Nigeria’s latest reserve audit reveals a slight dip in crude oil and condensate reserves, offset by record-breaking natural gas figures — a mixed yet cautiously optimistic outlook for the upstream sector.
According to data released by the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), the country’s crude oil and condensate reserves stood at 37.01 billion barrels as of January 1, 2026 — a decrease of approximately 270 million barrels from the 37.28 billion barrels recorded in 2025.
In contrast, gas reserves climbed to 215.19 trillion cubic feet (TCF), up from 210.54 TCF the previous year, representing a gain of nearly 4.65 TCF.
Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan, Chief Executive Officer of the NUPRC, attributed the dip in oil reserves to two primary factors: the volume of crude extracted during the 2025 production cycle, and revised assessments stemming from field performance evaluations.
The latter refers to periodic technical reviews in which reservoir engineers reassess subsurface data, often resulting in downward revisions to previously estimated recoverable volumes.
“The decline is not unexpected,” industry analysts note, pointing out that without significant new oil discoveries or enhanced recovery programs to offset annual production, a gradual drawdown of proven reserves remains the natural trajectory for a mature producing nation like Nigeria.
Where the oil figures offered cause for concern, the gas numbers told a markedly different story. The near-five TCF jump in gas reserves was driven by fresh field discoveries and updated reservoir studies that unlocked previously uncounted volumes of natural gas across several basins.
This development is particularly significant given the global energy transition narrative, which has seen natural gas increasingly positioned as a transition fuel bridging the gap between fossil fuels and renewable energy.
For Nigeria, already home to one of Africa’s largest gas reserve bases the latest figures reinforce its potential as a dominant supplier to both regional and international markets.
Nigeria has long been criticized for decades of gas flaring and underutilization, squandering a resource that neighbors and competitors have monetized aggressively.
The uptick in proven reserves could lend fresh urgency to ongoing efforts to commercialize stranded gas assets and expand liquefied natural gas (LNG) export capacity.
Eyesan was unequivocal in asserting the NUPRC’s commitment to reversing the downward oil trend. He pointed to the ongoing implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021 as the cornerstone of the Commission’s long-term strategy for reserves growth and industry stability.
The PIA, landmark legislation signed into law by President Muhammadu Buhari in 2021, was designed to overhaul Nigeria’s oil and gas regulatory framework streamlining governance, incentivizing investment, and creating a more competitive fiscal environment for international oil companies (IOCs) and indigenous operators alike.
Critics, however, have argued that implementation has been slow and uneven, with some provisions yet to be fully operationalized nearly five years after the law’s passage.
Security challenges in the Niger Delta, persistent crude oil theft, and infrastructure decay have also continued to hamper production levels and discourage the kind of aggressive exploration activity needed to meaningfully replace depleting reserves.
Nigeria’s reserve figures carry outsized importance, not only for its domestic economy where oil receipts remain a critical source of government revenue and foreign exchange but also for its standing within OPEC, where reserve levels influence quota allocations and geopolitical leverage.
At current production rates, a reserve base of 37 billion barrels translates to decades of production potential, but only if the operational and security environment can be stabilized sufficiently to attract the billions of dollars in upstream investment required.
For now, the NUPRC’s data offers both a warning and an opportunity: the oil clock is ticking, but the gas future, for Nigeria, may be brighter than ever.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s oil reserves are gradually declining — a natural consequence of ongoing production and aging fields — but the country’s surging gas reserves offer a compelling counter-narrative. The real story here is not one of depletion, but of transition: Nigeria’s energy future increasingly lies in its vast and growing natural gas wealth.
However, that future will only be realized if the government accelerates the full implementation of the PIA 2021, tackles the persistent security and infrastructure challenges crippling the Niger Delta, and moves decisively to commercialize its gas resources. The numbers are promising — the execution is what remains in question.
























