By Bronson Jayamanna
NIGERIA (CWBN)_ In the midst of the arrangement by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, back in November, Nigeria extended the reduction of oil production to 1.32 million barrels per day.
The new OPEC report on Wednesday revealed that the oil production in Nigeria declined by 1.34 million BPD in October based on real-world correspondence. The average overall OPEC petroleum output in November was 25.11 million BPD, up by 0.71 million BPD in October, according to secondary reports. Furthermore, in the Monthly Oil Report produced by OPEC, it was stated that ‘Crude oil output increased mainly in Libya and UAE, while production decreased primarily in Iraq,”.
In April, OPEC and its partners, identified as OPEC+, decided to a reduction in production to compensate for the collapse in demand and prices triggered by the coronavirus crisis. For May and June, they agreed to slash the output by a staggering 9.7 million BPD, but the contract was prolonged by an additional month in July. Members, like Nigeria, who in May and June did not enforce 100% of their output cuts, were requested to allow further decreases from July to September to adjust for the deficits. However, starting from August through to the end of the year, the OPEC+ reduction of 9.7 million BPD was later trimmed down to 7.7 million BPD.
OPEC+ decided earlier this month to boost their oil output in January by 500,000 BPD steadily. The collective also chose to conduct monthly meetings to focus more on production increases, starting in January, before the overall production growth exceeds two million BPD. The group has also decided to expand the duration of compensation until the end of March 2021 to guarantee maximum reimbursement from all participating countries for excess production.





