– Driven by Ogoni Resumption and Enhanced Security
-Analysts Forecast Return to 1.8 Million Barrels Per Day as Historic Reconciliation and Tactical Pipeline Protection Unlock New Volumes
Nigeria’s oil production is on course for a substantial uplift in the second quarter of 2026, with analysts pointing to the concrete resumption of operations in the long-dormant Ogoni fields and a sustained focus on trunkline security as the key drivers.
The latest Nigeria Energy Sector Outlook for Q1 2026 frames the coming three months as a critical preparation window, setting the stage for what could be the most significant onshore production growth in a decade.
After exiting 2025 with output in the mid-1.6 million barrels per day (mbpd) range, the report projects that credible execution on current priorities could push the nation’s crude and
condensate production toward 1.8 mbpd by Q2 2026. This anticipated increase hinges on converting fragile peace and paper agreements in the Niger Delta into tangible field activity
and uninterrupted export.
From Framework to Field: Ogoni Moves from Symbol to Solution
The single largest potential contributor to the Q2 surge is identified as the Ogoni implementation programme. The Outlook outlines a clear sequence of Q1 2026 milestones that must be met to de-risk the timeline for material volume uplift later in the year:
Formalising the Community Equity Vehicle: Establishing the legal trust that ensures direct community benefit sharing.
Funding the Remediation Escrow: Capitalising the dedicated fund for environmental clean-up, a cornerstone of the reconciliation framework.
Appointing a Lead Operator/Consortium: Naming a credible operator to manage the resumption of safe, responsible production.
Initiating Early Civil Works: Beginning safe site access and preparatory work to signal serious intent.
“Early civil works and safe site access in Q1 can de-risk timelines,” the report states, noting that “material volume uplift remains more likely from late Q2/Q3.” This positions the coming quarter as the essential foundation for the subsequent production climb.
Security: The Linchpin of Sustained Growth
The projected increase is inextricably linked to continued improvements in pipeline security. While theft and sabotage risks persist at an exposure of 50-80 thousand barrels per day, the report emphasises that targeted, performance-linked strategies are showing effect. The coordinated federal-state security taskforces and the auditing of community
surveillance payments are cited as critical to protecting the gains.
“Success in Q2 depends on actions taken now,” the analysis warns. “Deploying smart pigging and leak detection on high-loss corridors and prosecuting organised hot-tap
networks in Q1 are non-negotiable to ensure additional Ogoni and onshore volumes actually reach export terminals.”
A Multi-Pronged Production Strategy
The anticipated Q2 rise is not reliant on Ogoni alone. It is expected to be bolstered by:
Deepwater Reliability: Steady output from assets like Bonga, with the Bonga North tie-in providing “the most dependable barrels.”
Divestment Benefits: Incremental volume gains from Seplat’s optimisation of recently acquired assets and the resolution of legacy issues related to Shell’s
onshore exit.
Pipeline Integrity: Reduced losses on key trunklines translating directly into higher recorded production.
Broader Economic and Sectoral Impact
A return to 1.8 mbpd production would have cascading positive effects:
For Government Finances: Increased oil receipts would bolster fiscal buffers, providing more flexibility for infrastructure and social spending.
For the Energy Sector: Higher crude availability secures feedstock for the now[1]stable Dangote Refinery and modular refineries, reinforcing national fuel supply
resilience.
For Macro Stability: Combined with reduced fuel imports, higher export volumes would significantly ease foreign exchange pressure, supporting the Naira and
cementing the disinflation trend.
A Defining Quarter for: The Q1 2026 period is portrayed as a final preparatory phase. “What we see in the next 90 days will determine if Nigeria seizes this opportunity,” the Outlook concludes. “Forming the Ogoni trust, funding remediation, and securing the pipelines are not just energy tasks— they are national economic imperatives. If executed with discipline, Q2 2026 will mark the moment Nigeria’s upstream sector transitioned from steady recovery to confident growth.”
[1]
Note to Editors: The Nigeria Energy Sector Outlook: Q1 2026 is an independent analysis
based on operational data, project timelines, and policy indicators. The Q2 2026
production forecast is contingent up

