Crude oil price falls below $85, IMF sends warning to Nigeria
December 27,2022
The global crude oil price has continued to hover around $75 to $84 per barrel in the last few weeks and experts believe it could drop below $50 in the coming months.
Brent, the global benchmark for crude on the early hours of Tuesday traded at $84.80 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was at $80.44.
This is the highest level, the two benchmarks touched since Dec. 5 indicating a change in global oil prices
This means that Nigeria has ultimately missed its chance in earning huge oil revenue when the price was above $100 per barrel.
When oil prices hit $100 per barrel or more, Nigeria struggled to produce enough oil to sell and fell farther down the list of Africa’s major oil producers.
It was only recently that the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited announced that oil production had picked up.
However, IMF sent a warning that Nigeria and other oil-producing countries in Sub-Saharan Africa should expect dwindling oil revenues in the coming years as the world transitions from fossil fuels to cleaner energy
In a new report titled “Savings from Oil Revenues Could Help Africa’s Producers Manage Price Swings,” the fund said oil exporters in sub-Saharan Africa should target buffers of around 5 to 10 per cent of gross domestic product to manage large swings in oil prices
It means Nigeria would need to maintain annual fiscal surpluses of at least one per cent per annum over a 10-year period.
IMF’s latest Regional Economic Outlook showed that oil prices have fluctuated from lows of $23 per barrel to a peak of $120 in the last two years, resulting in highly uncertain revenues in oil-dependent economies.
According to the report, most oil exporters in the region have not accumulated enough savings to insure against unpredictable oil price changes.
It added that sovereign wealth funds in sub-Saharan Africa hold assets of just 1.8 per cent of gross domestic product, compared to 72 per cent in the Middle East and North Africa, forcing countries to borrow or draw down financial assets whenever oil prices fall.
The report read in part, “As a result, in the decade through 2020, the region’s oil producers have grown over two percentage points slower per year than non-resource intensive countries. Debt service costs have also been almost twice as high as in other sub-Saharan African countries.
“Moreover, as countries transition to low-carbon energy sources, oil revenues could sharply decline. By 2030, oil revenues in the region could fall by as much as a quarter and by 2050, by half. Building buffers now would help the region’s oil exporters navigate the transition toward clean energy while managing oil price fluctuations