Global Rubber Market News
  • Home
  • Rubber News
  • Rubber Prices
  • Analytics
  • Synthetic
  • Tire News
  • Financial
No Result
View All Result
Global Rubber Market News
  • Home
  • Rubber News
  • Rubber Prices
  • Analytics
  • Synthetic
  • Tire News
  • Financial
No Result
View All Result
Global Rubber Market News
No Result
View All Result
Home Commodity Market News

Crude or condensate? The dilemma over Nigeria’s oil-cut exemption

Renton Campoy by Renton Campoy
August 10, 2024
in Commodity Market News
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
© Reuters. A floating fuel filling station belonging to Nigeria’s state oil firm Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation sits idle on a river in the oil rich southeastern Delta state

By Libby George

LONDON (Reuters) – When OPEC agreed to exempt Nigeria from its oil production-restraint deal last year, it knew the country faced a huge challenge in recouping output lost due to militant unrest.

As tensions subside and the country pumps closer to normal levels, another dilemma looms for the producer group as it continues efforts to eradicate a price-sapping oil glut – how to count Nigeria’s crude output without mixing in condensates.

The answer could determine when – and indeed if ever – Nigeria has to cut or curtail oil production, its key source of foreign currency.

Related Post

Tianli brand expands in uk

Tianli Brand Expands in UK

June 16, 2025
New uk country manager for alliance

New UK Country Manager for Alliance

June 9, 2025

Another Alliance Field Day

June 1, 2025

Dunlop Trailmax Raid Chosen To Grip Cross-Border Honda Adventure Roads Tour

May 23, 2025

While Nigeria promised to cap at 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) once production “stabilizes”, that limit exempts all of the West African nation’s condensates. And no one seems to agree on how much of that ultra-light oil it pumps.

“Previously, due to the whole issue of militancy, quotas were not an issue,” said Gail Anderson, research director at consultancy Wood Mackenzie. But now, “if you start thinking about OPEC cuts, then the definition of crude and condensate becomes quite important”.

Nigeria, along with OPEC peer Libya, was exempt from cuts due to militancy in its Delta region that slashed output from 2.2 million bpd to as low as 1.2 million bpd last year. The attacks have abated, with no major incidents since January.

Nigeria’s output has also rebounded, and secondary sources such as consultancies and price-reporting agencies quoted by OPEC said it edged above 1.8 million bpd in August and September – reinstating the country as Africa’s largest oil exporter.

But Nigeria has said some of that total included condensates, an ultra-light oil that is not counted as part of its promise to cap.

Oil minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu told Reuters in July that condensates contributed 450,000 bpd to Nigeria’s production that month.

The figure exceeds external estimates for condensate production ranging from 200,000 to 250,000 bpd and suggests Nigeria’s own condensate definition could keep it out of any cap.

“Definition matters and all producers are playing with definitions,” said Ehsan Ul-Haq, director of and refined products at Resource Economist Ltd, a consultancy.

Neither Nigeria’s state oil company, NNPC, nor its Ministry of Petroleum, responded to Reuters requests for comment on its production or definition of condensate.

WHAT’S IN A NAME?

Oil exists in many types of quality – from heavy, sulfur-rich Canadian oil sands to ultra-light shale oil.

Condensates are liquefied once extracted from high-pressure reservoirs, where they exist as a gas. Nearly all oilfields produce some condensates, usually in small amounts. Once it becomes a liquid, there is no widely agreed way to differentiate condensate from crude.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries does not publish a figure, reporting only the crude output of its 14 members, and NNPC also publishes no condensate numbers.

Asked how OPEC would define condensate if it needed to determine Nigerian production volumes, a spokesman for the producer group said the definition was based on “international standards” such as those of the American Petroleum Institute.

But those standards focus on whether the oil was a gas when extracted. Once liquefied, there is no widely agreed rule.

Often – including in Nigeria – condensates are blended into crude exports, and not tracked carefully. The issue briefly flared when the U.S. shale revolution led to a spike in oil production, and more would-be exporters sought to send oil abroad as condensate, circumventing a ban on exports of crude. [http://reut.rs/2yzrJA8]

Washington lifted its export ban before it could craft a clearer definition.

This lack of consensus on what constitutes condensate makes it tricky to determine how much any country produces.

“Nigeria does produce quite a bit of condensate, but apart from Akpo it’s not really measured because it’s blended into crude,” Wood Mackenzie’s Anderson said.

LABELS AND EXPORTS

Akpo, the only substantial Nigerian grade that trading and analyst sources told Reuters is marketed as condensate, is typically exported at a rate of 100,000-133,000 bpd. Production of another condensate grade, Oso, has declined so substantially that it is blended into Qua Iboe crude exports.

Late last year, the Paris-based International Energy Agency began counting another Nigerian grade, Agbami, with 220,000-250,000 bpd of exports, as condensate. Oil trading and industry sources told Reuters the grade is marketed as crude oil, and the IEA declined to give a reason for the change.      

Under IEA figures counting Agbami and Akpo as condensate, Nigeria’s crude production has not hit 1.8 million bpd since November 2015.

Despite a contrasting picture from OPEC’s secondary-source figures, Nigeria’s direct communication with the organization has not shown crude output holding above 1.8 million bpd in the past two years; the country’s own full-year 2015 figure was 1.75 million bpd, with that for 2016 at 1.43 million bpd.

Other experts said hitting 1.8 million bpd without Agbami or Akpo would be tough in the near term.         

“They would have to ramp up existing production or bring new fields online,” said Audrey Dubois-Hebert, senior oil analyst with FGE, an energy consultancy.   

Wood Mackenzie estimates that export grades aside, roughly 12 percent of Nigeria’s production could be classified as condensate but that it could be higher. This murky, but sizeable, chunk of output could keep Nigeria from capping.

“Having a lot of wellhead condensate production could work to your benefit,” Anderson said. 

Source: Investing.com

Tags: AfricaAmerican Petroleum Institutecrude oilIEAInternational Energy AgencyLibyaLondonNear TermNigeriaNNPCoiloil companyoil productionoil tradingOPECParispetroleumWest African
Renton Campoy

Renton Campoy

Related Posts

Tianli brand expands in uk
Tire Market, Tire Company News

Tianli Brand Expands in UK

by Renton Campoy
June 16, 2025
New uk country manager for alliance
Tire Market, Tire Company News

New UK Country Manager for Alliance

by Renton Campoy
June 9, 2025
Another alliance field day
Tire Market, Tire Company News

Another Alliance Field Day

by Renton Campoy
June 1, 2025
Next Post
Japan

Japan's consumer prices seen up for ninth straight month in September: Reuters poll

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Dow Futures Up After 8 Weeks of Decline

Dow futures higher; Arm Holdings, Michigan consumer sentiment in focus

August 13, 2024

Top-10 Rubber Producing Countries in the World 2024

May 8, 2024
Rubber Market Is Expected To Trade At Equilibrium Next Week

Japan futures hit one-week high on better China data, weaker yen

November 6, 2024
A rubber tapper from Felda Laka Selatan, Changlun, Kedah hard at work. -- BERNAMA PIC

Brief Analysis of Natural Rubber Production in Thailand

September 20, 2024

Rubber News

Rubber Market Is Expected To Trade At Equilibrium Next Week

Japan futures hit one-week high on better China data, weaker yen

November 6, 2024
Rubber price hike rejoices cultivators; irks manufactures

Japan futures dip as stronger yen, US election uncertainty weigh

November 5, 2024
In July 2024, Vietnam

Asian physical rubber prices – Oct 31

October 31, 2024
Japanese Rubber Futures Climb

Japan futures rebound on hopes of further China stimulus

October 31, 2024
Local Rubber Market Ends Mixed Amid Weaker Regional Sentiment

Japan futures hit one-month low on soft China data, trade tensions

October 30, 2024
Malaysia’s Natural Rubber Production Slides 5.2% In August

Asian physical rubber prices – Oct 30, 2024

October 30, 2024

Tire News

Nexen tire expands retail business in germany

NEXEN TIRE Expands Retail Business in Germany

June 18, 2025
Fortune tires and austone tires launch new websites

FORTUNE TIRES and AUSTONE TIRES Launch New Websites

June 18, 2025
Situation vacant – city 1st tyres

Situation Vacant – City 1st Tyres

June 17, 2025
Tyresafe highlights dangerous and widespread failings in part worn tyre sales

TyreSafe Highlights Dangerous and Widespread Failings in Part-Worn Tyre Sales

June 17, 2025
Tianli brand expands in uk

Tianli Brand Expands in UK

June 16, 2025
Kerrs tyres group acquires maghera tyre centre

Kerrs Tyres Group Acquires Maghera Tyre Centre

June 16, 2025

Other News

  • All
  • Commodity Market News
  • Economic, Financial news
Iron ore futures drop

Iron ore futures gain on expectations

March 19, 2025
South korea’s mfg buys about 137,000 tons of corn

South Korea’s MFG buys about 137,000 tons of corn

March 19, 2025
Soybeans Corn Edge Higher After Losses Us Rains To Limit Gains

Safras trims forecast for Brazil’s soy output

March 19, 2025
Gold hits new all time highs

Gold prices slightly down

March 19, 2025
Peshawar: prices of essential items remain steady

Peshawar: Prices of essential items remain steady

March 19, 2025
Oil prices tick up on us attack on houthis, china economic hopes

Oil prices tick up on US attack on Houthis, China economic hopes

March 19, 2025
Load More
Global Rubber Market News

Global Rubber Markets News, Rubber Prices Reports, Rubber Market Analytics & Outlook Reports

Rubber Prices

  • Global rubber prices reports
  • Futures
  • ASIA
  • China
  • India
  • Indonesia
  • Malaysia
  • Thailand
  • Vietnam

Rubber News

  • Global rubber market news
  • Global Rubber Analytics, Outlook
  • Global Synthetic Rubber News
  • Tire Market, Tire Company News
  • Rubber plantation

Other News

  • Commodity Market News
  • Economic, Financial news
  • Other News

© 2024 RMN - Global Rubber Markets News, Rubber Prices Reports, Rubber Market Analytics & Outlook Reports

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Landing Page
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2024 RMN - Global Rubber Markets News, Rubber Prices Reports, Rubber Market Analytics & Outlook Reports