ABUJA and LONDON (Bloomberg) -- Nigeria is about to ship the first
cargo of crude oil from a new deposit about 90 mi off its coast.
The 1 MMbbl consignment, which will head toward the Dutch port of
Rotterdam, comes at a tricky moment for the West African country, given a
pledge it has made to OPEC and other oil producing countries to help
them avert a glut of crude.
The tanker, the Achilleas, will export from a mooring linked
to the Total SA-operated Egina field. When fully up and running, the
European oil company anticipates flows reaching about 200,000 bopd.
The kind of crude is exactly the variety the oil market needs, but is
also the kind that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
doesn’t. It has an API gravity of 2.73° degrees, making it a so-called
medium grade, and a very low sulfur content of 0.165%, according to
Total marketing literature seen by Bloomberg. That will make it
invaluable for making fuels that comply with International Maritime
Organization rules to restrict shipping’s sulfur emissions starting next
year.
The extra barrels come just as the country is supposed to be lowering
its output by 53,000 bopd in the first half of this year as part of a
wider initiative by OPEC and allied nations to restrict collective
supplies. It’s supposed to pump about 1.685 MMbopd in the first half of
2019. In January, it averaged 1.792 MMbopd, according to OPEC figures.
Nigeria’s Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Emmanuel Kachikwu
has suggested the oil might be classified as a condensate -- a much
lighter, more gasoline-rich oil that’s not bound by the OPEC+ curbs.
Condensates are hydocarbons that are gases at reservoir temperature
and pressure, but condense into liquids at the surface. There is no
simple way to distinguish crude and condensate once they have been
extracted, as the definition relates to the type of field from which
they are produced. Condensate comes from gas fields, crude from oil
fields.
OPEC agreed a technical definition of condensates in 1988 that is
based on API gravity, the ratio of gas to liquids in the production
stream and the composition of that stream.
Condensates normally have an API gravity above 45° (the higher the
number, the lighter the oil). To put the 27.3 figure into context, even
Brent and West Texas Intermediate crudes are both around 40 API, making
them lighter than Egina.
In its January press release announcing the start of production from
Egina, Total made no mention of gas, suggesting that the gas:oil ratio
may be fairly low. That would reduce the likelihood of Egina meeting
OPEC’s requirements for classifying its output as condensate.
If that is indeed the case, then Nigeria may have a decision to make
when Egina really gets going: cut output elsewhere to adhere to its OPEC
pledge, or not.
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