The Group Managing Director of Nigeria’s National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Mele Kyari, is hoping the West African country will easily boost its oil production next year to, at least, 2.5 MMbpd.
“Fixing damaged pipelines will allow the nation to return capacity that’s stranded across the Niger Delta,” Mele Kyari told worldoil.com in an interview.
The nation is currently producing about 2.3 MMbpd, including about 350,000 bbl of condensate.
“We can easily hit 2.5 MMbpd in one year. We can pull back the 300,000 bpd shut-in without doing anything significant,” he said, referring to stranded supply.
Nigeria’s output has been gradually rising since the middle of the decade when disruption caused by a campaign of militant attacks drew to an end. While theft and sabotage remain an issue, Kyari outlined a plan to raise oil production to 3 million barrels a day and boost reserves to 40 billion barrels within four years.
“Security is still a concern and we are addressing that,” Kyari said.
Levels of theft have “gone down significantly but it is there,” he said, declining to give a figure for volume of crude lost to thieves.
A government committee that works on the issue pegged the figure at about 120,000 bpd in the first half of this year, according to Godwin Obaseki, chairman of that group.
NNPC, which pumps about 80% of Nigeria’s crude, in partnership with producers like Royal Dutch Shell Plc, ExxonMobil Corp., Chevron Corp., Total SA and Eni SpA, has set a deadline of the first half of 2021 to clear all outstanding debts related to operating costs owed to its partners, Kyari said.
The nation has paid $3.8 billion of a $5.1 billion settlement to majors. That leaves about $1.3 billion yet to clear.
“As we are extinguishing the legacy costs, we are meeting our current obligation. That’s the plan and that’s why our partners are going back to exploration,” he said.
Nigeria is in talks with Total on the Preowei field that is next to the Egina project, and is hoping to secure a final investment decision on Preowei next year.
A final decision on Shell’s Bonga Southwest could come by the end of this year. Those projects could add, at least, 200,000 barrels a day combined, according to Kyari.
Source:www.energynewsafrica.com