Site icon Nairametrics

NNPC says demand for Nigerian crude oil in Asia has dropped due to Russia-Ukraine war

Crude oiL

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited has explained that the lingering war between Russia and Ukraine has affected Nigeria’s crude oil inflow in the international oil market with a dip in demand from the once-dependable Asian market like India.

According to a press statement issued by the Chief Corporate Communications Officer of NNPC, Femi Soneye, this was made known by the Executive Director, Crude & Condensate, NNPC Trading Limited, Maryamu Idris, at a panel presentation at the Argus European Crude Conference in London.

Dwindling crude supply to India

Mrs. Idris said in addition to the substantial price shocks impacting commodity and energy prices globally, the conflict between Russia and Ukraine has triggered a situation where India, a primary destination for Nigerian grades, increased its appetite for discounted Russian barrels to the detriment of some Nigerian volumes.

Improved crude supply to Europe

On the other hand, she noted that the Nigerian crude flow to Europe has increased in a bid to fill supply gaps left by the ban on Russian crude, pointing out that 6 months before the war, 678,000 bpd of Nigerian crude grades went to Europe, compared to 710,000 bpd six months later and 730,000 bpd so far this year.

Idris said,

News continues after this ad

More on oil production challenges

On production challenges, Idris remarked that, like many other oil-producing countries, Nigeria had faced production challenges aggravated by the COVID-19 pandemic, including reduced investment in the upstream sector, supply chain disruptions impacting upstream operations, ageing oil fields, and oil theft by unscrupulous elements. These factors, she said, contributed to production declines in the second half of 2022 and early 2023.

Idris, however, noted that the challenges are fast becoming a thing of the past with the introduction and implementation of a new framework for the domestic petroleum industry (the PIA of 2021), rejuvenating the business landscape, and re-positioning NNPC Limited to adopt a more commercial approach to the management of the nation’s hydrocarbon resources.

According to her, NNPC Limited has secured vital partnerships with notable financial institutions to promote upstream investments to restore and sustainably grow production capacity in the coming years.

She said,

She affirmed that in addition to sustainably growing upstream production volumes, NNPC Limited is also increasing its participation in the downstream sector in line with a ‘wells-to-wheels’ approach, taking the country’s unique hydrocarbon molecules as close as possible to end-users.

The vehicle for this, she said, is the restructured NNPC Trading Company, focused on growing NNPC’s presence in the global market for crude, condensate, gas, and petroleum products.

Exit mobile version