OIL PRODUCTION AND ENERGY CONSUMPTION: IS OPEC A BLESSING OR IMPEDIMENT TO THE NIGERIAN OIL AND GAS INDUSTRY?

Vincent O. ADEDARA, E. K. ADETIFA

Abstract


The impact of oil in Nigeria could either be a blessing or impediment as this can be seen as two sides of a coinbecause of the blessings of oil industry to the economy of Nigeria, it has assisted in increased export and revenuegeneration which has been used for developmental purposes while impediments cannot be ruled out as a result ofneglects in the developments of other sectors of the economy like Agriculture, manufacturing and sea mining.Nigeria is one of the Top 12 oil producers as of 2001 and Nigeria occupies the 8th position concerning crude oilreserves, thanks to OPEC objectives. The role played by OPEC in regulating production, export and reserve hadbeen a blessing rather than curse to Nigeria oil industry. Currently, there is a shift towards alternative energysources, future technological projection, environmental awareness, and the sources of our energy are comingunder closer scrutiny and this has led to the rise of many alternative energy sources because of lower emissions,lower fuel prices and the reduction of pollution are all advantages that the use of alternative fuels can oftenprovide and this is a paradigm shift and an impediment to oil production and revenue from it as well as dangerto future oil production as conflicts and pandemic had contributed to the threat, similarly, failure on the part ofNigerian government to institutionally support diversification of other sectors is the real impediment, not ourmembership of OPEC and these are the issues this article intends to discuss so as to explore diversification ofother sectors for meaningful contribution to the country’s economy. The method adopted is doctrinal; theapproach is analytical and comparative while the purpose is both descriptive and normative.

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