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“NNPC Remits ₦1.804tn As Oil Production Declines To 1.51mbpd”

Nigeria’s crude oil and condensate production fell to an average of 1.51 million barrels per day (mbpd), in February 2026, reflecting ongoing operational challenges in the upstream oil sector. Despite the production decline, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd), recorded a significant fiscal boost, remitting ₦1.804 trillion to the Federation Account within the same period.

The contrasting trends highlight a critical paradox in Nigeria’s oil economy: declining output versus rising government revenue remittances driven by fiscal reforms and improved revenue retention policies.

Oil Output Decline to 1.51mbpd

Production Figures
Key Causes of the Drop

NNPC attributed the decline to multiple upstream challenges, including:

Structural Issues Behind the Decline

Beyond short-term operational faults, Nigeria’s oil sector continues to face:

These issues have repeatedly prevented Nigeria from sustaining production above the 1.6–1.8mbpd range, despite higher capacity potential.

NNPC Remits ₦1.804 Trillion to Federation Account

Revenue Performance

Despite lower production, NNPC recorded strong financial inflows:

This indicates improved cash flow efficiency even in a low-output environment.

Why Revenue Increased Despite Falling Output

The apparent contradiction is explained by fiscal and policy adjustments:

New Revenue Remittance Policy
Higher Oil Prices and Revenue Efficiency
Even with lower production:

Financial Performance Overview

Interpretation

Broader Economic and Sectoral Implications

Fiscal Dependence

Nigeria continues to rely heavily on NNPC for:

Production Gap Challenge
Infrastructure Risk

The Trans Forcados Pipeline disruption highlights:

Outlook

NNPC has indicated ongoing measures to stabilise output:

If these interventions succeed, Nigeria could see gradual recovery toward the 1.6–1.8mbpd range in the short term, though sustained growth will require structural reforms and security improvements.

Conclusion

The report underscores a key tension in Nigeria’s oil economy:

While the ₦1.804 trillion remittance strengthens fiscal stability, the decline to 1.51mbpd highlights the continued struggle with production efficiency and infrastructure reliability—two factors that remain central to long-term energy sector reform.

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