Nigeria is set to lose one of its major buyers of crude oil in the
international market which plunges the Nigerian economy into deeper
danger.
Nigeria’s woes in the area of dwindling revenue from crude
oil sales is
expected to heighten in the next couple of days, as the
South African Petroleum Industry Association, SAPIA, yesterday, stated
that South Africa would likely stop importing crude oil from Nigeria
following the lifting of the sanctions on Iran.
Executive Director
of the SAPIA, Avhapfani Tshifularo, told journalists that the potential
return of Iranian oil exports to South Africa threaten to displace
barrels from Saudi Arabia and Nigeria that plugged the supply gap when
sanctions were imposed on Iran, which is OPEC’s fifth biggest producer.
He
said: “The re-emergence of Iranian crude oil provides options for those
willing to buy from Iran. Iranian imports are likely to displace the
Nigerian and Saudi Arabian crudes, since they seem to have filled the
gap since South Africa stopped importing Iranian crude oil.”
Furthermore,
data compiled by SAPIA from refiners showed that South Africa stopped
importing crude oil from Iran in 2013, following which its oil imports
from Nigeria rose significantly, with Saudi Arabia emerging the highest
exporter of crude to the country.
Recent data released by the
National Bureau of Statistics, NBS, had showed that a sharp decline was
recorded in revenue accruable to the Federal Government from the
petroleum sector, as the country’s earnings from crude oil export
dropped to N5.271 trillion for the nine month period, January to
September 2015.
The NBS, in its Foreign Trade Statistics for the
Third Quarter of 2015, had noted that the value of Nigeria’s crude oil
export for the nine month period 2015, represented a decline of 45.39
per cent or N4.381 trillion when compared to crude oil export of N9.652
trillion recorded in the same period in 2014.
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