Nigeria Lifts OPEC December Output With 1.35 Million Barrels Daily Production
OPEC crude output reportedly edged higher in December after Nigeria partially reversed a long-term slump by cracking down on oil theft.
The OPEC, boosted supplies by 150,000 barrels a day, with Nigeria effectively providing the entire gain, according to a Bloomberg survey.
Total group output was 29.14 million barrels a day.
Nigeria has revived crude production from record lows by hiring security companies linked to Government Ekpemupolo, a onetime warlord in the oil-producing Niger Delta region.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, NNPCL, is calculating building on the progress.
However, data shows that even with December’s gains, which have bolstered Nigerian production to 1.35 million barrels a day, the country’s output is still barely half the level pumped a decade ago.
Elsewhere in the organization, producers were sticking to the production curbs agreed late last year to keep global markets in balance. Key members Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Iraq kept supplies roughly unchanged, with the Saudis pumping 10.48 million barrels a day.
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OPEC and its allies, a 23-nation bloc known as OPEC+, agreed to collectively reduce supplies by 2 million barrels a day from November, and then hold steady for the rest of this year.
While the decision initially drew concerns from the White House, it appears to have helped stabilize world markets against fears of recession in the US and a shaky economic reopening in China. Oil futures traded near $83 a barrel in London on Tuesday.
Outside of OPEC’s Middle East giants, other members are, like Nigeria, struggling with under-investment and operational disruptions.
Angola is showing particular signs of strain. As a result, the 10 OPEC nations bound by quotas are pumping about 650,000 barrels a day below their collective target.
Supplies from the wider OPEC+ coalition are set to come under pressure after further European Union sanctions came into force last month on member nation Russia, as punishment for its invasion of Ukraine.
A panel of ministers from the OPEC+ coalition will hold a monitoring meeting to review production policy on February 1.