Nigeria missed its OPEC oil production quota for nine out of thirteen months. Nigeria’s Oil Shortfall Costs N1.76tn in lost revenue. That is not a rounding error. That is a national problem.
The country was supposed to pump 1.5 million barrels per day. It often did not get close. In September 2025, output dropped to just 1.39 million barrels per day. That was the worst month of the year.
When you add it all up, Nigeria fell short by 18.12 million barrels between January 2025 and January 2026.
At an average price of $72.08 per barrel, that shortfall cost $1.31bn. At the prevailing exchange rate of N1,353 to the dollar, the loss comes to N1.76tn.
Let that number sink in.

What Is Driving the Nigeria Oil Shortfall?
This is not a new story. The causes are familiar. Security threats in the Niger Delta. Ageing infrastructure. Operational disruptions. Pipeline vandalism. Theft.
Nigeria did earn roughly N55tn from oil in 2025. That sounds impressive. But the government had planned to produce 766.5 million barrels. It only managed about 599.6 million. That is a gap of 167 million barrels.
Professor Wumi Iledare, an energy expert, put it plainly. Nigeria’s problem is not the price of oil. It is the volume being produced. Plans on paper do not fill pipelines.
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Six Straight Months of Missing the Target
The Nigeria oil shortfall did not ease as the year ended. It got worse. From August 2025 to January 2026, Nigeria missed its OPEC quota for six consecutive months.
In January 2026, output averaged 1.459 million barrels per day. That left a daily shortfall of 41,000 barrels. For the full month, that was 1.27 million barrels short of target.
The 2026 budget was built on projections of 1.84 million barrels per day. January’s figures are not a good start.
What Needs to Happen Now
Iledare is clear on what must change. Security around oil assets must improve. Regulatory approvals need to move faster. Shut-in wells need to reopen. Maintenance investment must increase.
He singled out the Independent Petroleum Producers Group. They have the ability to reopen dormant wells in onshore and shallow-water basins. With the right policy incentives, that could deliver real production gains quickly.
The new head of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan, has pledged action. Her agenda focuses on production optimisation, regulatory speed, and sustainable operations. She has set her sights on 2 million barrels per day by 2027 and 3 million by 2030.
Those are bold targets. Whether they are realistic depends entirely on what happens on the ground, not in the boardroom.
The Bigger Picture
Nigeria’s oil revenue underpins government spending. When production falls short, everything else feels the pressure. Budgets stretch. Deficits grow. The naira weakens.
Professor Segun Ajibola, an economist, noted that oil output depends on many factors the government cannot fully control. Technical partners, joint ventures, global market conditions, and environmental factors all play a role.
But some things are within Nigeria’s control. Security. Regulatory consistency. Investment conditions.
The Nigeria oil shortfall is not inevitable. It is, in large part, a policy and governance failure. Until that changes, the losses will keep adding up.

