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Economy

IEA Releases 400 million Barrels from Crude Stockpiles to Calm Oil Crisis

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Brent crude futures

By Adedapo Adesanya

The International Energy Agency (IEA) has ordered the largest release of government oil reserves in its history to help calm the oil price crisis triggered by the US-Israel attacks on Iran.

The world’s energy watchdog said its 32 members had agreed unanimously to release about 400 million barrels of emergency crude, which is over 30 per cent of the group’s total government stockpiles.

Members of the IEA, which was set up after the Middle East oil crisis in the 1970s, are required to hold at least 90 days’ worth of crude supplies in reserve, which can be released to the market in the event of a supply shock.

In total, its members hold more than 1.2 billion barrels of public emergency oil stocks and a further 600 million barrels of stocks held by industry under government obligation.

The latest emergency intervention is bigger than the release of 182 million barrels of oil by IEA countries after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

The IEA said the emergency stocks would be made available to the global market, which has lost about 15 million barrels of crude a day because of a block on trade via the Strait of Hormuz, over a timeframe appropriate to the national circumstances of each member, bolstered by supplementary emergency measures from some countries.

The IEA executive director, Mr Fatih Birol, said: “Oil markets are global, so the response to major disruptions needs to be global, too. Energy security is the founding mandate of the IEA, and I am pleased that IEA members are showing strong solidarity in taking decisive action together.”

Although no G7 countries have faced physical shortages of oil since the war began last month, the price of Brent crude has fluctuated wildly, briefly jumping as high as $119.50 a barrel on Monday. As of press time, it is up 4 per cent at $92 per barrel.

The historic market intervention will deliver the equivalent of about 26 days of crude typically delivered via the strait, where deliveries have ground to a halt because of the threat of attack from Iran.

On Wednesday, three commercial vessels were attacked as Iran’s military said the world should be prepared for oil to hit $200 a barrel.

Adedapo Adesanya is a journalist, polymath, and connoisseur of everything art. When he is not writing, he has his nose buried in one of the many books or articles he has bookmarked or simply listening to good music with a bottle of beer or wine. He supports the greatest club in the world, Manchester United F.C.

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Economy

NNPC Allocates More Crude Cargoes to Dangote Refinery

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NNPC vs Dangote refinery

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited has allocated seven cargoes to the Dangote Refinery and Petrochemicals for May 2026, up from five in previous months, to boost fuel production and ease rising costs.

The 650,000 barrels per day Dangote Refinery, which is responsible for over 60 per cent of domestic supply, has not been able to get its expected feedstock from the national oil company under the Crude-for-Naira initiative. It has received about 40 per cent of local feedstock in recent months, according to the chief executive of the oil refinery, Mr David Bird.

He said the refinery currently gets only about five cargoes of crude monthly, against an expected 13 to 15 cargoes, noting that this was below its agreed crude oil supply under the federal government’s Crude-for-Naira arrangement.

Business Post reports that the majority of Nigeria’s crude production is tied to Joint Venture (JV) contracts, which constrain the optimal supply of crude oil to the Dangote Refinery.

According to Reuters, an unnamed senior Dangote official said, “NNPC has allocated more cargoes to Dangote for May,” adding that, “While this will not completely meet our demands, it can help. We are also in negotiation with NNPC for more volumes.”

The increase in crude allocations to the 650,000 barrel per day refinery could also curb volumes of Nigerian crude available for export at a time when ​the Iran war has drastically cut supply from the Middle East.

Due to the shortfall in the crude-for-Naira policy, the company will still have to purchase crude at international benchmark prices. The company sources crude from Brazil, Equatorial Guinea, Angola, Algeria, and the US, among others.

The official said Dangote ⁠recently had to pay premiums as high as $18 a barrel over the Brent crude benchmark to secure cargoes from the international ​market.

Since NNPC cargoes are cheaper for the ​refinery because of lower ​shipping costs. This could translate to higher fuel prices with Nigerians buying as high as N1,300 – N1,400 at the pump.

Fuel prices in Nigeria have reached record ⁠highs as Dangote has had to increase petrol depot prices by about 13 per cent in the last month.

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Economy

Growth in Nigeria’s Private Sector Slows as Fuel Costs Raise Prices

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nigeria's private sector

By Aduragbemi Omiyale

The Nigerian private sector witnessed a contraction in growth in March 2026, as higher fuel costs triggered by the war in Iran, instigated by the United States and Israel, led to a steep intensification of inflationary pressures.

According to the Stanbic IBTC Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for the month, it stood at 51.9 points compared with 53.2 points recorded in February 2026.

In the period under review, output growth was only modest, but underlying demand reportedly remained resilient, leading to a further sharp rise in new orders. In turn, firms continued to expand their employment and purchasing activity.

The PMI numbers in the first quarter of this year have been consistent with an estimated 3.99 per cent y/y GDP growth for the quarter, after also accounting for the crude oil sector’s performance.

The Nigerian economy is now growing by 4.22 per cent y/y in 2026, from 3.87 per cent y/y in 2025, with the oil sector growth slowing to 3.01 per cent y/y from 8.50 per cent y/y in the preceding year. The non-oil sector’s growth is expected at 4.24 per cent y/y in 2026, from 3.71 per cent y/y in 2025, likely driven primarily by services, which we see growing by 5.64 per cent y/y in 2026 versus 4.14 per cent y/y in 2025.

“While higher fuel costs and power supply issues contributed to a slowdown in the growth of Nigeria’s private sector activity, underlying demand remains strong. This is reflected in an increase in customer demand and the associated impact of new product launches, both of which supported an improvement in new orders.

“Businesses also remained optimistic about increases in future output amid their plans to invest in business expansions and boost promotional efforts. Nonetheless, input prices rose markedly at the sharpest pace since January 2025, with all four monitored sectors seeing sharper rates of inflation,” the Head of Equity Research West Africa at Stanbic IBTC Bank, Muyiwa Oni, commented.

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Economy

Illicit Flows Cost Africa $88bn Yearly—Edun

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Illicit Money Flows

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr Wale Edun, has raised concern over Africa’s mounting revenue losses, warning that the continent forfeits an estimated $88 billion annually to illicit financial flows (IFFs), a development he described as a critical threat to sustainable growth.

Speaking at the 5th Session of the Sub-Committee on Tax and Illicit Financial Flows of the African Union on Tuesday in Abuja, Mr Edun said the persistent outflows continue to deprive African countries of vital resources required for infrastructure, healthcare, and overall economic development.

The high-level meeting, held at Transcorp Hilton Abuja, brought together policymakers, tax administrators, and development partners to examine strategies for strengthening fiscal systems amid evolving global economic uncertainties.

Mr Edun stressed the need for African countries to reduce reliance on external financing sources such as debt, aid, and foreign investment, noting that these options are becoming increasingly unpredictable. He maintained that domestic resource mobilisation must serve as the foundation for long-term economic sustainability.

“Our ambition is to finance up to 90 per cent of Africa’s development needs from domestic resources,” he said, referencing the continent’s Agenda 2063 development framework.

He identified structural challenges, including tax evasion, weak institutional capacity, and limited economic diversification, as key impediments, while emphasising that curbing illicit financial flows remains central to unlocking Africa’s fiscal potential.

Highlighting ongoing reforms under President Bola Tinubu, Mr Edun noted that measures such as tax system reforms, fuel subsidy removal, and exchange rate unification are beginning to improve revenue performance and boost investor confidence.

He added that initiatives like the National Single Window are helping to reduce trade-related leakages, while enhanced international tax cooperation is supporting efforts to recover lost revenues. He also cited Executive Order 9 as a key policy aimed at strengthening transparency in the oil and gas sector.

Calling for broader continental action, Mr Edun urged African nations to expand their tax base, strengthen public financial management systems, and deepen financial inclusion. He listed institutional strengthening, digital infrastructure investment, and cross-border collaboration as critical reform priorities.

“The question is no longer whether we must reform, but how urgently and how boldly we act,” he said, warning that failure to act could leave African economies exposed to external shocks.

On his part, the Executive Chairman of the Nigeria Revenue Service, Mr Zacch Adedeji, called for urgent steps to safeguard domestic resources and address widening financing gaps across the continent.

Mr Adedeji noted that illicit financial flows ranging from tax evasion and trade mispricing to aggressive tax avoidance continue to weaken Africa’s capacity to fund critical sectors such as infrastructure, healthcare, and education.

“Every year, billions meant for development are lost through illegal financial transfers. These are lost hospitals, lost schools, and lost opportunities,” he said.

He stressed that the cross-border nature of illicit flows requires coordinated responses at both national and continental levels, adding that Nigeria is pursuing reforms to modernise revenue administration through expanded tax coverage, improved compliance, and digital innovation.

According to him, efficient and transparent tax systems are essential not only for revenue generation but also for strengthening public trust in government institutions.

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