Nigeria’s oil sector recorded its strongest production performance of 2026 in April, as the country moved closer to fully meeting its OPEC production quota amid renewed momentum across major upstream assets.
Latest figures released by the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) showed that Nigeria produced a combined average of 1.663 million barrels per day of crude oil and condensates in April, up from 1.546 million barrels per day recorded in March.
Crude oil production alone stood at 1.488 million barrels daily, representing about 99.2 percent of Nigeria’s 1.5 million barrels per day OPEC quota. The commission also reported a 7.58 percent month-on-month increase in total liquids production, with output fluctuating between a low of 1.46 million barrels and a peak of 1.85 million barrels per day during the month.
The improvement reflects growing stability across Nigeria’s oil industry despite lingering operational and security challenges in some production corridors. It also signals the impact of ongoing efforts to restore assets, improve efficiency, and expand export capacity.
Among the top-performing crude streams, Bonga recorded 3.06 million barrels in April, while Erha contributed 2.05 million barrels. Anyala-Madu (CJ Blend) posted 1.81 million barrels, Utapate delivered 1.78 million barrels, and Egina produced 1.47 million barrels. The newly introduced Cawthorne crude stream added 929,055 barrels during the month.
On the condensate side, Agbami delivered 2.01 million barrels, Akpo contributed 1.34 million barrels, while Tulja-Okwuibome recorded 304,827 barrels.
The latest figures continue an upward production trend seen since the start of the year and reinforce Nigeria’s broader push to strengthen foreign exchange earnings and increase federation revenues through improved oil output.
Earlier reports had linked the introduction of the Cawthorne export stream to wider efforts aimed at diversifying Nigeria’s crude grades and supporting long-term production growth.
The April rebound follows mixed signals earlier in the year. NUPRC Commission Chief Executive Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan had previously announced that crude oil production rose by about 40.5 percent to 1.84 million barrels per day in March.
The commission also disclosed that domestic refineries received 28.5 million barrels of crude oil in the first quarter of 2026, far below the 61.9 million barrels allocated for the period. Earlier industry data further showed that Nigeria recorded a crude oil and condensate production shortfall of about 16.6 million barrels within the first two months of the year.
Still, April’s performance offers another reminder of the scale of opportunity within Nigeria’s energy sector when production efficiency, asset recovery, and strategic reforms begin to align.