Should Northern Nigeria Explore Oil and Gas? By Dr. Ahmed Adamu
The Nigerian government plans to
spend N39.4 Billion to undertake geological and geophysical surveys in
an effort to explore the prospect of oil and gas deposits in the
Inland-Basin of Lake Chad and upper Benue Trough. This is provided in
the proposed 2016 budget, presently awaiting National Assembly’s
approval, and have so far provoked political reactions from some
politicians. However, none have professionally react to it.
This is a ticklish issue as it involves investing huge amount of scarce
resource on uncertain venture, and at a time when the oil and gas prices
are below economic benchmarks. It will cost up to $15 million to drill a
single exploration well, and you will need a number of them depending
on the reserve spread. This investment will have to be recouped after
development and production. What determines when to explore and recovery
of investment cost is largely the oil price. Recently, Genel Energy PLC
requested for extension of its exploration licence in Ethiopia, so as
to put off the exploration drilling and save some cash due to the
dwindling oil and gas prices, which makes the exploration unviable at
the prevailing oil price.
This tells us that, it is not the right time to start new exploration,
and Nigeria being heavily reliant on oil revenue would of course want to
reduce the supply to help push the oil price up. Similarly, with the
growing poverty and scarcity within the economy, the Nigerian government
does not need to spend a single dollar to explore new reserves. The oil
companies shall be able to cover the prospect risk and pay for the
exploration costs. This is practiced in many countries, where oil
companies fund the exploration cost as part of the joint venture
agreement. So, in the joint venture or service agreements, if no
commercial oil is found, the loss falls entirely on the oil company, and
the government does not lose anything.
Even though, there is still a promising future for the fossil fuels
across the world, and in countries like Nigeria, it will continue to
dominate the energy mix up to 50 years to come. Therefore, careful
decision has to be made on what, where, how and for whom to produce the
oil and gas resources. The oil dependence made Nigeria to currently
suffer from Dutch disease, and investment has to be redirected toward
the manufacturing, industrial, agricultural and technological sectors to
offset the demand gap in the currency market and boost productivity and
investment.
It is not the right time to spend on uncertain explorations especially
of a volatile resources, and the fact that oil exploration wells may not
clearly provide exact estimate of commercial quantity of the deposits,
which questions the oil investment viability. The market conditions may
not be as expected, because oil prices are known to be extremely
volatile, and new discoveries from the shale reserves have already
saturated the market. Any further discovery will push the supply curve
outward, which may not be good for the poor oil producing countries.
Similarly, due to the long lead time in petroleum exploration and
development, when an oil field is brought online for production, the oil
price may be lower than expected. On the other hand, the costs could be
higher than expected because of inflation in engineering and
procurement of raw materials and equipment, which explains the cost
run-up in the past several years. So, even if the Nigerian government
will have to explore and produce more oil resources, it should not take
the prospect and commercial risks absolutely, and should not explore at
any oil price below $40 per barrel. The money should be redirected for
diversification incentive, infrastructural development, and social
welfare for the development of the real sector of the economy.
Ahmed Adamu, Ph.D., is a Development and Petroleum Economist and the Chairperson of the Commonwealth Youth Council (CYC).
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