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Nigeria reduces crude oil losses to a 16-year low

Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission said that Nigeria has reduced its crude oil loss to 9,600 barrels a day, which is the lowest since 2009.

This is a dramatic drop from 102,900 barrels per day (bpd) lost in 2021. That was the highest loss in over two decades.

The NUPRC credited the progress to collaboration between security agencies, contractors, and host communities as well as regulatory reforms, such as metering auditors.

Nigeria, Africa's biggest oil producer, has had to deal with oil theft, vandalism of pipelines and aging infrastructure for years. These issues have reduced government revenues and discouraged foreign investments in the sector.

The commission stated that the oil legislation passed in 2021, which aims to improve the regulatory framework and attract capital for upstream and middle operations, as well as increase transparency, has improved enforcement and protected infrastructure.

In July, the daily production was 1.71 million barrels, consisting of 1.507 million crude oil barrels and 204.864 barrels condensates.

The government announced on the social media platform X that in a separate development the Nigerian midstream and downstream infrastructure fund had signed a preliminary deal with Afreximbank for $500 million funding over the next 4 years to invest in gas infrastructure.

Nigeria is turning to gas for an alternative fuel since it eliminated a popular, but expensive subsidy on gasoline. This move caused petrol prices to rise, resulting in criticism from both motorists and businesses who use petrol as a source of power.

(source: Reuters)