MENU
Nigeria’s gas production hits 7.6 bscfd — NUPRC
By Lucy Emenike
Published on 30/08/2025 21:03
Business

Nigeria’s gas production figure rose to an average of 7.59 billion standard cubic feet in July, according to a report by the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission.

In a statement on its social media handles on Saturday, NUPRC said Nigeria achieved a rare energy milestone in July as gas flaring fell to 7.16 per cent.

“The simultaneous growth in output and decline in flaring underscores the commission’s drive to boost production while advancing its 2030 zero-flare commitment,” the statement said.

The commission noted that Nigeria’s gas industry has sustained steady growth over the past three years, with daily average production hitting 7.59 bscf.

This, it said, marked an 8.58 per cent increase compared to the 6.99 bscfd recorded in the full year of 2024.

“The 7.59 bscfd daily average also represents a 9.84 per cent increase from the 6.91 bscfd posted in the full year of 2023, which shows a sustained rise in gas production.

“Despite an increase in production, the Commission also reported a continued reduction in gas flaring, which fell to 7.16 per cent in July 2025, down from 7.55 per cent in 2024 and 7.38 per cent in the corresponding period of 2023,” the statement read partly.

It was stated that the reduction in gas flaring despite the steady increase in gas production reflected the commission’s commitment to end routine gas flaring by 2030.

The commission disclosed that it had embarked on gas reduction programmes like the Nigerian Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme.

Other initiatives include developing a Decarbonisation and Sustainability Blueprint, promoting Carbon Capture and Storage, and integrating sustainability into project planning through the Upstream Petroleum Decarbonisation Template.

In terms of Domestic Gas Delivery Obligation performance, it was reported that the sector delivered 72.5 per cent in July 2025, up from 71.8 per cent in June.

Data from the commission further showed that DGDO performance stood at 72.2 per cent in January; it rose to 73.5 per cent in February and dipped slightly to 70.8 per cent in March before climbing again to 73.7 per cent and 73.0 per cent in April and May, respectively.

On gas production by contract type, 63 per cent of output during the review period came from Marginal Sole Risk (formerly Marginal Fields), while Production Sharing Contracts accounted for 24 per cent.

Joint Venture contracts contributed 10 per cent, and Sole Risk operators delivered the remaining 3 per cent.

Comments
Comment sent successfully!