Ike Amos
28 February 2017, Sweetcrude, Abuja — Secretary-General of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC, Mr. Mohammed Barkindo, yesterday, stated that Nigeria’s survival of the low oil price regime was a miracle.
Speaking during a visit to the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources in Abuja, Mr. Ibe Kachikwu, Barkindo commended the giant strides the country had made within this troubling period in the global petroleum industry.
He maintained that confidence had returned to the Nigerian petroleum industry, due largely to the decisions reached last year by OPEC and non-OPEC member countries.
He said, “We have gone through the worst energy cycle in recent memory. Some of us who have been around for a quite a while have witnessed all these five cycles and it is a consensus in terms of the gravity of these cycles, prices have crashed by over 80 percent from the fall of 2014 to January 2016.
“How you survived as a government as an institution under this great industry remains a miracle. I have visited all other countries and I have seen how they are struggling.
“But you have weathered the storm; I think the worst is behind us thanks to your (Nigeria’s) leadership in the run up to the historic agreement of last year, beginning with the Algiers Accord on the 20 of September.”
“I have been visiting many countries over this period, and I have seen firsthand how they have been struggling. However, here, I think probably we have not sold our achievements effectively, wildly and efficiently.”
He, however, lamented that due to the crash in the price of crude oil, Nigeria as well as other OPEC member countries have lost about $1 trillion since the oil price crash, from deferred projects and outright cancellations across the supply chain, upstream, midstream, downstream.
He said, “This is the greatest threat that is facing future supply —the security of supply. Our industry is capital intensive; we make consistent investments in order not only to maintain current production but to take care of reserves that would produce as well as to secure security of future supply.”
Barkindo declared that OPEC, with the cooperation of non-OPEC countries, are on the course of pulling the petroleum industry out of the worst recession it had entered to restore stability to the market on a sustainable basis that would allow investment to come back on a continuous basis.
He applauded the effort of Nigeria in addressing the lingering issue of Joint Venture Cash Call, stating that over the years, previous administrations had battled to address the issues without success.
He said, “Many of my colleagues that we served together would testify that government after government, we had battled with this issue continuously without solutions.
“But the day I got the information that you have been able to overcome this issue that has beleaguered this industry as well as government, I think you made my day and those of participants in the industry who know the battle of previous governments over the issue.
The approach has been innovative, the solution is very practical. You are clearing an overhang of debt that is too high, yet maintaining the level of production and also focusing on an incremental growth that would continue to sustain not only the industry but the domestic economy.”