• July 13, 2026

In a statement signed by Eniola Akinkuotu, Head of Media and Corporate Communications at the NUPRC, the regulator said Nigeria produced an average of 1.56 million barrels of crude oil per day (bpd) in June 2026, surpassing its OPEC production quota of 1.5 million bpd by about 4%.

With condensate production averaging approximately 180,000 bpd, Nigeria’s combined crude oil and condensate output reached 1.735 million bpd during the month.

The June performance marks the fourth consecutive month of production growth and represents Nigeria’s highest crude oil output since April 2020, making it a 74-month high.

The achievement is a notable turnaround for Africa’s largest oil producer, which has spent years battling crude oil theft, pipeline vandalism, underinvestment, and operational disruptions that frequently kept production below its OPEC allocation.

According to the NUPRC, the improved performance was driven by stable production operations across most producing assets and the absence of major pipeline outages during the review period.

The regulator said the improved operational environment boosted production uptime and enhanced crude evacuation efficiency, enabling operators to sustain higher output levels.

Nigeria’s combined crude oil and condensate production peaked at 1.89 million bpd during June, while the lowest daily production recorded during the month was 1.57 million bpd.

The figures underscore the country’s growing capacity to move closer to the federal government’s long-standing target of producing 2 million bpd.

The latest production data also strengthens Nigeria’s standing within OPEC at a time when several member countries are gradually unwinding voluntary output cuts.

Source: africabusinessinsider

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