Africa's biggest oil exporter, Nigeria has suffered
declining production due to crude theft and vandalism of pipelines in the Niger
Delta as well as low investment in the sector, which has hit government
revenue.
But President Bola Tinubu's government says oil majors have
committed to invest $13.5 billion in the short term following his meetings with
senior executives from TotalEnergies (TTEF.PA) Shell (SHEL.L) and Exxon Mobil
(XOM.N).
The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission
(NUPRC) said in its 2024-2026 action plan that it would direct development of
oil assets to areas less prone to theft and vandalism and provided regulatory
support for alternative crude oil evacuation routes.
Oil firms require the NUPRC approval for new pipeline
routes.
Oil production was expected to rise from 1.8 million bpd
this year and progress to 2.6 million bpd in 2026, the NUPRC said.
Two of three consultancies tasked by OPEC+ to verify
Nigeria's output said in November that the country was unlikely to reach its
own production target this year.
NUPRC was also working to cut the cost of oil production to
about $20 a barrel, down from between $25 and $40, by providing incentives to
oil producers.
"The Commission will set up a framework for crude oil
and gas transportation and/or handling costs based on a standardised tariff
(and) implement an open access regime for upstream oil and gas pipelines and
ancillary facilities," the regulator said.
High signature bonuses - one-off fees paid to secure
exploration blocks - would be reduced to attract more investment and raise oil
production, the NUPRC said. -Reuters