Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke
The decline in crude oil production in
Nigeria, Iraq and Libya drove down output from the Organisation of
Petroleum Exporting Countries to its lowest in February since June last
year, according to the cartel’s latest monthly report released on
Monday.
According to secondary sources cited in
the report, total OPEC crude oil production averaged 30.02 million
barrels per day in February, a decrease of 140,000 bpd from the previous
month. In December, the group’s production was 30.25 million bpd.
In July last year, OPEC output was put at 30.117 million bpd, up from 29.786 million bpd in June.
“Crude oil output decreased mostly from
Iraq, Nigeria and Libya, while production showed increases in Saudi
Arabia and Kuwait,” the 12-member oil cartel said.
Nigeria’s oil output dropped to 1.896
million bpd in February from 1.96 million bpd in January, according to
secondary sources cited in the report.
Based on direct communication, the
country’s production in February was put at 1.777 million bpd, down from
1.796 million bpd and 1.89 million in January and December 2014,
respectively.
Meanwhile, a growing overhang of unsold
Nigerian crude oil cargoes for March-loading could depress values for
the April programme, West African crude traders told Platts, a US-based
publication that provides information on energy and metals data, on
Monday.
It was said that with the March programme
in the middle of being loaded at the terminals, pressure was growing on
traders to dispose so-called “floating” cargoes, which had been loaded
before being sold.
“Around 10 million to 12 million barrels
are currently on the water from the March programme,” a European refiner
said. “The lack of pricing attractiveness for April cargoes is driving
sluggish demand at this stage (of the trading cycle).”
In addition, nearly half of Nigeria’s April programme is still available, according to Platts cargo tracking.
With the May loading schedule expected soon, traders said that competition among sellers could soon become more intense.
Shipping sources said that the volume of
Nigerian crude currently sitting in tankers awaiting orders should
tighten up the West African Suezmax position list in the coming weeks.
The longer that the Nigerian crude
cargoes on the ships remain unsold, the longer the ships would be kept
off WAF tonnage lists, sources said.
It was said that this reduction in the supply of vessels would then likely lead to a rise in WAF Suezmax freight rates.
According to market sources, stubbornly
high freight rates in the Nigerian market over the past week has been
having a knock-on effect on already high differentials to Dated Brent in
the region.
Traders said that higher crude offer
levels in the market, in conjunction with higher freight costs, were
discouraging purchases of light sweet WAF crudes such as Nigeria’s Qua
Iboe, with European refiners turning instead to sweet, short-haul
Mediterranean grades such as Azeri Light.
With European buyers apparently showing
only limited interest in the Nigerian market because of the high freight
rates and high offer levels, most buying of Nigerian grades was coming
from Asia.
No comments:
Post a Comment