NIGERIA has a lot to do to woo buyers following the decision
of China to ignore crude from Nigeria. This is
happening at a time when the
country has become the biggest casualty of the rising United States shale oil
production.
China is the second
largest consumer of crude oil, and when it does not feature as one of your
regular buyers, you know you have a problem, and Nigerian crude is suffering
because of this. China likes crude oil that is heavy and sweet, as it fits the
appetite of its refineries that produce a lot of fuel oil to keep its
industrial and manufacturing economy running, according to a data from the US
Energy Information Administration, EIA.
The EIA noted that
China also has a lot of complex and sophisticated refineries that can still
produce middle distillates by distilling heavy crude oil, making the refiners
much better margins.
Consequently, China
ignores Nigerian crude for now, as their demand for light sweet crude oil is
very sparse. It is high time Nigeria found a way to attract its crude oil to
China, report said.
In 2014, about 45
percent of Nigerian crude exports went to Europe, according to the EIA data.
But the issue for Nigeria is that it is so dependent on a region where crude
demand is stagnant as a lot of economies are still stumbling and it needs to
find demand in countries that are growing, particularly in Asia.
Nigeria's condition
is made worse by the fact that it has become the biggest casualty of rising
United States shale oil production
Until about seven
years ago, US, which remains the largest oil consumer in the world, used to buy
more than 1 million barrels per day of light sweet Nigerian crude oil, which
was almost 50 percent of Nigerian oil exports at the time. In 2014, only three
percent of Nigerian exports went to the US, according to the same data
published by the US EIA.
Nigeria lost its
biggest buyer, and the reason has been attributed to the dramatic rise in US
shale oil production.
US shale oil is said
to be extremely similar in quality to light sweet Nigerian crude oil, and as
more and more shale basins were discovered in its own backyard, the US did not
need any more oil from Nigeria.
Last year, there
were six weeks in a row starting from early July during which the US did not
import a single barrel of crude oil. This was the first time that the US had
not imported any Nigerian crude oil for such a length of a time, since US EIA
started compiling this data almost four decades ago.
The shale revolution
has had a profound impact on the makeup of the US import market, which has, by
extension, greatly altered the direction of crude flows both within Europe and
to Asia. Nigeria has been the biggest casualty of this, it noted.
However, India has
the largest buyer of Nigerian crude, which has been one of the positives for
the West African country in the last few years. But demand from India for
Nigerian crudes is slightly on the wane as its demand for Latin American crudes
is growing sharply.
India is also the
largest buyer of Venezuelan crudes, and with refineries getting more and more
complex in the sub-continent, their demand for light sweet crudes is expected
to tail off.
The world's largest
refinery complex situated in Jamnagar in the western state of Gujarat in India,
operated by Reliance, runs primarily on heavy crudes, dominated largely by
crudes from the Middle East and Latin America.
China shuns Nigeria’s oil
Reviewed by Vita Ioanes
on
Monday, June 22, 2015
Rating:
Reviewed by Vita Ioanes
on
Monday, June 22, 2015
Rating:


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