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Nigeria's oil output could fall 35% without reforms - Wood Mackenzie

Published 13/02/2020, 14:15
© Reuters.  Nigeria's oil output could fall 35% without reforms - Wood Mackenzie

By Libby George

ABUJA, Feb 13 (Reuters) - Cost increases and uncertainty in

Nigeria's crucial energy sector could lead to a 35% decline in

oil output over 10 years as companies delay investments in key

oilfields, consultancy Wood Mackenzie said in new research due

to be published on Friday.

In findings shared exclusively with Reuters, the company

warned that three deep offshore fields, which would generate

$2.7 billion a year for the government at peak production, are

likely to be delayed as companies put their money in regions

with better and clearer terms.

"Nigeria is going to enter quite a steep decline in

production," said Lennert Koch, principal analyst of sub-Saharan

Africa upstream with Wood Mackenzie. "In order to keep its

revenue up...it needs to develop additional fields."

Without the three fields, Koch said Nigerian production

would drop 35% within a decade.

Nigeria is Africa's largest oil exporter, with output close

to 2 million barrels per day (bpd), but it needs continual

investment to maintain output as fields naturally decline. Oil

accounts for 90% of Nigeria's foreign currency earnings.

Wood Mackenzie delayed its projected startups for the

deepwater projects Bonga Southwest Aparo, operated by Shell, and

Preowei, operated by Total, by two years to 2027 and 2025

respectively, and for ExxonMobil's Owowo by four years to 2029.

Total said Preowei is under study with a final investment

decision scheduled for 2020 or a year later. Exxon did not

immediately respond to a request for comment, while Shell

declined to immediately comment.

Together, the deepwater fields hold an estimated 1.5 billion

barrels of oil, and could add 300,000 bpd of oil.

Wood Mackenzie cited changes to tax and royalty laws and

uncertainty over oil reform as the main reasons for delays,

although it also estimated that the three projects are "not

economically viable" under current terms, and with oil under $60

per barrel.

In November, Nigeria boosted its share of deepwater oil

revenues in an effort to add some $1.5 billion to coffers in two

years, and last month enacted a finance bill increasing the VAT

rate from 5% to 7.5%. Koch said companies are also wary about whether terms of

development will change, as the government has promised to pass

a bill overhauling the oil sector this year but has yet to

release any details. Offshore oil projects are expensive and time-consuming but

key to boosting Nigeria's production. Its deepwater output has

grown from nothing at the beginning of the century to 780,000

bpd in 2019. "These are still world class resources," Koch said. "What

makes some of the other regions more attractive is just higher

returns (from) lower costs and less regulatory uncertainty."

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