of marginal fields has not materialised so far in 2014), whereas Angola has held pre-salt rounds, offshore in 2011 and onshore in 2013, the IEA said.
“In the 10 years to 2013, Angola drilled 166 exploration and appraisal wells in deep water, while Nigeria drilled 144.”
The IEA, however, said it expected the Nigerian crude output to edge higher to 2.2 million bpd by 2040 and total liquids production, buoyed by natural gas liquids, reaching three million bpd, helping the country to reclaim the top oil producer position.
“For the moment, uncertainty persists, but our projections assume that a more stable regulatory and fiscal environment, reflecting the key aims of the PIB, is achieved by 2020, providing a stimulus for upstream investment and a particular boost to the gas sector,” the agency said.
The IEA estimated that Nigeria is currently losing 150,000 bpd to oil theft, the equivalent of $5bn a year.
“Uncertainty over the regulatory environment is only one of the challenges facing Nigeria’s oil sector. A more pressing immediate concern is the impact of unrest and militancy in the Niger Delta region, which results both in oil theft and sabotage to the energy infrastructure. This has been a problem in Nigeria for many years, but the scale has increased,” it said.

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