Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu has explained why Nigeria has been exempted from the reduction of oil production by OPEC.
After
seven hours of deliberation, the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) has agreed to reduce oil production by around 1.2
million barrels per day from Jan. 1, 2017.
However,
Nigeria and Libya were exempted from the cut, while Indonesia suspended
its membership after refusing to agree to the deal.
Qatar’s Minister of Energy and Industry, Dr
Mohammed Al-Sada, said this at a news conference at the end of the 171
meeting of the Conference of the OPEC on Wednesday in Vienna.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the meeting started at about 9:30 a.m and lasted till about 5:30 p.m.
NAN
reports that this is the first time since 2008 that an agreement of
this nature was reached to reduce supply in spite of several attempts.
“This
agreement was reached following extensive consultations and
understanding reached with key non-OPEC countries, including the Russian
Federation that they contribute by a reduction of 600,000 barrel per
day.
“The duration of this
agreement is six months, extended for another six months to take account
of prevailing market conditions and prospects.
“We
also agreed to establish a Ministerial Monitoring Committee composed of
Algeria, Kuwait, Venezuela and two participating non-OPEC countries,
chaired by Kuwait and assisted by the OPEC secretariat.
“They are expected to closely monitor the implementation of and compliance with this agreement and report to the conference,” Al-Sada said.
He
said the next Ordinary Meeting would convene in Vienna, Austria on May
25, 2017 to review the implementation of the agreement.
A
breakdown of the agreed oil production adjustment made available to the
media by the OPEC Secretariat after the conference shows that Saudi
Arabia is expected to make the largest contribution by cutting
production by 486,000 b/d.
Also, Algeria
is expected to reduce its output per day by 50,000; Angola, 87,000;
Ecuador, 26,000; Gabon, 9,000; Iran, 90,000; Iraq, 210,000; Kuwait,
131,000; Qatar, 30,000; UAE, 139,000 and Venezuela by 95,000.
Meanwhile
Nigeria’s Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr Emmanuel Kachikwu said
vandalism of crude oil pipelines and militancy activities in the
Niger-Delta was the reason Nigeria was exempted.
“We are grateful that the OPEC was understanding of the case we made about why Nigeria needs to be exempted from this cut.
“This
gives us time to get our house in order by resolving the Niger-Delta
crises. Already production in Nigeria is up to 1.9 million barrels and
we expect to get it up to 2.2 million but not flood the market.
“We all have the responsibility to contribute to the tightness of this market,” he said.
Kachikwu
said the cut would re-balance the price of crude oil globally and
projected that oil prices would go up to 60 dollars per barrel from the
50 per cent it traded today.
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