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Nigeria’s Revenue Crisis May Worsen as India Slashes Crude Imports By $39.5bn

4 Min Read

Nigeria’s revenue earning capacity has come under threat following the reduction of importation of crude oil by India.

Data from India’s Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell showed that the country, which took over from the United States as Nigeria’s largest crude oil importer, reduced crude oil imports by $39.5 billion in April, compared to the same time the previous year.

Read Also: Crude Oil Prices Rise After Colonial Pipeline Cyberattack

According to the Indian High Commission in Nigeria, India’s crude oil imports from Nigeria in 2020 amounted to $10.03bn.

According to OilPrice.com. this represented 17 per cent of Nigeria’s total crude exports for the year according to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.

As Nigeria’s largest importer of crude oil, lockdowns in India’s major cities from COVID-19 surge in April had ripple effects on Nigeria’s oil sales.

The NNPC was prompted to drop the official standard price of its main export streams, Bonny Light, Brass River, Erha, and Qua Iboe, by 61-62 cents per barrel below its April 2021 prices. They traded at $0.9, $0.8, $0.65, $0.97 per barrel respectively, below dated Brent, the international benchmark, as Oilprice.com showed.

India had been buying the not-too-light and not-too-heavy Nigerian crudes that suited its refiners.

Report for Reuters shows that the Indian Oil Corporation’s owned refineries were operating at 95 per cent capacity in April, down from 100 per cent at the same time the previous month.

“If cases continue to rise and curbs are intensified, we may see cuts in refinery runs and lower demand after a month,” an official at the IOC was quoted as saying,

Hundreds of seafarers risked being stuck at sea beyond the expiry of their contracts, a large independent crude ship owner reportedly told Bloomberg.

India reportedly bought more American and Canadian oil at the expense Africa and the Middle East, reducing purchases from members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to around 2.86 million barrels per day.

This squeezed the group’s share of imports to 72 per cent from around 80 per cent previously, as India’s refiners were diversifying purchases to boost margins, according to Reuters.

According to Bloomberg, India also plans to increase local crude oil production and reduce import expenses as its population swells.

A deregulation plan by the Narendra Modi-led government to boost national production to 40 million tonnes of crude oil by 2023/2024, an increase of almost eight million tonnes, had already been initiated.

According to Business Today, an Indian paper, the country currently imports 82 per cent of its oil needs, which amounted to $87bn in 2019.

The state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corporation produces about 20.3 million tonnes of crude oil annually.

Increasing total production to 40 million tonnes will reduce total imports to 67 per cent.

 

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