Less
than 24 hours after the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries,
OPEC, ended its 166th meeting, with a resolution to keep production
quotas unchanged, oil prices dipped further close to $70 per barrel on
Friday, surpassing a new benchmark proposed by the Nigerian government.
Latest
OPEC Secretariat calculations on Friday showed that the price of its
basket of 12 crudes stood at $70.80 dollars per barrel on Thursday,
shedding $2.90, or 3.94 per cent from the $73.70 per barrel recorded on
Thursday.
The development would be bad news for the Nigerian government battling to respond to one of the most serious oil price falls.
The federal government has proposed a new benchmark of $73 per barrel, from $78 approved in the 2014 budget.
The
latest crash indicates the $73 benchmark may not be realistic, a
concern earlier raised by the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria,
Godwin Emefiele.
Mr. Emefiele, had on Tuesday, at the end of the
Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja described the new oil
benchmark as “overly optimistic”, as the decline appears permanent.
But
the Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has assured Nigerians
that they have no reasons to panic, as the government has a
comprehensive strategy, based on number of scenarios, to cushion the
impact of the slide in crude oil price even if it were to drop to as low
as $60 per barrel.
Credit: Premium Times
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