Nigeria’s oil and gas reserves are running out – NNPC

NNPC has painted a gloomy outlook for Nigeria’s economic fortunes, as it disclosed that the country’s crude oil and gas reserves were fast depleting.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation [NNPC] has predicted doom for the nation’s oil and gas industry.

NNPC, in a statement in Abuja, painted a gloomy picture for Nigeria’s economic fortunes, saying that the country’s crude oil and gas reserves were fast depleting.

The national oil assets manager, therefore, begged oil and gas exploration companies, professionals and other stakeholders to focus on increasing the nation’s oil and gas reserve base.

This, according to them, is to match national aspirations to increase oil production.

The NNPC Group Managing Director, Mr. Maikanti Baru disclosed this when the Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists [NAPE], hosted him in Abuja.

Mr. Baru expressed readiness of the NNPC to partner with stakeholders in the oil and gas industry to grow the nation’s fast depleting reserves.

This, in his words, is in order to increase productivity in the petroleum sector.

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He said: “Our national gas demand forecast to year 2020, domestic plus export, indicates a rapid growth to 15 billion Standard Cubic Feet per day (bscfd).

“Meaning [that] current reserves level can only sustain that production for 35 years, if we do not increase the 2bscfd gas reserves base which require three trillion cubic feet (tcf) to replace production yearly.”

It was also revealed that the country’s drive for industrialization risks being truncated.

Mr. Baru indicated this, saying that the country’s aspirations were to increase oil production to four million barrels per day.

It also aspires to meet gas demand of 15 billion standard cubic feet per day, bscfd, by 2020, required for industrialization and consumption.

He further lamented that less than three per cent of all oil wells drilled in the Niger Delta Basin, both onshore and swamp, were deeper than 15,000 feet.

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He added that a greater number of these wells had not gone beyond the 10,000 feet as a high pressure regime seemed to be a limiting factor.

However, he stated that “some of our earlier drilled non-commercial holes could be turned around if we deploy requisite technologies.

“We need to change our perspective of risk as technology is advancing.”

Baru further explained that the 2016 national average oil production of 1.9 million barrels was low, partly due to oil infrastructure vandalism.

He stressed the need for stakeholders to share data and use common available resources to reduce cost of operations in the area of rig-sharing, vessel sharing and synergy in projects development.

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He further stated that this had become even expedient in this era of low oil prices and security challenges.

On frontier exploration, Baru said the NNPC was progressing in exploration efforts in the Chad Basin, the Benue trough and other frontier basins to shore up the reserve base of the country. 

In his own presentation, NAPE President, Mr. Nosa Omorodion towed the line of thought of Mr. Baru.

He said that the association was ready to support NNPC in its drive to grow reserves towards increased production in all the frontier basins.

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