A more dangerous dimension might be setting in for the Nigerian economy as the price of crude oil which is used as Brent, the benchmark for the country’s Bonny light, has fallen by 20 percent to $18 per barrel.
The drop, sparked by a perfect storm of COVID-19-fuelled demand destruction and dwindling global crude storage facilities, is unlike anything markets have ever seen.
The unit cost of production of crude oil onshore is put at $20 per barrel while that of deepwater is put at $30 in Nigeria. Her budget benchmark was initially $57 per barrel with a daily production of about 2.3 million barrels per day.
This benchmark was however reviewed to $30 per a barrel after the price came crashing alarmingly.
About 50 cargoes carrying Nigeria crude totaling approximately 50 million barrels are roaming about on the international waters across the globe without buyers.
Yesterday, the oil market witnessed a historic crash when the West Texas Intermediate US benchmark settled at -$37.
The coronavirus has severely reduced oil demand around the world due to large declines in airline, car, shipping, and trucking traffic as well as manufacturing.
Demand for crude oil is projected to fall by 29 million barrels per day this month, according to the International Energy Administration, as COVID-19 has forced countries around the world to issue “stay-at-home” orders to slow the spread of the disease. Lower economic activity means weaker demand for crude oil and its byproducts, including gasoline and jet fuel.
Supertankers are in high demand and often left idling offshore as on-shore facilities are out of space. In the North Sea, for example, vessels have been parked for days, loaded with gasoline and jet fuel with nowhere to go.
Even the world’s largest oil storage firm, Vopak, which operates three main facilities in Singapore, Rotterdam and Fujairah, is saying they’re at capacity.
Gerard Paulides, the chief financial officer of Rotterdam-based Royal Vopak NV, noted that “For Vopak, worldwide available capacity that is not in maintenance is almost all gone and from what I hear elsewhere in the world we’re not the only ones.”
In addition to the storage crisis and COVID-19-fuelled demand destruction, Oilprice.com reported that a wave of oil from Saudi Arabia was heading to US shores. And with little commercial space available, the additional crude could potentially force deeper production cuts in the US shale patch in the coming months, an issue that has been the centre of a heated debate in Texas.
Meanwhile, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has held a virtual meeting with the representatives of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank.
The meeting, anchored via videoconferencing from the Presidential Villa, deliberated on how the agencies could collaborate with Nigeria in the planned additional economic stimulus packages to address the fallout of COVID-19 pandemic.
President Muhammadu Buhari had on March 30, set up the Economic Sustainability Committee (ESC) headed by the vice president to develop a clear economic sustainability plan until 2023.
The committee was tasked with identifying fiscal and monetary measures to enhance oil and non-oil revenues in order to fund the plan; develop a stimulus package and come up with measures to create more jobs while keeping existing ones.
Buhari had also approved an initial economic stimulus package of N500 billion.
The global economy is expected to go into recession in 2020 while the IMF has predicted that Nigeria will go into recession to a level of negative 3.4 per cent.