Nigeria Misses ₦28 Trillion Oil Windfall Amid Low Output, Subsidy Burden — Expert

Related Articles

Advertisement:

Nigeria may have forfeited an estimated ₦28.3 trillion in potential revenue due to low oil production and ongoing subsidy obligations, despite the recent surge in global crude prices triggered by the Iran conflict, according to Dele Oye, Chairman of the Alliance for Economic Research and Ethics.

Oye, who also served as the immediate past Chairman of the Organised Private Sector of Nigeria, said the country failed to convert high oil prices into fiscal gains. “When crude soared past $100 per barrel, other nations capitalized on the windfall. Nigeria, however, remained largely on the sidelines. On paper, we should have realized a ₦28.3 trillion boost, but production gaps and structural inefficiencies kept our pockets empty,” he explained.

He noted that Nigeria currently produces 1.46 million barrels per day, well below the 1.84 million bpd target, leaving a daily shortfall of 380,000 barrels. Much of the country’s crude is already committed to creditors and refineries, while the national subsidy regime further drains potential revenue. “Even during periods when prices were exceptionally high, much of the extra revenue remained a mirage,” Oye said.

Oye added that even a portion of the lost windfall could have been deployed to address critical sectors, including establishing a strategic petroleum reserve, subsidizing fertilizers ahead of the planting season, expanding compressed natural gas (CNG) usage, rehabilitating refineries, and providing targeted support to vulnerable households. “Without addressing production shortfalls, these opportunities remain largely theoretical,” he noted.

He urged the federal government to focus on long-term resilience rather than temporary fixes, recommending measures such as selling crude to local refineries in naira, digitizing fertilizer distribution, introducing flexible fuel taxes, scaling up CNG and LPG adoption, securing oil assets to close the production gap, and ring-fencing windfalls into the Sovereign Wealth Fund and Excess Crude Account. Oye warned against over-reliance on high oil prices, stating, “Oil booms are fleeting. The real test is whether Nigeria can build an economy resilient enough to thrive in both boom and bust cycles.”

GNA TV News is the news and television organ of the Great Nigeria Assembly. www.greatnigerian.org

For news, events, celebrity profiles, organization profiles, birthdays, pacesetters, and much more, please contact info@greatnigerian.org. You can also join our WhatsApp group here.

Are you a Nigerian professional interested in moving Nigeria forward through unique contributions, innovation, and ideas? Join us at the Great Nigerian Assembly (GNA), a global coalition of professionals in Nigeria who are dedicated to leveraging skills, knowledge, and capabilities to improve members and foster unity, advancement, and the rule of law and equity in Nigeria. We are a non-political, non-government, non-religious, and not-for-profit organization. We operate through 16 professional groups covering power, infrastructure, agriculture, information technology, tourism, housing, good governance, health, and transportation. Other programs include GNA Pacesetter, Global Conference, GNA Youth, GNA Business, and GNA Grassroots &State chapters. Join Us Now to make that difference.

Your organization or association can partner with us Become our Partner || GNA

You can join the Great Nigerian Assembly here  Join GNA || GNA

More on this topic

Comments

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here
Captcha verification failed!
CAPTCHA user score failed. Please contact us!

Popular stories

Advertisement: