Nigeria is reducing its capital budget for joint venture oil operations by 40 per cent this year to $8.1 billion due to the slump in crude oil prices, sources at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) said Monday.
Nigeria, through the NNPC, operates oil joint ventures with
multinational companies including Shell, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Total and
Eni that account for almost half of Nigeria's oil output.
“The NNPC has informed the joint venture partners that this year’s
capital expenditures will be cut down by 40% from the initial proposed
budget of $13.5 billion," an NNPC source was quoted by Platts, a
US-based publication that provides information on energy and metals
data.
“$13.5 billion was the level that has been maintained in the past three
years, but because of the drastic decline in oil prices that level
cannot be sustained this year,” the source added.
NNPC did not comment officially.¨Under Nigeria's joint venture
arrangements, NNPC contributes about 60 per cent of the funding
requirement while the foreign firms provide the remaining 40 per cent.
Initially, the Nigerian government had proposed N1.22 trillion ($7.5
billion) to fund its share of the oil joint venture operations this
year, with foreign oil firms providing $6 billion.
“But since this budget was agreed in the last quarter of 2014, there
have been drastic changes in the parameters considered by the partners,”
another NNPC source said.
“Oil prices have fallen sharply to around $50 per barrel from $80/b
when the joint venture budget was prepared, while general growth in the
Nigerian economy has declined to below 6 per cent from 6.3 per cent,”
the source said.
Officials of the international oil companies confirmed receiving NNPC
directives on the budget cut.
“Even though the directive is for joint venture operations, it is
generally expected. Oil companies have themselves been revising down
their budgets in the light of the oil price slump,” an official
said.
With the price of oil currently hovering at $50 a barrel, down by more
than 50 per cent from the middle of last year, Nigeria faces growing
fiscal challenges as oil accounts for about 70 per cent of the country's
revenue.
NNPC chief executive, Joseph Dawha, last month hinted that three
deep water offshore oil projects and one shallow water oil field were at
risk of being delayed or cancelled outright because of the decline in
oil prices.
Meanwhile, Nigeria's oil output declined to 2.15 million b/d at the end
of 2014 from 2.26 million b/d at the beginning of the year, according
to data released on Sunday by the National Bureau of Statistics
(NBS).
Oil revenue also declined to N2.3 trillion ($13 billion) from N2.6
trillion, as the decline in oil prices took its toll on export earnings,
the agency said.
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