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Nigeria, other African countries boost OPEC oil output in October

… OPEC meets Nov. 26 to review production policy for next year

 

Joseph Irikefe

 

Moderate increases in Nigeria and other African countries sustained a steady OPEC oil output in the month of October.

The modest increases across most of the OPEC African members offset the declines being recorded elsewhere.

The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries pumped an average of 28.08 million barrels a day in October — about 50,000 a day more than the previous month, according to a Bloomberg survey.

Nigeria led the gains, followed by Congo, Gabon, Angola and Equatorial Guinea. Several of those countries are having their production capability assessed by OPEC, a review that could potentially secure them higher output quotas for 2024.

Oil prices fluctuated in the weeks after Hamas’s attack on Israel, initially surging on concern that the crisis could draw in Iran, a key backer of the militant group and a major Persian Gulf exporter. Yet the market has since cooled as supplies remain unaffected, with Brent futures hovering around $86 a barrel Wednesday.

The turmoil hasn’t affected the strategy of OPEC leader Saudi Arabia, which is keeping output on a tight leash after slashing it during the summer in a bid to shore up prices. Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said last week the policy is “working.”

Riyadh has had some assistance from Russia, the joint leader of a wider coalition known as OPEC+, which pledged export cutbacks.

Nonetheless, the latest tanker tracking by Bloomberg indicates that Russian shipments of crude increased by 110,000 barrels a day to 3.64 million barrels a day in the week to Oct. 29. The advance reflected a jump in shipments from Novorossiysk in the Black Sea that was partly offset by a drop in the number of vessels leaving Russia’s Baltic and Pacific ports.

OPEC is assessing output capacity in several African states following an agreement in June that downgraded their targets for 2024 following years of underperformance. Many producers in the continent are suffering from inadequate investment, operational disruptions and political instability.

Nigeria, which said it wanted to restore output to previous levels to secure a higher quota, boosted supplies in October by 60,000 barrels a day to 1.49 million barrels.

While that’s the highest in almost two years, it’s still below the country’s aspirations, and it’s unclear whether that will be enough for a quota revision. The increases by African members last month were countered by fractional reductions in Iran, Iraq, Kuwait and Libya.

Bloomberg’s survey is based on ship-tracking data, information from officials and estimates from consultants, including Kpler Ltd., Rapidan Energy Group and Rystad Energy A/S.

The entire 23-nation OPEC+ alliance is due to meet Nov. 26 to review production policy for next year.

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