Although output recovered modestly in April at 1.49 mbpd and May at 1.45 mbpd, Nigeria remained under its OPEC ceiling until June, when crude production edged up to 1.51 mbpd, marginally exceeding the quota. The country sustained this momentum in July, producing 1.51 mbpd, before slipping below the threshold again in the following months.

As 2026 progresses, expectations are that Nigeria will ramp up crude production, especially as the Dangote refinery announced it has reached its full capacity of 650,000 barrels per day.

Meanwhile, the new Chief Executive of the NUPRC, Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan, has pledged to increase oil production. In a statement issued by the commission’s Head of Media and Strategic Communication, Eniola Akinkuotu, the NUPRC boss said her vision for the upstream sector rests on three pillars: production optimisation and revenue expansion; regulatory predictability and speed; and safe, governed and sustainable operations.

According to her, the agenda aligns with President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda and the administration’s plan to grow Nigeria’s crude oil production to 2 mbpd by 2027 and 3 mbpd by 2030.

Eyesan said the commission would pursue production and revenue growth by recovering shut-in volumes with economic value, arresting natural field decline, reducing losses, and accelerating time-to-first oil, without imposing additional regulatory burdens or transaction costs on operators.

PUNCH.