Nigeria’s oil production performance in November 2025 has taken a noticeable downturn, with total crude and condensate output dropping to 1.599 million barrels per day (bpd). This represents a 5.9 percent year-on-year decline from the 1.698 million bpd recorded in November 2024, according to the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC).
Production Details and Context
The NUPRC’s December 2025 Crude Oil and Condensate Production Report shows that the nation’s daily average output in November was 1,599,054 bpd, which includes 1,436,005 bpd of crude oil and 163,049 bpd of condensate. During the month, production fluctuated between a low of 1.54 million bpd and a peak of 1.79 million bpd.
On a month-on-month basis, the figures also reflect a drop, as output fell from 1.698 million bpd in October 2025 to 1.599 million bpd in November 2025, underscoring a short-term contraction in the upstream sector.
Despite the decline, Nigeria’s average output for November hovered around 96 percent of its OPEC quota of 1.5 million bpd, indicating that production remained broadly aligned with the country’s officially approved quota limits.
What This Means for Nigeria’s Oil Sector
Nigeria’s oil sector remains a critical pillar of the national economy, contributing significantly to foreign exchange earnings, government revenue, and export earnings. A drop in output, therefore, has broader economic implications:
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Revenue Impact: Lower production directly affects export volumes, which in turn can reduce foreign exchange inflows—potentially tightening fiscal space.
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Economic Growth: Given oil’s outsized role in government budgets and balance-of-payments support, prolonged dips in output could slow economic growth or pressure external accounts.
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OPEC Compliance: Compliance with Nigeria’s OPEC quota can be a double-edged sword: while it helps stabilise international oil markets, it can also mask underlying production inefficiencies when output remains just below or near quota levels.
Underlying Challenges and Sector Dynamics
Nigeria’s oil production has faced persistent challenges throughout 2025, including maintenance issues, infrastructure bottlenecks, and periodic disruptions. Earlier data showed production figures below quota levels in previous months, with modest fluctuations reflecting the sector’s volatility.
Security concerns such as pipeline vandalism and oil theft also continue to disrupt production and export operations intermittently. These issues, combined with ageing infrastructure and logistical constraints, frequently strain upstream performance.
Government and Industry Response
To counter production dips, stakeholders in Nigeria’s energy sector—government regulators, NNPC Ltd, and international partners—have intensified efforts to stabilise and grow output. Investments in field development, maintenance of critical infrastructure, and upstream capacity expansions are ongoing, even as the sector grapples with cyclical challenges.
In recent months, there were high-profile operational achievements in parts of Nigeria’s upstream segment, although overall national production figures indicate the need for sustained interventions to reach higher and more consistent output levels.
Looking Ahead
Nigeria’s medium- and long-term oil production strategy targets higher output levels—aiming for steady recovery and eventual growth beyond current levels. Plans under the Petroleum Industry Act and broader energy sector reforms are expected to attract investment, improve operational efficiency, and boost production capacity in the coming years.
However, in the short term, maintaining stable production above 1.6 million bpd and aligning operational performance with global oil market dynamics will be critical for our national economic resilience and fiscal stability.

